Pubdate: Sat, 15 Mar 2008 Source: Southland Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2008, Southland Times Company Ltd. Contact: http://www.southlandtimes.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1041 Author: Evan Harding PARTY PILL BAN MEANS LOCAL STORE'S CLOSURE Three Invercargill men are out of a job following the Government's announcement that BZP-based party pills will be banned from April 1. Staff members at party pill shop Jordy's, in Don St, yesterday said the shop would close as a result of the BZP ban announcement. The BZP pills made up between 60 and 80 percent of the shop's income and it was not viable to stay open, they said. "This is putting three of us out of a job in invercargill. It's crap, we have been out looking for jobs and it's not that easy," one of the men said. Though they knew the ban was inevitable, the two weeks' notice was insufficient to find new jobs, they said. Customers yesterday began stocking up on the pills, which were selling at a reduced price at Jordy's, with one man buying $165 worth, they said. Jerry Soper, who has worked at Jordy's for about a year, said he would miss the social side of the job and dealing with interesting customers, especially seeing them before and after buying the pills. "They come in to buy pills at about 8pm and are normal and they come back at about 1am and their eyes are all dilated and they are talking at 100 miles an hour," he said. The banning of BZP would intensify the underground market of the pills "tenfold", he believed. The owner of Invercargill's Pillz & Thrillz in Dee St, Ann Kincaid, said the Government's ban on BZP-based pills was shortsighted and hypoctritical, given that thousands died every year in New Zealand from alcohol and tobacco use. "Since BZP has been on the market there hasn't been one direct death," she said. Ms Kincaid's shop would stay open and continue to sell novelty gifts and party pills that were not BZP-based -- and a new batch of party pills was waiting to come on to the market when BZP was outlawed, she said. "The distributors are ready to go." A staffer at Pillz & Thrillz said he had sampled some of the new pills that will come on to the market and he said they produced a "nice wave, nothing too intense". - --- MAP posted-by: Derek