Pubdate: Thu, 08 Aug 2002 Source: Tillsonburg News (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 Annex Publishing & Printing Inc. Contact: http://www.annexweb.com/tillsonburg/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2388 Author: Jeff Helsdon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) A GROWING TREND Number Of Marijuana Grow Houses Increasing: Police It looks like any other house except nobody lives there. It's not a typical house, though. Instead of people living in it, the home has marijuana plants living in it - many, many marijuana plants. Referred to as a grow houses, the trend of using residential homes for large-scale growing operations is on the rise. A bust on June 13 south of Tillsonburg meant this area is no longer immune to the trend that has been sweeping Ontario. In that case, officers entered two different homes, one on Reg. Rd. 21 and the other on Reg. Rd. 60 in Norfolk Township, and found grow operations. Value of marijuana and paraphernalia seized was estimated at more than $300,000. In another recent bust, arrests were made in connection with a smaller-scale grow house in Otterville. That was the third grow house found in the Norwich area since the end of June. Another two grow houses were taken down in the north end of Oxford in the past couple of months. In an interview with The News, Detective Sergeant Brad Durphy, head of the London OPP Drug Enforcement Section, explained the growing trend towards grow houses. He has seen an increase in industrial-type grows in the area he oversees in the last two years. The London unit covers 10 counties, across an area that stretches from Owen Sound to Chatham-Kent and Niagara Falls. The reason for the increase in the number of growing operations is simple: it's lucrative. Assisted by 1,000-watt grow lights and exhaust fans, as many as 600 plants grow in the basement of a typical grow house. However, a bust earlier this week found 1,540 plants growing in a house in the west end of Elgin County. Larger operations can net as much as $250,000 per year. The houses are often in rural areas or areas fringing large cities, but they have also been found in $300,000 homes in London. The houses can either be purchased solely for the purpose of a grow house or can be rented without the landlord knowing what's going on. There is often little traffic around a grow house as far as people coming and going. The yard not being kept up to the same standards as neighbours is another indicator of a grow house. Quite often there is no one living there, just people coming to care for the plants. Curtains being drawn and the same lights going on and off at preset intervals are telltale signs there is no one living in the home. However, there have been cases where someone has lived in the upstairs portion of the house. Houses with garages are typically used so the grow producer can load plants and unload supplies without being seen. In many cases, grow house operators not only break the law by cultivating a narcotic, but also steal electricity by supplying power for the grow lights by bypassing the electrical meter. At 1,000 watts each, and with as many as 35 grow lights in an operation, there is a large draw of power. Normal usage for household functions is still put through the meter. "It would look to Ontario Hydro like it's a standard house operating with standard kilowatt usage," Durphy said. With the operators themselves often making the electrical alterations, Durphy said there is a danger of shock and fire. "It's extremely dangerous," he said. "You can imagine someone tapping into 240 volts." Grow houses can be set up with plants growing in either soil or hydroponically. The plants can be trimmed to height or shape by manicuring. Durphy said indoor marijuana is often a higher grade because nutrients, lighting and pests can be controlled. "You are Mother Nature at that time and you don't have to rely on a drought or a wet period." Durphy is unsure why there is an increase in the occurrence of grow houses. Statistics from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health show a slight increase in use of marijuana by adults between 1999 and 2000, but nothing alarming. There is however a marked increase in use among 18 to 29 year-olds, rising from 18.3 per cent in 1996 to 28.2 per cent in 2000. In the last couple of years, the drug enforcement unit has noticed some decrease in outdoor marijuana growing operations. Durphy said police can't determine if that trend is because not as much marijuana is being planted outdoors or the plants are perishing because of the dry weather. Grow house operators face a variety of criminal charges if caught by police. Possession of a narcotic, possession for the purpose of trafficking and production of marijuana are the usual charges. Punishment doled out by the courts from indoor grows is not necessarily much different from a similar-sized outdoor operation, with a couple of exceptions. If the house is owned by those growing the marijuana, it can be confiscated by the courts as a proceed of crime. While police often have a difficult time finding those responsible for outdoor growing operations, they nearly always get their man (or lady) with indoor operations. Even if the court doesn't seize the house, often it is devalued after being used for a marijuana grow. The lights are so hot in the basement, the amount of moisture produced surpasses what can be disposed of by exhaust fans. Black mould is a huge problem and it usually can't be solved except by replacing all the interior walls. "It's in the drywall, in the actual studs and penetrates the walls," Durphy said. Attic insulation can also be ruined from the production of so much moisture. It can get to the point the moisture builds up to such an extent on the interior of the roof it drips onto the attic insulation and ruins it. Anyone suspecting a grow house in their neighbourhood can contact their local detachment or Crime Stoppers. QUOTE The reason for the increase in the number of growing operations is simple: it's lucrative. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh