Pubdate: Wed, 15 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 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+operations TENANT GROUP FUMES OVER GROW-OP BYLAW A new bylaw that puts greater onus on Richmond landlords to keep drug labs and marijuana grow-ops out of their rental properties is being panned by a renters' rights organization. City council Monday gave first, second and third readings to a new bylaw aimed at recovering the costs of policing marijuana growing operations and drug labs from landlords. Under the city's new property maintenance and repair bylaw, landlords will be required to inspect their rental properties at least every three months. If they don't, and if a marijuana grow-op is found there, they could be charged the full cost of police, fire and city services. Those costs can be significant, running into thousands of dollars. The bylaw unfairly penalizes renters, says Tom Durning of the Tenants Rights Action Coalition. He added it also fails to address the fact that many grow-ops are in warehouses or homes owned by drug dealers. "What are they going to do about owned homes and warehouses and commercial properties?" Durning wondered. "Are they going to inspect them, too? Are owners better citizens than those who rent?" According to the Surrey RCMP's Marijuana Enforcement Team, a large number of grow-ops there are in homes owned by drug dealers. "It used to be most of the commercial grow-ops (were) in rental housing," Cpl. Vince Arsenault of Surrey's Marijuana Enforcement Team recently told the Province. "That's totally not the case anymore. I would say 90-plus per cent are in owned homes." Richmond is not the only municipality putting more responsibility on landlords. A year ago, Vancouver introduced a flat penalty for the owners of properties that housed grow-ops. Landlords there pay $1,700 to cover the costs of policing, fire and building inspections. That's on top of the $1,500 to $1,700 paid for permits. In total, Vancouver landlords pay an average of $3,200 when a grow-op is found on their property. That's not counting what they pay for repairs. In Richmond, landlords will pay the actual costs for police, fire department and building inspections, rather than a flat fee. Unlike Vancouver, however, Richmond is providing an appeal process. Landlords who regularly inspect their properties will not be hit with the additional costs; those who are will have the ability to appeal to city council. If a similar bylaw in place in Vancouver is any indicator, council may not actually see many appeals. Since June of last year, there has been an average of 17 grow-op busts per month in Vancouver, but few complaints about the new penalty, said Carlene Robbins, manager of bylaw administration for Vancouver. "We've only had, I would say, five complaints that I'm aware of," Robbins said. "I thought there would have been a huge outcry." Of the five complaints received, only one landlord was let off the hook, she said, and that was because the landlord himself was the one who brought the grow-op on his property to the attention of the city and police. Landlords aren't the only ones feeling the heat from the city's crackdown on marijuana grow-ops - the city is also hoping to recover some costs from the criminals. The city plans to ask the provincial and federal solicitors general to return proceeds of crime from grow-op busts to the city. Currently, there is a bill making its way through the House of Commons that will, if passed, make it easier for the courts to seize the proceeds of crime. But if Richmond hopes to get a cut, it will likely need support from other municipalities, says Richmond MP Raymond Chan. "What we need to do is get the support of the federation of municipalities and so on to increase interest in a national program," he said. "I think it would be very difficult for the federal government to deal with this a city at a time." Richmond is hoping to use any additional revenue generated from increased busts to hire another Green Team police officer, at a cost of $129,000 per year. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin