Pubdate: Thu, 18 Dec 2003 Source: Sudbury Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The Sudbury Star Contact: http://www.thesudburystar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/608 Author: Rob O'Flanagan POT GROWING OPERATIONS A THREAT TO SOCIETY: POLICE CHIEF Indoor growing operations increased by 250 per cent in Ontario between 2000-02, according a report released Wednesday Local News - What harm could there be in growing a little weed indoors? Lots, according to a new report by the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police. Green Tide: Indoor Marijuana Cultivation and its Impact on Ontario exposes a growing organized crime involvement in pot cultivation. According to the report, released Wednesday, an estimated 10,000 children live in cultivation houses and are exposed to numerous health and safety risks. Millions of dollars in electricity are stolen every year to fuel the growing operations, which has direct impact on hydro rates. Sudbury, like most Ontario cities, is seeing growth in the illegal activity. "Sure, it's going on," said Deputy Chief Jim Cunningham of Greater Sudbury Police. "We took a place down last week on Bancroft Drive, a house with a grow operation that bypassed the hydro. "It's a serious problem." Indoor "grow ops" increased by 250 per cent between 2000-02, according to the report's findings. It's estimated that 15,000 such operations were flourishing in the province in 2002, when police seized 1.2 million plants. Pot cultivation is not a nickel-and-dime operation. An estimated 1.2 million kilograms of saleable pot were produced in 2002, generating revenue of as much as $12.7 billion, the report states. "The fact that organized crime seems to be fuelling the expansion of commercial marijuana grow ops is reason for grave concern for police and the people of Ontario," said Vaughn Collins, Ontario Provincial Police deputy commissioner, in a press release. "These criminal groups are well-organized, well-financed and ruthless in pursuit of their business." The operations, Cunningham said, are often booby-trapped and pose a serious risk to police, fire and ambulance personnel called to investigate them. "It's dangerous for our people to go inside these grow operations," he said, adding that there is a high potential for fires and explosions because of the rerouted electricity lines, heat and humidity inside the houses. "Most people who have an investment, protect that investment by some means. With a grow op, you booby-trap it. It's done in any number of ways - explosives, bear traps, a firearm set to go off when you open the door. They are all deadly." The report estimates that $85 million worth of illegal electricity was stolen by indoor pot growers in 2002. Fires in grow ops are 40 times more likely than in a normal household. The operations are increasingly found near schools and residential neighbourhoods. "The big problem is not the kid in the street that smokes a little pot," said Cunningham. "It's organized crime. It's biker related." Ontario's police chiefs want to get tough with growers and are calling for stiffer penalties to deter the activity. Currently, growers aren't running scared from the law, they say. "It's time to give the law some teeth," said Durham Regional Police Chief Kevin McAlphine in a statement. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman