Pubdate: Wed, 23 Mar 2005 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Greg Knill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) LOGIC GOES UP IN SMOKE News that B.C.'s indoor pot business is still flourishing is a message to some that it's time to give up the fight over marijuana grow operations. They claim it's a battle that can never be won; that simple surrender is the only option. That's a naive suggestion. It's naive because it is based on the assumption that the powers that drive the multi-billion dollar illegal marijuana trade will simply go away if the drug is legalized. Recently a study done by the University College of the Fraser Valley showed indoor marijuana grow operations were still doing a thriving business. This despite the fact that communities like Chilliwack and Surrey have developed tough new strategies to combat the problem. Indeed, the study found that Chilliwack has more grow ops per capita than any community in British Columbia. From 1997 to 2003, the study found, cases in Chilliwack grew 214 per cent. Granted, the study's findings were compiled before the city introduced its new municipal regulations that can impose a $10,000 fine on property owners caught with a grow op on their premises. But UCFV criminology professor Darryl Plecas, main author of the report, doubts the bylaw will have much impact. When a single crop of marijuana can reap $300,000, he says, a $10,000 fine will not provide much of a deterrent. Nonetheless, giving up the fight is not an option. It is simplistic to assume that legalization of marijuana will end the proliferation of indoor grow operations. Most of the product produced in B.C.'s $6-billion marijuana trade heads south, where it's sold or exchanged for drugs like cocaine. This lucrative commerce is driven by organized crime, and organized crime is driven by money. The fact that the recreational pot smoker might be able to pick up a joint at a corner store won't end this export production. What it would do is effectively close the borders with our largest trading partner. If border crossings have become difficult in this post-9/11 world, imagine what they would be like if Canada legalized a drug that most Americans believe is dangerous. Instead, Canada has to look at its own laws. The courts have to see that large-scale pot operations are the thin edge of an organized crime wedge. Grow ops are the money end of operations that feed other illegal activities in communities. As Plecas said, "The only thing that's going to turn this around is more active types of (court) sentences. "We don't want to lose our compassion and understanding at some point for growers, but we've got to stop being stupid about it and recognize it's an economic crime with major connections to organized crime." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek