Pubdate: Fri, 10 Feb 2006 Source: Chilliwack Progress (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 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) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/grow+operations HYDROPONIC BYLAW WILTS UNDER GLARE OF PRIVACY ISSUES Lawyer Suggests `Red-Light District' For Grow-Ops Chilliwack's controversial bylaw aimed at regulating the sale of hydroponic equipment and drug paraphernalia was withdrawn by city council Monday in light of mounting privacy concerns. Mayor Clint Hames apologized to the 60-plus crowd, some of whom came from Vancouver and Kelowna, for cancelling a scheduled public hearing on the bylaw, saying it would instead be sent to the B.C. Privacy Commissioner for review before coming back to council. He also said the city will work with municipal government associations in B.C. to develop a model bylaw that could be used by all communities in the region. But after the council meeting, Hames was clearly frustrated by the reaction of some hydroponic merchants who flooded City Hall with faxes that characterized the bylaw as "Stalinist" and "gestapo-esque" while Chilliwack residents are demanding city officials take more action to protect their neighbourhoods from illegal marijuana grow-ops. Hames said he wants to work with the hydroponic industry to find a solution to legitimate privacy concerns, but noted that many of the opposition faxes appeared to originate from one company, which openly advertises its products for marijuana production. "I would have thought legitimate merchants would be just as anxious to clear their name and would want to work with the city to protect the public," Hames said. "The products they're selling are ending up in our neighbourhoods causing unsafe situations -- now how do we fix that?" Jason Goodman, vice-president of the U.S.-based Hydroponic Merchants Association, agreed there is no easy answer to the Mayor's question, but he suggested the city lobby federal and provincial governments to enforce existing "relatively-strict" anti-marijuana laws rather than impose "pseudo-criminal sanctions" on merchants engaged in a legal business. "If judges aren't handing out harsh sentence for people who break the law .. I would think that would be the first place to go for a community that's morally outraged," he said. He likened the Chilliwack bylaw proposal to restricting video camera sales because some people have used cameras to make child pornography. "The tens of thousands of plants cultivated (with hydroponic equipment) certainly outnumber the illegal ones," Goodman said. Lawyer Jonathan Baker, legal counsel for the B.C. Hydroponic Merchants Association, said the city has "enormous powers" already and can conduct warrant-less searches to enforce its bylaws. "The proposed bylaw, however, went after innocent businessmen who are selling lawful goods and who are not legally responsible for what their customers do with their product," he said. The city could also create high-priority enforcement areas in residential neighbourhoods, he added, which would "create an incentive" for illegal grow-ops to move into low-priority industrial areas. "In a sense, that is what a red-light district is in some larger cities - an area where the enforcement is not as stringent," he said. The Chilliwack bylaw would have required sellers of hydroponic equipment and drug paraphernalia to keep a registry with the names and addresses of buyers for police review, and to pay a $1,000 licence fee, both measures aimed at slowing down or regulating sales as an outright ban is outside the city's jurisdiction. B.C. Privacy Commissioner David Loukadelis told The Progress on Tuesday that he welcomed Chilliwack council's decision to hold off on the bylaw, and he "urged" the city to conduct a privacy impact assessment of the proposal. There is no legal requirement for the city to conduct such an assessment, he said. Hames agreed after the council meeting that "in hindsight" the city should have conducted the privacy assessment, but the bylaw was reviewed by the city's advisory committee with input from legal counsel and the RCMP. It was also similar to earlier Chilliwack bylaws aimed at stemming the sale of stolen goods at pawnbrokers' shops and slowing the proliferation of marijuana grow-ops in the community. "We wanted to do this in a manner that is fair and reflects the values of this community," he said. "The community is pushing us and saying we don't want (grow-ops) in our neighbourhoods. We're trying to respond to that." Federal and provincial legislation make marijuana grow-ops illegal, but the battle is being fought in local communities, which have few weapons to wield. Hames also said the courts are not backing up the community's anti-drug stand by imposing tougher sentences on offenders. "I'm getting the sense from our community that their values are completely disconnected from the courts," he said. "That's fundamental to democracy and justice, that the courts reflect the values we have in the community." The Privacy Commissioner is preparing a discussion paper on B.C. bylaws that involve the collecting and disclosure of personal information - and how secondary use of that information can be controlled - for release next month. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin