News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: RCMP Slammed For Drug-Test Position |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: RCMP Slammed For Drug-Test Position |
Published On: | 2003-05-01 |
Source: | Georgia Straight, The (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 18:18:18 |
RCMP SLAMMED FOR DRUG-TEST POSITION
The RCMP Drug Awareness Program's obstinate refusal to allow the testing of
pills at all-night dance parties shows a willful disregard for the basic
principle of harm reduction that underlies Canada's Drug Strategy and calls
into question their commitment to protecting the health and safety of
Canadians ["Partiers Serious About Safe Fun", April 10-17]. By the RCMP's
own statistics, a large percentage of pills seized in Vancouver that are
sold as ecstasy contain no MDMA-like substance. A simple field test such as
the Marquis reagent used by DanceSafe can screen for such bogus pills and
allow people to make more informed choices about whether to consume drugs
they've purchased through the black market.
However, Cpl. Scott Rintoul's observation that a simple field test cannot
verify drug concentrations or purity is correct. This is why MindBodyLove
advocates for the availability of portable gas chromatography testing
equipment (which can fit into a small van and be set up at party venues).
These are more sophisticated tests and can give drug users a much more
accurate assessment of what they intend to put in their bodies. Some
European cities have such testing available at dance events.
Of course, abstinence from drugs is the safest way to party, but tens of
thousands of young Canadians choose other than to "just say no" every
weekend. A public-health approach (rather than the RCMP's criminal-justice
approach) to dealing with this reality would allow drug testing at parties
and give a message of "just say know".
Ken Tupper,
MindBodyLove
Victoria
The RCMP Drug Awareness Program's obstinate refusal to allow the testing of
pills at all-night dance parties shows a willful disregard for the basic
principle of harm reduction that underlies Canada's Drug Strategy and calls
into question their commitment to protecting the health and safety of
Canadians ["Partiers Serious About Safe Fun", April 10-17]. By the RCMP's
own statistics, a large percentage of pills seized in Vancouver that are
sold as ecstasy contain no MDMA-like substance. A simple field test such as
the Marquis reagent used by DanceSafe can screen for such bogus pills and
allow people to make more informed choices about whether to consume drugs
they've purchased through the black market.
However, Cpl. Scott Rintoul's observation that a simple field test cannot
verify drug concentrations or purity is correct. This is why MindBodyLove
advocates for the availability of portable gas chromatography testing
equipment (which can fit into a small van and be set up at party venues).
These are more sophisticated tests and can give drug users a much more
accurate assessment of what they intend to put in their bodies. Some
European cities have such testing available at dance events.
Of course, abstinence from drugs is the safest way to party, but tens of
thousands of young Canadians choose other than to "just say no" every
weekend. A public-health approach (rather than the RCMP's criminal-justice
approach) to dealing with this reality would allow drug testing at parties
and give a message of "just say know".
Ken Tupper,
MindBodyLove
Victoria
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