Pubdate: Fri, 01 May 2009 Source: Foster's Daily Democrat (Dover, NH) Copyright: 2009 Geo. J. Foster Co. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mYsCsdPU Website: http://www.fosters.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/160 Author: Adam D, Krauss Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/salvia MADBURY LAWMAKER MAY BRING BILL TO OUTLAW LEGAL HALLUCINOGEN DOVER - Not long ago state Rep. Janet Wall found a news article on the powerful and, in New Hampshire, legal hallucinogenic herb salvia divinorum. She expected to explore whether the herb was being used around here. Then she got a call from a parent of a local high school student who was shocked to find her daughter had used it. Now Wall's considering filing legislation to possibly make the Granite State the 14th state to make salvia a controlled and illegal substance. Seven states are considering regulation. Salvia - also known as Maria Pastora, Sage of the Seers, Diviner's Sage, Sally-D and Magic Mint - is also under review by the federal Drug Enforcement Agency for inclusion in Controlled Substances Act. The DEA has warned of the "substantial risk of injury or death" of getting high off the herb. "I always thought of salvia as a plant outdoors," Wall, D-Madbury, said this week. Salvia, which belongs to the biological species commonly known as sage, can be quite common. But there's also a species known for altering perceptions and zonking out users - and local police have expressed concern. "It's is very disturbing and it's a serious concern that it's available locally," Wall said. "I don't know if legislation will be filed. I don't know to what degree the problem is. But I want to be ready as soon as the date opens for filing in case this problem is more than one family." There's a good chance it is, considering the Dover smoke shop that sells salvia says it's become popular and the Dover Police Department, which wants to see it become illegal, dedicated an education program with middle school patents to it. The DEA reports salvia divinorum, which is native to certain areas of the Sierra Mazateca region of Oaxaca, Mexico, is more common among people 18 to 25 years old, with an estimated 1.8 million people 12 years old or older having used the substance as of February 2008. The DEA says the effects of smoking salvia are felt within 30 seconds and last about 30 minutes, with effects including uncontrolled laughter, "a sense of loss of body, overlapping realities and hallucinations." The parent who called Wall requested her name not be printed out of concern for her daughter's reputation. "She used a gram of it. I have the empty package," the parent said. "It's kind of shocking to know that it's being sold locally." She's concerned teenagers are experimenting with legal substances akin to hallucinogenic mushrooms. "There's a real dissociated state at first where they can be a danger to themselves," she said. "One (web) site recommended having a sitter" if using it. Wall said testimony regarding lowering the legal drinking age has shown that young people's brains do not begin to fully develop until their 20s and the parts of the brain affected by things like salvia control judgment. "So people who think something may be harmless try it and get themselves in more trouble than they ever imagined," she said. Wall said she appreciated the parent being proactive and trying to draw attention to salvia. The filing period for filing new legislation is usually in September or October, she said. In 2007, Maine began regulating salvia as if it were tobacco so only adults 18 and older could purchase and use the herb. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom