Pubdate: Fri, 16 May 2008 Source: Western Star, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2008 The Western Star Contact: http://www.thewesternstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2523 Author: Cory Hurley POLICE WARN OF 'TRICKLING EFFECT' OF NEWER DRUGS CORNER BROOK - Field workers of Youth, Child and Family Services received a lesson on street drugs Thursday to not only help protect young people, but also themselves. Const. Robert Edwards of the city's RNC visited with the representatives of Western Health to deliver a drug awareness presentation targeted for junior high students. He provided an overview of the local situation, what to watch for in the field, and how to avoid the dangers of drugs and its abusers. Locally, he said there isn't an increase in drug abuse from 10 or 15 years ago, but the wider spectrum of drugs used is a problem. The days of only marijuana, mushrooms, LSD or acid have changed and snorting of prescription medication such as Ritalin and Percocet is now a concern. Before Christmas, three elementary school children in the city were found snorting Ritalin during homeroom period, he said. Cocaine, once known as a white-collar crime drug, is now as easy to get here as marijuana, Edwards said. Even more alarming, he said, is the shift from soft drugs to harder drugs that net dealers more money because they are easier and cheaper to make and more addictive. The officer said ecstasy has become commonplace locally. It is an addictive derivative of methamphetamine (also known as meth or crystal meth). While it is worrisome in its own right, Edwards said sightings of meth, and the potential for it to become a major problem is alarming. In fact, he said dealers are using drugs like ecstasy as a way to unknowingly introduce users to meth, saying a person becomes instantly addicted with slim chances of kicking it. "Problems we have been finding in our drug seizures, and throughout drug sections across Canada, that ecstasy tablets that people think are ecstasy, in proper proportions, sometimes is found to be 100 per cent meth," he said. That is a common problem with many street drugs; one doesn't know what it has been mixed or laced with, he added. Slowly, but surely, meth is arriving on the local scene, Edwards said. It is not in the proportions of other major centres in the country, but enough to cause concern for the RNC. "That's what we are trying to get out to all the high school students and the junior highs, if crystal meth comes on stream here, it is so addictive and will screw up that person so bad that they will not be able to maintain a relationship with their family or friends," he said. "The drug will consume them altogether where they will never be able to get a job, and they have to maintain their habit, so the only way to do that is crime - break and enters, armed robberies or thefts. "We have to make people aware that it is here, but if we don't actually stop it, then it is going to be a trickling effect." Meth has a direct impact on the brain function, said Edwards, while the toxic chemicals contained in its ingredients literally rot away at the body. An addiction has a 10-year life span, he said. While unaware of any meth labs in the local area, but admitting it is possible, he said they can be set up just about anywhere by anybody who knows the combination of readily available ingredients used to make it. It is easy to make and cheap to sell, he noted. A lab is a heavily contaminated environment and Edwards showed the field workers photos of children suffering burns and other effects without ever entering the lab itself. He also warned of the impacts of being exposed to contamination themselves, if they were to happen upon such a scene. "You have to realize this is the stuff you will be walking into throughout your career now," he said. "(Meth) is the drug coming on stream now. You have another 10-20 years to go in your career, you are going to have more of a chance of running into this than somebody retiring in three or four years. "You have to realize, not only the dangers of the people on it, but the chemicals in the house itself that you may be exposed to. "The number 1 thing on your mind is the protection of those kids and you don't even realize you could be contaminated, and it could be doing permanent damage to yourself." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake