Pubdate: Wed, 21 May 2008 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Craig Pearson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?228 (Paraphernalia) COUN. POSTMA WANTS BONGS 'OUT OF SIGHT' If a Windsor city councillor has her way, drug paraphernalia -- such as bongs, glass pipes and hookahs -- will disappear from convenience stores like smoke in the wind. At the very least, Coun. Caroline Postma wants corner stores to cover up the equipment used for smoking -- whether it's for smoking tobacco or illegal drugs -- as they now do for cigarettes. "No matter what they're used for, they should be out of sight," Postma said. "Out of sight, out of mind." At Tuesday night's council meeting, Postma asked the city's legal, licencing and health departments to look into whether drug paraphernalia falls under the Smoke Free Ontario legislation. If not, she wants to know the feasibility of a city bylaw banning convenience stores from selling such wares, or requiring them to hide them behind a counter. Postma feels the time is right to target pipes, given that next Monday she will introduce a Windsor-Essex County drug strategy, which has been in the works for more than a year. But Rad Chamoun, manager of the east-end Maple Leaf Variety -- which has a prominent display case featuring colourful bongs, glass pipes and more -- said banning sales of those products will only hurt a city already reeling from a bad economy. Even requiring owners to cover up such wares will shut some stores down, he said. "It's totally not fair," Chamoun said. "Our sales will already go down because of covering the cigarettes. And now, if this suggestion passes, we will lose more business." Chamoun said several families rely on salaries from his store alone, and that politicians must understand how difficult the economy is right now. "The pressure on us is too much, more than what we can bear," Chamoun said. "We are losing business. If this passes, very soon convenience stores will close and declare bankruptcy, and the people will apply to social services to get money." Deborah Gatenby, executive director of the House of Sophrosyne, a substance-abuse recovery program for women and their families, feels openly displaying drug products represents too much of a "trigger" for recovering addicts -- and sends the wrong message. "I don't object fundamentally to the right of an adult to go into a head shop and purchase as many pipes and bongs as they can carry," said Gatenby, who first raised the issue with Postma about a year ago. "What I object to is the message we send to the young people in our community, when they go into a place to get candy bars or popsicles -- and are confronted with crack pipes and bongs." She thinks deterring youth will curb drug addiction in the future, and therefore supports the idea of covering up drug paraphernalia, as other municipalities have done. "What it prevents is children seeing these items, piquing their curiosity, or planting a seed that these items are a normal part of our community, that can be purchased on every corner," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom