Pubdate: Thu, 25 Mar 2010
Source: Outlook, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2010 Black Press
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/o9Mc9WZ6
Website: http://www.northshoreoutlook.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1433
Author: Kelly McManus

'METH JUST WANTS MORE METH'

The oil portraits at Collingwood School stare out over  a mostly empty
lecture hall. They number 13 --  depicting former board directors or
heads of school --  some seated in the garden, one with a hand on the
hip,  one holding a basketball.

As many people, maybe 15 if you count the two guidance  counsellors,
pepper the 200-seat auditorium. Mark  McLaughlin stands at the podium.
He is lean, serious,  intent.

The Victoria man points to a display of rat poison, cat  litter, drain
cleaner, cough syrup -- some common  ingredients for cooking crystal
meth. The corrosive  toxic stew is one of the most addictive street
drugs  and years ago was flagged as a Vancouver area epidemic.  Police
say the home-cooked psychostimulant is now  nation-wide.

"The secret of crystal meth is that it just wants more  meth,"
McLaughlin says, looking out over his audience.  "Crystal meth can
reach in and take away from a person  everything they have."

Four years ago his teen -- he asks not to reveal any  more about his
family -- became a meth addict and a  runaway.

"When you're walking along the street looking for your  kid and keep
bumping into other parents, you start  saying 'Someone ought to do
something about this (meth  addiction),'" he says. "And that's when
you realize, it  has to be you."

McLaughlin's voice is sharp. His rhetoric is  passionate, even angry.
He tells parents about six  teens who thought they bought ecstasy, but
the pills  turned out to be pure meth. They almost died in  Victoria
General, he says. One 13-year-old, not as  lucky, overdosed the first
time she tried ice: "Dead,  buried in the ground. Have a nice life.

"You can't ignore it," he says. "It (education) needs  to be never
ending."

So, in McLaughlin's view, if 15 people show up tonight,  that counts
10 or 15 more families he might help  through prevention.

This afternoon he spoke to more than 200 Grade 11 and  12 Collingwood
students. Some days he can reach 1,000  people. In two and a half
years, McLaughlin says he and  handful of volunteers at the nonprofit
society he  founded, The Crystal Meth Prevention Society of BC,  have
reached more than 50,000 people across the  country, mostly young people.

The Victoria man has made it his part-time job to tell  people about
"How (meth) works, why it's dangerous, how  to protect yourself . . .
It spreads more like a  disease pandemic. It eats it all."

He typically asks for a show of hands.

"How many of you know someone who is or has been  meth-involved?"

He says one fifth of his audience can answer yes. When  he asks about
ecstasy, half the students say they know  someone using.

This raises a serious alarm for McLaughlin, who cites  long-standing
police warnings that meth is making its  way into other street drugs,
particularly MDMA or  ecstasy, providing cheap filler and bigger highs.

"The message is dope dealers don't know what's in the  pill, nor do
they care. They care only about getting  the money and tossing you out
like a squeezed out  orange."

In a separate interview Const. Jeff Palmer, coordinator  of WVPD's
youth liaison program, cautioned that dealers  have "every motivation
in the world" to make drugs more  addictive. "That's one of the
characteristics of meth,  it's highly addictive. To someone thinking
about trying  street drugs," Palmer warns, "You have zero assurance
that you're not being given something other than what  you're being
offered."

Ecstasy also offers its own hosts of perils, which  McLaughlin says he
plans to treat in next year's shows.

The euphoria-inducing illicit drug is suspected in the  deaths of two
Metro Vancouver teens, friends who died  hours apart in Vancouver and
Richmond earlier this  month. Police expect toxicology reports soon.

THE UGLY DRUG

The video Death By Jib, created five years ago by a  Lower Mainland
outreach worker, doesn't pull any  punches. It shows a maimed,
toothless meth addict who  begs kids to stay in school and say 'No' to
drugs. It  shows a naked dead man lying like an exclamation mark  in
his own vomit after overdosing in a squalid rooming  house. The
now-infamous video, shown in some Planning  10 classes, zooms on a
needle slamming into an infected  sore as a junkie shoots up in slow
motion.

"It makes some people cross to watch that," McLaughlin  tells the
parents at Collingwood school. But it drives  the point home for
teens. "(The junkie's) arm looks  like a pile of hamburger. He is
driven down. Meth is in  charge."

Call it the "ugly drug" and young people listen,  McLaughlin says. He
brandishes before-and-after photos,  charting how users become like
dark-eyed ghouls, wasted  in a matter of months.

Collingwood's Patty Metheral, a Grade 11 guidance  counsellor, says,
"Whether the students enjoyed seeing  it (the video) or not, for the
most part it was taken  rather well."

The senior students asked teachers to educate the  younger students
about crystal meth and other street  drugs.

"Their message was the grade 8s and 9s should have it,  too," says
Metheral. "I know they've seen ecstasy."

Metheral says McLaughlin's message that meth is often  cut into
ecstasy -- seen erroneously as a harmless, fun  drug by some teens --
made an impression.

A handful of students stayed behind after McLaughlin's  afternoon talk
to ask about volunteering in drug  prevention programs, Metheral adds.

McLaughlin says his society needs more help. He thinks  with a dozen
presenters like himself, he can put his  show in front of as many as
2,000 people each month.

"A lot of parents might only come to us when their  children get
caught up in (addictions). I know I was  there," he says.

He says his child, the recovering addict, lives at home  now, sleeping
through the night.

"Put it this way," he says, "pursuing education and  work
opportunities . . . is a great outcome compared to  the
alternative."

For more about the Crystal Meth Prevention Society of  BC, visit
www.crystalmethbc.ca . 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D