Pubdate: Sun, 09 Sep 2012 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2012 News-Journal Corporation Contact: http://www.news-journalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 Author: Frank Fernandez SYNTHETIC POT, BATH SALTS ON WAY OUT IN PALM COAST Palm Coast is forging ahead with an ordinance to prohibit the sale of synthetic marijuana masquerading as herbal incense and is also taking a bead on chemically tainted bath salts. City Manager Jim Landon said that the city's research showed that other communities had banned bath salts as well as synthetic marijuana. Both products circumvent existing laws against illicit drugs but contain hazardous chemicals. "I have been told from our local law enforcement in our schools that (bath salts) are not a problem here yet," Landon said in a phone interview on Friday. "But because they are very similar in their effects and there's nothing prohibiting them from being sold for these inappropriate uses for young people, we chose to add that as a proposal to address both items in one ordinance." Palm Coast has been researching the issue since July and will discuss a draft ordinance at its workshop beginning at 9 a.m. Tuesday at city offices, 160 Cypress Point Parkway. The public is not allowed to speak during workshops. During a recent workshop on Aug. 28, Mayor Jon Netts asked Flagler County Sheriff School Resource Deputy Corporal Don Apperson just how bad was the synthetic marijuana problem in Flagler County. "It's epidemic proportion. It's terrible," Apperson said. "They are getting away from the pills more. They are getting away from the alcohol. They are getting away from regular marijuana. This stuff is accessible in numerous places throughout the community and you don't have to be a certain age to purchase it." Apperson said deputies have had to call medical units to treat youth because they smoked the synthetic marijuana, have had to contact parents about their children, and have had to refer some students to Stewart Marchman Act treatment center. "I mean it's terrible," Apperson added. "I've seen kids that are just completely out of it from smoking this stuff and it's terrible." The city ordinance notes that synthetic marijuana and bath salts have been known to cause a long list of dangerous effects, including seizures, paranoia, anxiety, aggression and hallucinations. The ordinance would ban the sale, display or distribution of substances sold as "herbal incense" which can be easily smoked and contain chemicals mimicking marijuana's effects. The ordinance would also ban bath salts defined in part as any substance the retailer should have reasonably known contains a synthetic stimulant regardless of whether it has a label warning "not for human consumption." The cellophane packages of brands such as "Barely Legal" herbal incense are labeled "not for human consumption." A violation would be punishable by a citation, but the City Council has yet to set the amount of the citation, said Barbara Grossman, the city's code enforcement manager, in an email on Friday. City Attorney William Reischmann said in a phone interview on Friday that the city could also go to court to get an injunction to force a store to stop selling the products. State law has failed to keep up with the ever changing chemical brews unscrupulous chemists use to circumvent drug laws. That means the sheriff's office cannot step in with criminal charges. But a Palm Coast ban on the sale of synthetic marijuana and bath salts would help, Flagler County Sheriff Don Fleming said in a statement emailed to the News-Journal by his spokeswoman. "We are anxiously awaiting the city's ordinance," Fleming said. "It will not affect our enforcement actions since the sale of these products is not illegal. It will, however, at least provide a level of enforcement through the city's Code Enforcement Division. I continue to monitor state legislative action in hopes that some type of regulation will be passed that makes the sale illegal. We continue to investigate whether other enforcement routes are available also. Our children are at risk with these products." Netts said during the Aug. 28 workshop that he does not want to shift the problem to another part of the county. The city has provided copies of its proposed ordinance to Flagler County and other cities in the county, so those governments could also ban the substances. "My goal is not to displace the problem out of Palm Coast and into some community. My goal is to displace it out of Flagler County," Netts said. City Councilman Frank Meeker said during the Aug. 28 workshop that he wanted the city to move as quickly as possible on the ordinance even if it meant enacting the ordinance ahead of other communities. "Is everyone working as diligently as swiftly as it sounds like we need to be working because if not I don't have a problem with forging ahead and letting everybody catch up," Meeker said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt