Pubdate: Wed, 12 Mar 2008 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2008 News-Journal Corporation Contact: http://www.news-journalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 Author: James Miller, Staff Writer Note: gives priority to local writers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Salvia+Divinorum LAWMAKERS PURSUE BAN ON HALLUCINOGENIC PLANT TALLAHASSEE -- Shamans in part of Mexico find value in Salvia divinorum, a hallucinogenic sage plant. So, apparently, do some young adults who post giddy, sometimes incoherent on-line videos of themselves smoking it. The Florida Senate? Not so much. On Tuesday, the plant that migrated from Oaxaca, Mexico, to the United States made what could prove a fateful trip -- to the Senate Committee on Criminal Justice. The committee endorsed a ban on the plant and its extract -- which researchers say are comparable in potency to LSD, arguably the best-known hallucinogen. Salvia divinorum would join cannabis, peyote and LSD on the state's most unwanted list of Schedule I controlled substances. Sale or possession would become a felony punishable by up to five years in prison. While the idea got a lukewarm reception Tuesday from some locally, it cleared the committee unanimously. "It's extremely hallucinatory, and when you have a drug that is that hallucinogenic, it can lead to endangering yourself or others," said the bill's primary Senate sponsor, Sen. Evelyn Lynn, R-Ormond Beach. Lynn said use has spiraled. She cited a 2006 federal survey that concluded 1.8 million Americans had tried Salvia divinorum, which can be eaten or smoked. Several other states have banned or proposed bans on the plant, which is widely available through the Internet. The bill also has been introduced in the Florida House. To be listed as a Schedule I controlled substance in Florida, a substance must have a "high potential for abuse" and no accepted medical use in the United States. A Senate analysis concluded it met those standards. Bryan Roth, a professor of pharmacology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said he thought "everybody agrees it should be regulated in some way." But conclusions about its abuse potential are based largely on anecdotes, which suggests many people find it too intense and don't use it many times. "Unfortunately, we don't have any human studies, controlled clinical studies to show what the abuse liability is," said Roth, who was a pioneer researcher on the plant. Locally, Douglas Davies, medical director of The Stewart-Marchman Center, said no one has shown up for treatment for it. He said the Legislature should be spending its energy addressing tobacco and prescription drug abuse problems. At Tropic Shores, 3111 S. Atlantic Ave., Daytona Beach Shores, owner Harrison Griffin sells Salvia divinorum as aromatic incense with prices ranging from $20 to $70, depending on quantity and potency. He has a few customers who come in regularly for it and described one as "ravenous" for it. He was not surprised the government would want to ban it. "It's part of our Puritan heritage to clamp down on anything and everything," Griffin said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek