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PREMIERS TACKLE CRYSTAL METH 'CURSE'

Western leaders call on Ottawa to join them in all-out war against highly addictive drug

LLOYDMINSTER, ALTA.  -- Calling it a "common curse," the leaders of the western provinces and territories unanimously pledged yesterday to battle crystal methamphetamine, a highly addictive street drug plaguing their communities.

"We have to be aggressive," Alberta Deputy Premier Shirley McClellan said after emerging from a closed meeting at the annual Western Premiers Conference.  "This is an issue we are going to take leadership on.  We are not waiting."

She added that the country's young people are in "grave danger" from the cheap drug, which is more addictive than crack cocaine and more likely to cause psychosis than any other street drug.

Saskatchewan Premier Lorne Calvert pushed the issue on to the conference's crammed agenda, saying it is a "common curse" that all the provinces and territories are struggling to control and treat.

The premiers agreed to hold a special meeting in Regina early next month on the growing problem, which is also being experienced across the country and in the United States.  Each jurisdiction plans to send their health, justice and public safety ministers to discuss strategies on education, prevention, treatment and policing for crystal meth, which is also known as speed, crank, crystal and ice.

The leaders are also calling on Ottawa to stiffen punishments for traffickers and tighten controls on the sale of the chemicals used in crystal meth production.  It is easily made using a combination of fertilizers, over-the-counter cold remedies and products sold in health food stores that contain ephedrine.

Manitoba Premier Gary Doer wants crystal meth dealers to serve the same sentences as people caught selling heroin and cocaine.

Northwest Territories Premier Joe Handley said while crystal meth isn't a major problem in the North yet, he supports the strategy because he doesn't want it spreading to his territory.

Most of the seven governments at the conference are already tackling the problem.

British Columbia Premier Gordon Campbell said his province has devoted more police officers to quashing the drug and meth trade and has beefed up its addiction treatment services.

The Alberta government recently passed a law that will allow authorities to lock young meth users into detox centres for up to five days.

And last year, Alberta and British Columbia pharmacies voluntarily decided to restrict the sale of cold remedies.  Many are now available only from behind the counter.

National statistics about the growth of meth addiction are scarce; however, recent data from Health Canada's Drug Analysis Service, which tests the drugs confiscated by police across the country, show B.C.  police seizures of the drug increased by 50 per cent between 2001 and 2003.

In Alberta, the number rose 20 per cent; in Ontario, 108 per cent; in Manitoba, 141 per cent; in Quebec, 457 per cent; and in Saskatchewan, 857 per cent.

The problem of crystal meth in the United States has been so severe that police in some western States have called it the Prairie Fire.

Sharon Jackson, an addiction worker at a Lloydminster detox centre located behind the hotel where the premiers are meeting, was surprised but relieved that they were discussing the issue.

"It's a rampant problem," she said.

Ms.  Jackson said crystal meth, which can be either smoked, swallowed, inhaled or injected, has become particularly attractive to young people in the past couple of years because it is cheap -- a dose often costs less than a package of cigarettes, and the high from the white crystals lasts for hours.

"They just don't get the same thing from marijuana," she said.

She said that governments need to rethink how they treat meth addicts because it takes much longer to recover from meth than other drugs.

While a detox program for someone escaping alcohol and drugs, such as cocaine, takes five to seven days, a meth addict needs up to one month of treatment.

Ms.  Jackson also said governments need to rally communities, police and the schools around this problem.  "I think anything we do will help, but I think it's going to have to be across the board.  Not in just one area."

The western premiers also discussed many other issues yesterday, including the skilled-labour shortage, transportation problems and problems in agriculture, such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy ( mad-cow disease ).

The mountain pine beetle and spruce bark beetle also made it onto the agenda.  The pests are ravaging forests in British Columbia and Yukon.

Mr.  Campbell said the mountain pine beetle should be a national issue, and all the premiers asked for more federal money to be committed to fighting the infestations.

The premiers conference wraps up today.