Pubdate: Wed, 25 Oct 2006 Source: Fergus-Elora News Express (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 Fergus-Elora News Express Contact: http://www.centrewellington.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2214 DRUG ARRESTS PROMPT WAKE-UP CALL It is being called the biggest drug bust in Wellington County history - - 737 pounds of marijuana, marijuana products, cocaine, psilocybin and cash discovered at a Wellington North address. The drugs seized are valued at almost $6 million. Two Arthur Township people face several charges. This should be a wake-up call for anyone who thinks illegal drugs are a big city problem. The fact is, they have always been part of the rural scene. Those picturesque fields and homes that sit on a couple of acres of forested land attract more than Toronto retirees wanting to escape the hustle and bustle. They also attract people who prefer to do what they do, away from prying eyes. A massive marijuana grow operation requires a lot of fertilizer and pesticides, items that might raise a few eyebrows in the city but are commonly found in a rural area. And there is space. Abandoned breweries to use as marijuana factories are few and far between. Unused barns and huge houses, on the other hand, make an excellent substitute. Drug operations tend to produce some odd odours, for example, the tell-tale cat urine stink from making methamphetamine. Out in the country, no one is going to notice with all the barnyard smells. Wellington County is in a unique position of being largely rural but well-served by excellent roads and close to the city - less than two hours to most of Ontario's large cities, and less than an hour to some of them. It makes this area ideal for industrial and business development, although a $6 million marijuana operation was probably not the sort of development local municipalities had in mind. The fact is, drugs are here and they are not going away anytime soon. People in this part of the country can choose to stick their collective heads in the sand and allow marijuana grow ops and meth labs to proliferate, or we can wake up. First of all, our kids and our neighbours' kids have access to just about any illegal drug. They will hopefully choose not to take them, but they are not naive. It is their parents who are naive. We owe it to our kids to learn as much as we can about the local drug scene, and to keep the lines of communication open. If we blanche at the mere mention of the Evil Weed, and tell them one puff will rot their brains and turn them into demented junkies, they are going to laugh at us. They know better, and there is a good chance it is from personal experience. Listening is a more effective tactic than spouting drivel at them. And if we have a serious comment to make about drugs, we cannot make it with any credibility when our words are slurred from the evening's fourth beer. We can also keep our eyes and ears open. People in a rural area respect the privacy of our neighbours, but we know when something weird is going on. It is not alarming when people move into an isolated old farm house and keep to themselves; we take notice when they buy truckloads of fertilizer but do not appear to be growing any crops. We also notice if they seem to be putting out a lot of trash but are rarely at the house, if people seem to be visiting at all hours of the day and night, if they cover all the windows with aluminum foil, or if their roof is the only one with no snow on it - an indoor marijuana grow op produces a lot of heat. What we do after we notice something odd depends on how much we want to have criminal activity in our neighbourhood, keeping in mind there is big money in illegal drugs and people often protect their operations with firearms or by booby-trapping the premises. Calling the police or Crime Stoppers seems a valid response. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek