Pubdate: Tue, 02 Jan 2001 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2001 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Camille Bains, Canadian Press Cited: DanceSafe http://www.dancesafe.org/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) http://www.mapinc.org/raves.htm (Raves) ECSTASY RULES RAVE SCENE IN VANCOUVER VANCOUVER -- Sarah's eyes bulge out like saucers and her smile is as constant as her chatter. "I'm really, really high right now," she says giggling on the floor and hugging people she hardly knows. Sarah, 16, has just popped an ecstasy pill at this Saturday night rave, which costs up to $75 per ticket. It's her first time on "e." "Jungle" music pounds away in the dimly lit room where images of alien heads are projected onto screens. "People are really cool," she says of the ravers at the all-night dance party where no alcohol is served and most of the 3,000 people have taken the illegal "love drug." "Everyone's so nice," says Sarah, who's from Victoria and says her parents don't know she's at the rave. Her friends, A.J., Robin, Seth and Simon, are rubbing Vicks VapoRub on her and each other because they say "e" enhances the senses and it just feels, well, really cool. She derives great pleasure from rubbing Seth's pants, which look like they're made of faux fur. "I feel so good," Sarah says of the designer drug that's often manufactured in home laboratories and is also known by its chemical name, MDMA. "I'm not supposed to be here," she says to a reporter, whose pants she starts to rub, smiling. In an adjoining room, ravers are dancing to the constant thump thump thump of the "trance" music churned out by DJs. Some of the dancers are sucking on soothers because "e" makes them grind their teeth. The bug-eyed ravers wear glow-sticks on their heads that look like halos. They guzzle water and dance jerkily to the pounding beat. Some are asleep in the middle of the dance floor littered with water bottles. Layers of coats are piled on top of them, likely because they've taken "e" containing "downers," says one raver. Ravers, some as young as 14, are also flaked out on the floor or leaning against the walls, as friends massage their neck and shoulders. It's almost 5 a.m., and some have remained on the floor since midnight. Ashley Hughes, 22, who says she's a certified massage therapist, has set up four massage tables to one side of the room. Hughes, wearing flannel pyjamas over a midriff-revealing tank top, says she has a business licence to work at the rave. People pay up to $3 per minute to have their clothed bodies rubbed by one of eight massage therapists, says Hughes. Some ravers just want someone to talk to, she says. "They're on 'e' and they don't know their limits." Eight police officers and 50 security guards prowl around, checking to see if the kids are all right. They make their rounds to the three areas, including the "chill room" upstairs, an auditorium where people are slumped over in chairs and a few are dancing to the music piped in from below. Ravers say they're not sure what's in the drugs they're taking but that a group called DanceSafe should be allowed to test them. The U.S.-based group operates at raves in 13 American cities and has recently branched out to Vancouver. DanceSafe volunteers have set up a booth at the rave to hand out literature about ecstasy and other drugs. They're not testing pills tonight because, they say, the RCMP have threatened to arrest them for trafficking if they do. DanceSafe has previously done testing in the Vancouver area by scraping off some powder from pills offered to them by ravers. A chemical mixture of sulphuric acid and formaldehyde is then dropped on the powder. The resulting colour within 10 seconds will determine if any of four potentially harmful substances is present, DanceSafe volunteers say. Nadia Van der Hayden, 18, a DanceSafe volunteer, says the group provides "harm reduction" for ravers who are using ecstasy anyway. By getting the drug tested, they have the option to take it or not -- even though the pill would be given back to the raver before it's tested," Van der Hayden says. "We don't condone or condemn it," she says of taking ecstasy, which she has used herself. Van der Hayden says the drug only causes euphoria and those who have died after taking it have succumbed to dehydration because they didn't drink enough water after dancing for hours. But Cpl. Scott Rintoul, of the RCMP drug squad, says DanceSafe's tests are extremely unreliable because they can't detect the presence of up to 70 dangerous drugs that can be used as fillers in ecstasy pills. That gives potential users a false sense of security and also puts promoters, police, first-aid attendants and security at risk for being named in a civil lawsuit if someone dies, Rintoul said. He said the infrastructure of the rave scene in Vancouver is different from other cities in North America. In Vancouver, promoters, city police, the RCMP, a security firm and first-aid attendants work in partnership. Their goal is to keep the all-night dance parties fun while taking a strong stance against drugs, Rintoul said. "The drugs are extremely addictive and extremely deadly . . . we've had four people die in Vancouver and 16 people have died in the Toronto area." Tessa Nicoll, a University of B.C. pharmacist, says ecstasy is a potent drug that causes side-effects such as clenching of the jaws, nausea, paranoia and a huge depletion of serotonin, a chemical in the brain that controls mood. "We know that people have died taking as little as two tablets, so the safety index or margin is pretty small," Nicoll says. "The dose that you take to get high and the dose you take to die is not that much different." But at this rave, "e" rules: capsules and pink pills with an imprint of tulips, white ones with the Playboy bunny logo and XXX markings, and plain green, beige and blue ones. Chris, visiting from Seattle, says he downed "e" two hours earlier and now feels a tingling sensation in his head and the back of his neck. "I'm feeling happy and I'm really into the music," he says as he shows a reporter five blue pills in plastic wrap stuffed into a clear tube. Like other ravers, he's smuggled them in despite being frisked by security at the door. Chris says he gets the pills for $20 each in Canada, compared to $20 US in Seattle. An eagle-eyed first-aid attendant catches a glimpse of Chris's stash and hauls him into the first-aid room, with the teen pleading his innocence. He's forced to hand over the drugs as three first-aid attendants start lecturing him about the evils of ecstasy. "When we find you foaming on the floor we have to treat you and go home thinking about it," says one of them. Minutes later, first-aid attendants carry a male teenager into the room and close the door. They won't say what happened to him. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake