Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jul 2003 Source: Powell River Peak (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Peak Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1998 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/734 Author: Laura Walz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+ops LANDLORDS TO PAY FOR POLICE A New Bylaw Would Have Property Owners Pay RCMP Costs in Busting Tenants' Grow Ops Powell River RCMP have asked the municipality to adopt a bylaw which would give it authority to recoup from property owners expenses incurred in investigating and closing down marijuana grow operations. RCMP Staff Sergeant Larry Misner wrote a letter to the municipality outlining the extra expenses incurred when police investigate grow ops. "These types of investigations are not only costly but very time consuming and have a negative impact on our policing budget," he wrote. "Valuable resources which are tied up with this type of investigation take away from other areas of policing such as traffic enforcement and crime prevention." As an example, Misner told The Peak, Powell River police recently shut down grow ops in five houses. "We had to call people in on days off and it's an expense for overtime, and as a result it's a cost incurred by the municipality," he explained. "For example, if I had to call people in for 40 hours' overtime, the cost could come to $5,000." In addition to overtime, the police have to store the equipment seized at the grow op. Storing equipment until a trial is finished could cost up to $1,000. "Those are all the expenses that are incurred as a result of the investigation," Misner said. "If the bylaw was adopted, the municipality could go back to the homeowner and say it's going to cost you $6,000 for those police expenses." The bylaw would apply to homeowners who don't live in Powell River, Misner also said. "Landlords have to take some responsibility in regards to doing proper checks on the people, references on the people they rent to. It puts a little more onus on the landlord to do some checks on who they're going to rent to." Misner included with his letter a copy of a bylaw from the City of Surrey, called the Surrey Community Improvement and Controlled Substance Manufacture Bylaw, as an example of the kind the municipality could pass. He stated in his letter that other municipalities and regional districts have identified grow-op investigations as a concern and have enacted bylaws to assist in recouping some of the policing costs. Misner's letter was on the agenda at the July 15 council meeting. Councillors passed a motion directing staff to prepare a report regarding a controlled substance manufacture bylaw for the August committee-of-the-whole meeting. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake