Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 Source: Chief, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Whistler Printing & Publishing Contact: http://www.squamishchief.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2414 Author: Sylvie Paillard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) PROPERTY OWNERS TO BE RESPONSIBLE FOR GROW-OPS UNDER NEW BYLAW Police Costs Of Drug House Busts Would Go To Landlords A proposed bylaw that would hold property owners responsible for renters' drug operations and bill them for the cost of investigations passed its first three readings and received strong council support at the District of Squamish council meeting Tuesday (June 20). Squamish council is only one of several B.C. municipal governments supporting the provincially endorsed bylaw, which was drafted by the Union of British Columbia Municipalities (UBCM). The intent of the bylaw is to limit and reduce marijuana grow operations and methamphetamine production labs -- called Controlled Substance Properties (CSP) -- and to recover costs associated with RCMP and municipal investigations, according to district protective services staff. "RCMP officers in Squamish are routinely investigating and 'busting' illegal marijuana cultivation operations," states a staff report. "This bylaw will authorize proper clean-up of these sites as well as a framework for dealing with clean-up of the more hazardous methamphetamine labs." Property owners will be required to inspect a rental property for a CSP at least once every three months, to maintain a written log of such inspections, to provide a copy of the inspection log when requested by an inspector, and to report any found CSP to the district within 24 hours of finding it. If RCMP or inspectors suspect and discover a CSP without the property owner's notification, the owner is billed with policing and district enforcement costs, starting at $500 for an inspection. If these "service fees" are not paid, they can be collected as property taxes. The fees are justified due to the costs and hazards associated with CSPs. "Meth labs use many chemicals, which are toxic and extremely volatile when combined," states the report. "With these sites, a firefighter and any other first responder or safety staff must be cognisant of the additional risks posed by hydro bypass, booby traps protecting the operation, electrical wiring entanglements, confrontation with attack dogs, and collection of toxic chemicals. In addition to the danger, there is currently the cost to the taxpayer for providing first responder, operations, and other services." Once the CSP is discovered, the owner has two months to make the site livable by removing mould and thoroughly cleaning the residence. Owners are encouraged to follow new regulations or face more costs through minimum $1,000 fines for a number of offences including failure to notify inspectors, failure to provide inspection logs, altered hydro meters, failure to properly clean premises after CSP discovery and failure to notify neighbouring tenants or new tenants of CSP discovery. "Most grow ops and meth labs are in rental homes, where often the internal structures and services are adversely altered to accommodate the production activities," states the staff report. "When the production facilities are dismantled, it is left virtually uninhabitable from damage to the integrity, often mould and/or absorption of chemicals into carpeting, walls, etc. If not cleaned properly, these sites are very unhealthy and dangerous for future residents." The bylaw will also entitle district staff, landlords and other authorities to shut off water service despite a provincial Residential Tenancy Office regulation that states: "It is an offence for a landlord to discontinue providing a service or facility that is essential to the tenant's use of the site or unit for their residence." Conflicting regulations may be resolved through the bylaw's "severability" clause, which states: "If a portion of this bylaw is found invalid by a court, it is the intention of the council that the portion be severed and that the remainder of the bylaw remain in effect." The bylaw will be heard for its adoption at the next District of Squamish council meeting on July 4. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom