Pubdate: Sat, 13 May 2006 Source: Nanaimo News Bulletin (CN BC) Copyright: 2006, BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.nanaimobulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/948 Author: Langley Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) ONE MORE TOOL TO FIGHT DRUGS Both political parties represented in the B.C. Legislature deserve praise for agreeing on Bill 25, the Safety Standards Amendment Act. This act will require B.C. Hydro to tell municipalities about homes with unusual rates of power consumption -- too high or too low. They will then have the authority to search those homes, after giving 48 hours notice. One NDP MLA, Nicholas Simons, and privacy commissioner David Loukidelis see this as an invasion of privacy. They are correct -- but it is such a minimal intrusion that no law-abiding citizen has anything to worry about. The bill is based on a pilot project in Surrey, where 119 grow-ops were dismantled, based on Hydro records. There were 49 children living in those homes. All this bill will do is force growers to dismantle grow-ops. It does nothing to make it easier to actually charge them, as they have 48 hours notice in which to ferret away their "tools of the trade." Basically, it allows local governments to pester them and cause them to move on a regular basis. As many of these grow-ops are now operated by owners of the homes, as opposed to those who rent, this can become a big nuisance. This bill, when enacted into law, will give governments one more skimpy tool in which to try to stem the tide of marijuana grow-ops. Crooks have the edge in this battle -- they have insufficient law enforcement, judges who are soft on sentencing, the Charter of Rights, defence lawyers and an apathetic public on their side. However, it will be a tool which will prevent some children from dying because they live in a dangerous home environment. It will also harass some people who have no respect for either the law or human life. They only bow to money. Perhaps the larger debate needs to be on whether marijuana should be legally sold under strict controls. However, that debate isn't one for politicians in Victoria. That debate must take place in Ottawa. - - Langley Times - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman