Pubdate: Tue, 04 Mar 2008 Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.mrtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372 Author: Amy Steele ADDICTION STAFF UPSET AT STORE'S ITEMS Alouette Addictions staff members are alleging that a Maple Ridge convenience store is profiting off drug addiction by selling products specifically geared toward crack cocaine and pot usage. On Friday Alouette Addictions staff had set up a table at the office with a wide array of products that a staff member had purchased at the convenience store. The table included a wide array of plastic baggies and glass vials, glass tubes with a decorative rose inside, small chunks of Brillo pads and a variety of glass pipes and bongs, colourful rolling papers and flavoured bong water. Practicum student Tom Batkin purchased all the products at a downtown convenience store. "I'm just choked, absolutely outraged," said Ron Lawrance, executive director of Alouette Addictions. "The police can't do anything about this because it's all legal but I think the community can. We need to stand up as a community and say, 'Enough.'" Batkin said he was able to purchase 25 cents worth of brillo pad, which he said can be used to smoke crack cocaine. Batkin also purchased glass tubes with decorative roses inside. He said when he and Lawrance left the store after a second visit they noticed tiny roses from the glass tubes on the ground and said he believes that crack addicts pull the rose out of the glass tube and use them as crack pipes. Nicole Kiniski, counsellor at Alouette Addictions, said, "When you're selling chunks of brillo for 25 cents you know exactly what you're doing...To be so blatant about it is an insult to our community." Batkin said he's noticed that every welfare day the store is "really busy." "There's always somebody in there buying something to do with drugs," he said. Kiniski said she's disturbed by the rolling papers being sold because they are colourful, making them attractive to youth. But the rolling papers look like a pack of gum so parents could be fooled as to their true usage. "It's deliberately targeting younger kids," said Lawrance. Tammy, an addiction prevention counsellor in the school district, who asked that her last name not be used said she's offended a business is making money off drug addiction. "It doesn't matter if people are suffering from addiction and losing everything because of it," she said. Lawrance said he showed the table of products to a parents' group and they were "livid" that the products were readily available to anyone who walked into the store. "I think it's allowed to happen because the community doesn't know," said Lawrance. The TIMES was unable to reach the owner of the store for comment by press time. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin