Pubdate: Fri, 06 Oct 2000 Source: Monday Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2000 Monday Publications Contact: 818 Broughton St., Victoria, B.C. V8W 1E4 Fax: (250) 382-6188 Website: http://www.monday.com/ Author: John Threlfall CULTIVATING CHANGE Who goes down when grow-ops get busted - regular folks or organized crime? It has been in all the papers lately, so it must be true: B.C. is under attack by mobsters. According to police rhetoric, marijuana cultivation has evolved into the kind of criminal industry that would make Al Capone weep, with an estimated 10,000 grow operations - run predominately by vicious bikers and Vietnamese gangs - generating more than $4 billion in the province annually. Constantly retelling the stories of B.C. Bud fetching prices as high as $6000 U.S. per pound and being traded kilo-for-kilo for cocaine, the police have carefully crafted the public image of "the grower" as the community threat du jour, the neighbourhood menace who lowers property values, preys on your children and threatens the fabric of society. But the problem with this rhetoric is that it leaves no room for individual cases - it says nothing about who the grower is, why they're growing, what they plan to do with it or how much cash their crop will actually reap, assuming it even makes it to harvest. So who's really growing all that pot? The odds are good it's someone you already know. "If it wasn't for marijuana, I wouldn't be alive," Jack says. I'm sitting in a cafe with him and his wife Sheila, two growers with a hillside plantation. Though they've been cultivating marijuana for personal use since 1997, their crime is anything but organized. They lost their first crop to a police raid two years ago - netting Jack his first criminal charge at age 61 - but decided it was a medical necessity to rebuild the crop. Jack and Sheila have been stricken with liver disease and arthritis, and to prove it, they show me their medical records. They grow and smoke their own marijuana to ward off the pain. Scared, nervous, both with failing health, they're hesitant to talk to the media - I'm their first contact. "Please don't use our names," says Sheila with tired eyes. "If we get busted, fine. Then I want you to use our real names. But not now." They've heard second-hand that a neighbour is planning to turn them in, but it's not only the police they fear. Some plants were lost to a crop raider a few months back, which means someone else now knows about their operation. With their outdoor harvest just a month away, it's a risky time. "I'm an old man, I'm sick and I won't live much longer." Waggling a finger at me, Jack continues. "If they want to bust me again, fine, but I'll start growing again, even if I have to use only one light." Marijuana means life to Jack and Sheila, but a life of freedom, not imprisonment. Freedom from pain, freedom from debt, freedom from a medical system that they say refuses to help them. If they didn't grow pot, they would have to buy it; instead, they break the law and sell to other medicinal users through the Vancouver Island Compassion Society (see story on page 8). "We've set a reduced price for sick people," Sheila explains. "But if they're really sick," Jack says, "we just give it to them. I've been there, I know what it's like." On a police report their operation would certainly sound organized: hundreds of plants, four greenhouses, indoor grow rooms, outdoor fields, and equipment for drying cloning, and budding the plants. In reality however, it's a bit of a mess. Blackberry and broom choke the fields, their house needs serious repairs, and the only thing new I see is the equipment they've had to replace after the 1997 bust. There's no way these people are growing for cash. Living on welfare benefits of around $800 each a month, they're just trying to survive. Jack and Sheila are far from being a blight on their community. Judging from the way people treat them at the cafe, they're well-liked, and considered good folks. "Anyone who knows us is behind us - including straight people who do nothing illegal," Jack insists. "This community is behind us, we're well-respected people here. Hell, even the cops who busted us didn't want to be doing it." If they succeed in bringing in their crop, accounts at local stores would be paid off, sick people would feel better, and Jack and Sheila could get off welfare. But if they get busted again, only debt, sorrow, illness and still more hatred of the federal government would result - and their physically ill clients would be forced to buy off the street. Jack and Sheila are adamant about growing their pot organically, which the compassion society requires. But that adds to the cost, and the risk: organic plants don't yield as much marijuana, are more likely to be infected by mites, and require expensive nutrients like a $175-per-gallon kelp and nettle mixture. When I asked how she feels about the common perception of pot growers, Sheila sighs and shakes her head. "Lots of growers refuse to sell to anyone involved with organized crime. I really don't believe the majority of growers are into that. Marijuana was put here on earth to help people, not harm them." Twenty-four people got arrested for cultivation offenses in Victoria in 1999. Exact numbers for grow-ops in Victoria are hard to come by, but given the approximately 7,000 in Vancouver, the police estimate that there could be several hundred here. Victoria police chief Paul Battershill toes the official line. "Grow operations [are] very expensive, dangerous operations that bring organized crime into communities," he says. "And you're starting to see homicides, guard dogs, gang activity, and electrical fires occurring in neighbourhoods where grow operations have proliferated." Of course, such things also occur in places where there are no grow operations - and if cultivation of pot wasn't illegal, then anyone could grow it on their back porch, and the commercial demand, along with the surrounding crime, would largely disappear. Steve, another grower who agrees to talk with me on the condition of anonymity, disputes Battershill's blanket condemnation of growers. At 38, he's got a communications degree and a good job. He's never been on welfare, he says, and he's always been a good renter and gets references from landlords. "We're good tenants," he says. "Growers are good community citizens." Steve grew pot for 10 years before he got busted in Victoria in 1999. After he'd lost an eye in an accident, Steve also lost his business and started growing to make ends meet while on a disability pension. "Like most people, I started out as a 'mortgage burner' in Vancouver," he tells me over tea, "someone with a basement set-up. You grow to help pay the bills, to not have to buy your pot." Although he only had a small setup, it was still three years before he began making more than his expenses-at which point he decided to move to Victoria and go pro. Soon he was renting two houses and running 21 lights, producing 10 to 12 pounds a month. "But it was costing me $3,000 to $4,000 in expenses every month: rents, hydro, equipment, supplies, living expenses. People think you put a lot of money into it and you just get rich, but success is hard." Steve brings up the issue of organized crime. "There are ruthless players out there, no question, but when the police lump you in there with everyone else it's risky. There are a number of groups producing large quantities and the police don't know who to stop, so they sweep down on those they can. Mostly they get the two-three light basement operations, but in nailing the small-timers, the police essentially give control over to organized crime-the only ones who can afford to hide really well, who can afford to rebuild if they do get nabbed." Steve estimates his bust cost him $25,000 in equipment, up to $40,000 in product and 515,000 in cash, plus an assortment of jewelry and tools that "disappeared" during the arrest. Thanks to a lenient judge, he was sentenced to 75 hours of community service, served at the volunteer agency where he was already working. But he also lost his marriage. "Our dreams were wiped out. The pressure was too much." The air is sweet and thick with the smell of marijuana as I stand in Jack and Sheila's field of dreams. On all sides I'm surrounded by lush, green plants taller than me; brushing through them, my hands come back sticky with resin. Up ahead, Jack is inspecting some plants for slug damage. Just another farmer worried about his crop. Sheila lingers with me, tired from all the talking but happy with how the day has gone. "You see, we're nice, quiet people. We just want the cops to back off." I hope that they will. They have to. Things have to change. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D