Pubdate: Wed, 26 Sep 2012 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2012 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Karissa Donkin MAIN INGREDIENT BATH SALTS NOW ILLEGAL The main ingredient in bath salts, a mind-altering, synthetic drug, is now illegal. MDPV has been added to Schedule I of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, putting it the same category as heroin and cocaine, federal Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced Wednesday in Ottawa. "This means it's illegal to produce, sell, import or possess MDPV unless it is authorized by regulations, which will make it harder for people to deal, or manufacture, these so-called 'bath salts,'" Aglukkaq said. "It also means border officials and police officers who find these products now have the authority to act." While "little is known about the specific health affects associated with the use of MDPV," Health Canada spokesman Stephane Shank said, it has been "associated with severe panic attacks and anxiety, as well as hallucinations and psychosis." In June, the Canadian government announced it planned to make MDPV illegal days after the drug was implicated in a grisly face-eating attack in Miami. Lab tests later showed only marijuana in the system of the attacker, who was shot and killed when police found him chewing on another man's face. "We owe it to our children and communities to get this serious drug off our streets and I'm proud our government was able to honour the commitment it made in June to address this issue," Aglukkaq said. A Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse alert issued in June lists New Glasgow, N.S. as the only municipality where concern about the drug is at a high level. Staff Insp. Randy Franks of Toronto police, who serves as acting chair of the drug abuse committee with the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, said Wednesday's announcement will give officers authority to seize the drug and lay charges. "We're very pleased with the speed Health Canada managed to correct this problem and make MDPV scheduled under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act so that it's now illegal and police can actually deal with it more effectively," he said. Though police did seize bath salts in June as part of a larger drug seizure, Franks said the drug hasn't really surfaced in Toronto yet. New Glasgow Regional Police Service spokesman Cst. Ken MacDonald said his community has seen "the dangerous side effects of this particular drug" but previously had limited powers to deal with it. "This announcement is going to increase our capacity to deal with this illicit drug." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt