Pubdate: Tue, 05 Jul 2005 Source: Chilliwack Progress (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Chilliwack Progress Contact: http://www.theprogress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/562 Author: Robert Freeman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) SAFETY VS. PRIVACY IN GROW-OP FIGHT If your neighbour's electricity meter is spinning like a whirling dervish, Chilliwack police and fire officials may soon have the power to inspect that home for possible fire hazards - and maybe shut down a marijuana grow-op in the process. The city is looking at a recent pilot project in Surrey that saw the electricity cut off to about 78 homes that didn't respond within 48 hours to an inspection request to check for fire hazards due to increased electrical consumption. Surrey fire chief Len Garis says most marijuana growers among the 119 homes served with inspection notices during the project had fled by the time inspectors arrived, but preventing fires sparked by grow-ops is the primary goal. Certainly there were cases where the tenant had fled and the owners attended and let us in for the inspection and we found active grow-ops," he said, but the goal is electrical safety." B.C. Civil Liberties policy director Micheal Vonn, however, called the joint police/fire inspections a ruse" that further erodes privacy protections set out in the constitution. It's so thin, I don't even know if I could call it a ruse," she said. This is an attempt to do an end run around the protection of judicial oversight" and the requirement to obtain a court warrant before entering a citizen's home. Mr. Garis said project inspectors had to bend and weave" privacy laws governing BC Hydro, but added that changes to the legislation are now expected this fall that will allow the corporation to divulge information directly to local authorities. Until then, BC Hydro is not allowed to release high consumption locations. Ms. Vonn described the proposal as an attempt to conscript" BC Hydro to act as an agent of the police. B.C. Solicitor General John Les agreed that privacy rights and the safety of residents living next to grow-ops must be carefully balanced," but added that the high risk of fires related to grow-ops is a proven fact. It's not some overwhelming need to pry, but pro-actively deal with a proven danger in the community," he said, about the proposed legislative changes. The ministry is very encouraged" by the results of the Surrey project, he added, and looking into changing the law to allow the release of high electricity consumption locations - and allow the use of infrared technology to detect hot electrical wiring. There were four house fires in Chilliwack last year directly related to grow-ops, and eight in 2003. Surrey reported 15 fires related to grow-ops in 2003. Chilliwack fire chief Rick Ryall said grow-ops pose a substantial" fire hazard to neighbours and to firefighters who risk exposure to burning chemicals and to booby-traps set up by growers. A study earlier this year estimated the chances of a grow-op fire are 24 times greater than a typical home. Making (high electricity consumption) information readily available to the RCMP and the authorities is really a positive step," he said. Chilliwack councillor Sharon Gaetz, chair of the city's public safety committee, said the Surrey project is definitely on the radar screen" here because it could offer the only way to shut down grow-ops. This will be the only way we'll be able to completely stop grow-ops in our communities," she said. It sounds like a pretty efficient way to me to shut them down." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth