Some stores pulling canisters off their shelves
Publication title: Edmonton Journal
Pages: B7 Section: City
Publication date: Jun
22, 2000
ProQuest document ID:
252735481
Copyright: Copyright
Southam Publications Inc. Jun 22, 2000
Abstract:
It's not a new phenomenon. [Rick Abbott] said it's been
around as long as raves and it's common to see piles of empty canisters lying
around during the all-night warehouse parties.
People steal canisters from stores or buy them from
restaurant suppliers, who sell them in packages of 10 for around $6. They take
it in through a balloon, breathing in and out to recycle the gas, Abbott said.
The balloons usually sell for $5 at raves and are nickednamed
"whip-it" by those who use them.
Full text:
Police are seeing an increase in the number of people who
take laughing gas at raves and it's prompting some Edmonton stores to pull the gas off their
shelves.
"It gives you sense of euphoria," he said.
"It takes your mind off anything."
Save-On-Foods at Mayfield Common pulled canisters of nitrous
oxide from its shelves two months ago after it found the gas has one of the
highest shoplifting rates among teenagers.
"It's not a high-volume item but we were going through
cases of the stuff," a store employee said.
The store keeps the cartridges in a locked case in the
tobacco section and won't sell to anyone younger than 18.
The gas is commonly used as a whipping agent in whipped
cream and for seltzer bottles. More commonly called laughing gas, it's also
used by dentists.
People steal canisters from stores or buy them from restaurant
suppliers, who sell them in packages of 10 for around $6. They take it in
through a balloon, breathing in and out to recycle the gas, Abbott said. The
balloons usually sell for $5 at raves and are nickednamed "whip-it"
by those who use them.
The gas has the potential to be fatal, said medical officer
of health Gerry Predy, though there have been no recorded deaths from it in Edmonton .
"It renders you unconscious," Predy said.
"You could stop breathing, you could vomit and you could choke on your own
vomit."
Taking the gas too fast can puncture a hole in the lungs or
deprive the brain of oxygen, causing you pass out. Abbott said one of the
biggest problems at raves is kids who pass out and hit their heads on cement.
It's not a new phenomenon. Abbott said it's been around as
long as raves and it's common to see piles of empty canisters lying around
during the all-night warehouse parties.
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