Pubdate: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 Source: Guelph Mercury (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Guelph Mercury Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guelphmercury.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1418 Author: Tom Ford Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) STOP THE POT GROW OPERATORS It was one of the most surprising moments in my otherwise humdrum life. I had been standing beside a pretty young mother and her baby, who was happily gurgling and waving her arms and legs in her mother's arms. We were in a newish, upscale suburb north of Toronto. The green lawns were carefully cropped; beds of flowers smiled at us in the summer sunshine; kids were playing soccer just down the street. "We've been invaded by an Asian gang, "she suddenly told me later. I was dumbfounded. An invasion of West Nile crows perhaps. Maybe even some killer bees. But an Asian gang? Organized crime is supposed to stay downtown with the poor people and the crummy housing. What were the gang members doing in a pristine suburb? "They've set up a grow house in our neighbourhood," she explained. Apparently, Asian and a few Russian gangs are buying houses in Canadian suburbs to use them exclusively for growing marijuana. These houses have helped make Canada one of the largest, if not the largest, suppliers of marijuana to the huge United States market. No wonder Americans were concerned when they learned Canada intends to decriminalize the possession of small amounts of pot. Reacting to American concerns, Jean Chretien, the prime minister, emphasized that growing, selling and possessing pot would still be illegal. As well, he promised Canada would put resources into fighting the drug trade. And that's what burns me. So far, there's been little evidence of adequate resources for police drug squads. In fact, police chiefs say they don't even have enough officers to shut down the mushrooming networks of grow houses. House owners in Scarborough got so angry at police delays they painted in large letters "this is a grow house" on the two-car garage door of a house in their neighbourhood. Grow house operators are sophisticated. They buy houses at a street corner or nearby so they won't get trapped in a cul-de-sac. They like the two-car, attached garages so beloved in the suburbs because they can transfer materials without being seen. They put a waterproof material on a basement floor and part-way up the basement walls. Then they flood the basement with one to two inches of water. The marijuana plants are placed in the water under huge lights. They break through a basement wall, tunnel out to the electrical main and tap into it. This way the large amounts of power needed for the lights won't show up on a hydro bill. Wiring the lights is complicated; some of the electrical panels look like NASA control centres. To get rid of the noxious fumes given off in marijuana production, some gangs run pipes up to a vent in a house's roof. Police forces sometimes fly over suburbs looking for houses with extra roof vents. Other characteristics of grow houses: the drapes are usually drawn; lawns are often scraggly; no one from the house comes around collecting for the parent-teachers' association. Police officers have even found expensive video cameras in some houses that record movement in front and back yards. Of course, Canada is not the only country experimenting with new marijuana laws. This month, the Netherlands became the first to allow pharmacies to sell cannabis on a prescription basis to the chronically ill. Pressures are building in Canada, Australia and the U.S. for similar policies. British authorities have set up nationwide hospital trials to test the effectiveness of pot in relieving pain. In Amsterdam, Europe's most liberal city, you can buy pot in some cafes. But the cafe staffs emphasize that the use of marijuana in the cafes is not legal; it is simply tolerated. If you take pot out of the cafe, you can be arrested and penalized heavily. Almost certainly, marijuana laws in Canada and some other nations are going to be liberalized. In making the changes, however, our government should not forget the needs of law enforcement agencies. For the sake of the baby and her mom, we can only hope Chretien's promise of adequate enforcement is not just a mealy-mouthed platitude. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin