Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jan 2004 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: David Bruser Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Molson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/kubby.htm (Kubby, Steve) GROW YOUR OWN? IT'S A BUMMER Pot Charges Are Just One Problem 'Like Playing Mother Nature' Put together a few thousand dollars to rent a house in an unsuspecting subdivision, another $10,000 for lights and fans, order cannabis seeds from the Internet, hire some trustworthy friends, and there you have it: the skeleton of a small marijuana grow-op. Sounds simple enough. But you'd better make friends with a horticulturist, and maybe an electrician, and read up on plant nutrients. If you get past the first few months without half your crop dying, consider yourself lucky. If you're successful, think twice before expanding. The money is good, but so is the risk of someone squealing to the cops or thieves crawling into your greenhouse. All of this makes the discovery of the massive marijuana grow-op in Barrie last week even more surprising. Police found a football field-size crop growing in beer vats inside an erstwhile Molson brewery, a scenario fit for a writer of hard-boiled TV scripts. Many say the operation's size was also its downfall. "The growing's not that easy," said Bruce Ryan, who has grown marijuana in Toronto for medicinal purposes. "You have to be a little bit of a carpenter. You have to be a little bit of an electrician. You have to know climate control. You have to be able to understand quite a bit about gardening. It's like playing Mother Nature indoors." Ryan, who has epilepsy, said he once operated a grow house with nine others on Carlaw Ave. in Toronto that produced 600 plants at a time until it shut down in 2000. Police say the Barrie growers were caught with 30,000 plants, a vast hydroponics operation that Ryan and others say required more than a mischievous mind and green thumb. The bust is being called the biggest ever in North America. Police video footage shows a tropical jungle of marijuana plants grown in a computer-controlled environment. Giant beer vats were hothouses for germinating seeds. Estimates peg the total value of the marijuana -- which took up about half the space in the 121,000-square-foot building -- at $100 million a year. Nine people were arrested. "That is the biggest place that I've heard of," said Michael Straumietis, CEO of Advanced Nutrients, a hydroponics nutrients distributor based in Abbotsford, B.C. Straumietis, whose company operates 12 legal, medicinal grow-labs in 400-square-foot garages, said the cost and effort involved with setting up a commercial grow parallel a medicinal weed operation. His cost equation is simple: $1,500-$2,000 for every high-pressure sodium light, including the required grow-space accessories -- assuming the operator taps into the power grid -- but closer to $3,000 if the operator uses a generator. The average grow-op will typically gross between $10,000 and $12,000 per 1,000-watt light per year, he added. "They probably spent at least $2 million," Straumietis said of the Barrie operation's start-up cost. "You're going to need lots of trimmers. They would have people that all they do all day long is take cuttings to propagate the plant... A building like that, you'd have 24-hour security." In addition, a large operation would need several rooms so plants can be rotated out of the lights' glare and into darkness, air conditioning, fans and carbon dioxide, among other things. "The guy who did this, he knew certified electricians, certified plumbers and certified air conditioning guys, and they're very easy to hire because they get paid in cash." Only an organized crime outfit could bring the money and knowledge to bear on providing the umbrella for an operation on the scale of the Barrie grow factory, according to RCMP Chief Superintendent Ben Soave, who's in charge of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit. "You don't have a bunch of amateurs getting involved in a major operation like that," he said. "They have the financial resources to set up the operation." In addition to the manpower, expertise and audacity, the organizers behind a grow operation would need to trust everyone in the network. "It's always based on trust," said Thomas Naylor, economics professor at McGill University, who teaches a course called The Underground Economy. The unlikelihood of stiff sentences is also luring the commercial pot grower to larger operations, said Toronto defence lawyer Ken Smith, who has worked on several marijuana-cultivation cases. Fifteen years ago in Stratford, Ont., Smith worked a case that involved "thousands and thousands of plants. Those people did not go to jail. ... I was able to 'Aw shucks' it out of court, even though it was worth millions. .. The commercial side of it was downplayed. The penalties have always been minimal." Couple low risk with North American demand and the allure is obvious, said Steve Easton, economics professor at Simon Fraser University. "There is a lot of money in this business," said Easton, who's preparing a report on marijuana growing in B.C. for the Fraser Institute. "I was at a sentencing hearing for a guy who got convicted about a few months ago. . .. (The judge) said, 'Okay, your fine is $1,800,' and the guy went, 'Okay, you want that in cash?' "The analogy I see is Prohibition. I mean, good grief. Haven't people watched The Untouchables enough on TV? Turn on the TV station, watch Eliot Ness as he smashes Al Capone's stills and sit back and sip your martini." Here are Easton's specs on an operation that produces 100 plants every four months: At 100 grams per plant, the harvest would generate $57,000 worth of pot. That's $171,000 per year. For expenses, factor $18,000 to rent a house for a year, another $5,000-10,000 for equipment, such as lights, trays, fans, and $70,000 per year to hire round-the clock maintenance and security staff. That's a maximum of $100,000 in expenses, Easton said. But the pitfalls of tending a marijuana crop can foil a grow operation just as fast. "Everything from pests off your house plants to neighbourhood pests who will break and enter and steal your garden if they catch wind of it ," Bruce Ryan says. Ask Steve Kubby. Suffering from adrenal cancer, Kubby left Lake Tahoe, Calif., and won a medical exemption from the Canadian government to grow marijuana in his new home northwest of Vancouver. "Growing indoors invites a whole host of problems, the most horrendous of which is spider mites," he says. "They can take down a garden in a couple of weeks and leave just one giant mess of cobwebs." Kubby's wife Michele helps him tend to the crop, an experience that has left her marvelling at the Barrie operation. "I am stunned and amazed that they could keep it under control," she said. "They had, what, a thousand lights and thousands of plants? So many problems can happen. Those guys must have been pretty good." But illegal operations, by their very nature, are the enemy of expansion and vertical organization, Naylor said. "(With a legal business), what you try to do is absorb the business of the competitors. You want to absorb all of that profit into your own company," he said. "With an illegal business, it's just the opposite. "You want as many mediators as possible. All factors point toward downsizing. They point toward loose associations rather than integrated management." If, as Naylor says, size and organization are both lethal to an illegal business, then the Barrie pot house's chances for survival were slim. "The profit rates are higher, but profits are useless if you're arrested and they're being stripped from you," Naylor said.The Barrie operation "is a great Cheech and Chong story -- these characters thinking they can take over a gigantic building and employ nine or 10 flunkies to tend it and think no one's going to hear about it," lawyer Smith said. "It got too big. ... This really shows the cheek of these guys. A very risky operation." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake