Pubdate: Wed, 25 Apr 2007 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: Jennifer Smith, Staff reporter RCMP: EMERGENCE AS 'DRUG OF CHOICE' NO SURPRISE After a year of debate over whether crystal meth is a factor on the local drug scene, RCMP seizure statistics show the drug hit Kelowna hard last month. If the drugs seized on raids and during arrests are any testament to what is available on the street, crystal meth is now virtually as popular as crack cocaine, the previous drug of choice for what police call the "criminally transient." "I don't know that it's surprised me," RCMP Supt. Bill McKinnon said in an interview following his monthly crime report to council on Monday. The drug has taken significantly longer to get to Kelowna than many communities on the coast where it has been a hot topic for several years, in particular over the way it's infiltrated school populations and elevated street crime. "It was only a matter of time before it got here. It's in every other community," McKinnon said. The seizure statistics for last month show police took a kilogram of meth and a kilogram of crack off the streets. "Up until now, 80 per cent of what we were dealing with has always been cocaine or crack cocaine and this is where we're starting to see that trend change," McKinnon said. Local RCMP have only busted one meth lab in the last five years, although they have seen remnants indicating the concoction has been manufactured in town from time to time. But by and large, the drug is coming from the outside into our city, where it is appealing to the downtown street population as its cheap and easy to buy, he said. Activists from the Living Positive Resource Centre raised the issue over a year ago, in an effort to stem the tide before the drug took hold. Their efforts eventually culminated in Kelowna's Crystal Meth Task Force. The group has roughly 40 members on an e-mail list and a dozen active volunteers, lead organizer Carmen Lenihan said yesterday. Their latest project is to start a Meth Watch program in Kelowna, similar to one started by a citizen's group in Victoria. Volunteers distribute educational material to local stores, giving shopkeepers options on how to handle the everyday medications it takes to produce this drug. As to whether the drug has hit the youth population the group was formed to protect, McKinnon said there is no longer any doubt it is in the schools. "It's been in the high schools here. In large numbers, no, but it has been in the schools and there have been individuals in the schools who have used it," he said. He tempered his comments by saying it is still not likely as big a factor as many people perceive. Last February as the issue picked up speed in local media, Const. Dean Childs told the Capital News crystal meth was not in the mainstream school population, as did the school district itself. Those students who were experimenting with the drug generally quickly dropped out of system, he said. McKinnon noted the Crystal Meth Task Force's efforts were not in vain. "The Crystal Meth Task Force was all about education and awareness and trying to tell people what the evils were of using crystal meth. And I think it's had an effect--I certainly think it's been beneficial." - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine