Pubdate: Fri, 30 Dec 2005 Source: Tri-City News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005, Tri-City News Contact: http://www.tricitynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1239 Author: Janis Warren Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) ENFORCEMENT PAYS OFF FOR POMO Port Moody's crackdown on marijuana grow operations two years ago put a dent in the city's pot production, police say. "We still have a few of them around," said PMPD Const. Brian Morwood-Clark, who is in charge of the grow op files in the city. "You can tell which ones they are because they have no snow on their roofs. But, clearly, we sent a signal out in 2003 with enforcement and it seems to have paid off for the city." That year, PMPD launched a high-profile sting on some 20 pot farms, many of them operating in expensive homes on Heritage Mountain and allegedly run by a Vietnamese drug ring. With a bylaw adopted the year before, the first in the Tri-Cities, the city started billing the homeowner for the police clean-up costs. And it had an impact. This year, PMPD dismantled only four pot farms and charged out $19,370 for its officers' time, said Jim Weber, PoMo's manager of building, bylaws and licensing. "If we do get any tips, we're pretty diligent in following them up," said PMPD spokesperson Const. Phil Reid. Still, he said, "We haven't had many." Mounties Busy It's a different story in Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam, where police and city officials are run off their feet keeping up with the number of reported grow ops. Since 1998, Coquitlam RCMP has seen a 347% increase in indoor pot farm complaints in Coquitlam and a 285% jump in PoCo. Drug investigators believe there are more than 300 grow operations currently in the two cities. This year alone, Coquitlam RCMP's six-member Marijuana Enforcement Team, which was formed in September 2004, seized plants at 89 homes between January and November ?" an average of two busts a week. Coquitlam, which adopted its Noxious or Offensive Business Activity bylaw last year, opened 104 files this year on grow ops, billing out a total of $193,044 for police clean-up costs and city inspections and permits. Of those files, 33 homeowners have had their occupancy permits returned, said city spokesperson Therese Mickelson. The city of Port Coquitlam, which toughened up its anti-grow op bylaw in May to include penalties against the homeowner for any city, police and fire employee on site while a grow op is dismantled, opened 21 files this year. The city billed out $108,453, including $60,994 to clean up a meth lab discovered at a townhouse on Shaughnessy Street, said Brian North, PoCo's manager of revenue and collections. Impacts Outlined Home-based pot farms have become so common that federal prosecutors are now presenting a "Marijuana Impact Statement", tailor-made for Coquitlam and PoCo, when dealing with a charged cultivator in court. According to the statement, which The Tri-City News obtained this month and which is available for viewing in full at http://www.tricitynews.com, Pot grown locally is often exported to the United States, specifically Seattle and Los Angeles, where it is sold for double its Canadian value. "Profits made from the sale of marijuana are often used by organized crime groups to finance other criminal activity," the report states, citing the manufacture of methamphetamine and ecstasy, and the importing of cocaine. But Kirk Tousaw, legal counsel and spokesperson for the BC Marijuana Party, said B.C. bud only makes up a small percentage of pot going across the border. About 30% is imported to the U.S. from Mexico and the rest is domestically grown, he said. Whatcom County is one of the top areas for pot production, Tousaw said. "It's sort of infuriating to hear this idea of a crackdown is going to somehow get rid of the marijuana situation in Canada," he said. "It hasn't worked in the United States, that's for sure." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin