Pubdate: Wed, 22 Jun 2005 Source: Richmond News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005, Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.richmond-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1244 Author: Nelson Bennett CITY WANTS POT BYLAW EXTENDED TO NON-RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY Commercial and industrial property owners in Richmond may soon be responsible for the full costs of policing marijuana grow-ops, like the one believed to have caused a fire in a warehouse Sunday. A new bylaw that obliges the owners of residential land to make sure their property isn't used for grow-ops is up for final adoption June 27. It has been criticized by a tenants' rights group because it ignored the fact many major grow-ops are located in warehouses, like the one at 11091 Bridgeport Rd., which burned down Sunday. The blaze convinced city council Monday to apply similar responsibilities to the owners of commercial and industrial property. "Given the dangers that were faced over the weekend, I think we should make a referral to staff to ask about extending the bylaw to the commercial and the industrial properties," said Mayor Malcolm Brodie. Cpl. Peter Thiessen of the Richmond RCMP welcomed the news. "Clearly there's many, many examples that we're not just dealing with single-family dwellings," he said. "It's far beyond that. The major grow-ops that clearly involve organized crime are way beyond being in a single-family dwelling." The city's new property maintenance bylaw for rental properties will require inspections at least every three months. If the property is not inspected, and if a marijuana grow-op is found there, the landlord will be on the hook for the full costs of police, fire and building inspection services. In the case of Sunday's warehouse fire, those costs would be staggering. "It's going to end up in the tens of thousands of dollars that it costs the city," said Coun. Harold Steves. Council was told that every available firetruck scrambled to the scene. "The rest of the city was in peril," said Coun. Bill McNulty. "It could have been an absolute disaster for the city." Wayne Mercer, manager of community bylaws, said the new bylaw for rental properties is still expected to pass June 27. Provisions for commercial properties would be added later, as an amendment. Mercer said the bylaw would not be retroactive. In other words, taxpayers are on the hook for the costs of Sunday's warehouse fire, not the owner or the property management company in charge of the building. Les Greig, property manager for Broadway Properties, which owns the torched building, said he has no problem with what the city is proposing. "We don't want this happening in the first place," Greig said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh