Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jul 2006 Source: Chilliwack Progress (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Chilliwack Progress Contact: http://www.theprogress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/562 Author: Jessica Murdy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) TOUGH LOVE FOR TROUBLEMAKERS While Chilliwack is spending more than one million dollars per year to fight marijuana grow-ops, it may be heartening to know there is an army of unpaid volunteers behind the ongoing battle. A group of city officials, fire and police staff, community members, ICBC and business owners have built the Public Safety Advisory Committee on the ideal of a drug-free community, and its members are pushing for the closest possible version. The committee, which meets on its own time, is co-chaired by city councillors Sharon Gaetz and Chuck Stam. "We started this because we had a really big concern about grow-ops," says Gaetz, from her office as pastor of the Southside Church. She recalls the shocking 2002 UBC report that named Chilliwack as the second-highest producer of such operations. "Seeing as B.C. has the highest number of grow-ops, it was easy to surmise that we were one of the top (producers) in Canada," she says. "We knew we had to do something about it." The group got started right away, meeting once a month at the crack of dawn. (Gaetz explains that it's the only free time for all of the busy members.) Now, many of the city's bylaws regarding grow-ops and meth labs, the Block Watch program and a state-of-the-art anti-fencing program all directly stem from this four-year-old committee. The July meeting is scheduled for next Tuesday, at 7 a.m. at Chilliwack City Hall, and Gaetz says the public always has been, and always will be welcome to join in discussion, table ideas and air grievances, either as a group or an individual. There are exceptions to that rule, though. Gaetz explains that due to the nature of the committee, they occasionally discuss issues surrounding known criminals that the public is not privy to. During those in-camera sessions, the public will be asked to leave. "We are getting lots of input from the public," she says. "We can help them find a direct link to action when they call us about an issue. And we really rely on that information." She says there is no actual budget for the committee, made up mostly of public service workers, and that Chilliwack is already spending in excess of a million dollars on drug-related crime management. "That was one of our first actions, was to find out how much grow-ops in particular cost our community," she says. "From that we created a victim impact statement to be read in court at any drug-related hearing. We wanted to make sure that the judges don't take this lightly." But cost-saving is not the real driving force behind the committee, as Gaetz explains the dangers inherent of both meth labs and grow operations. "There are sometimes children involved. There is a danger to the police and firefighters who enter the buildings, there are bypasses and unsafe electrical wiring. Sometimes there are even booby traps or attack dogs, and even guns," she lists. "Make no mistake, this is not just a ma-and-pa organization," Gaetz says. "These people are not in the business so they make a little more money and eat Doritos and be happy. They are greedy and harmful." Just how harmful? Gaetz says local RCMP report that "over 85 per cent of Chilliwack's crime is directly attributable to drugs." But the tide may be changing, she adds. In 2004, just two years after the start-up of the safety committee, the local crime rate fell 11 per cent. "Still, we are uncovering a grow-op in Chilliwack every week-and-a-half (on average)," she says. She thinks merit can partly be attributed to the committee, extra police forces and a keen public eye. But mostly, the turnaround may be a change in attitude at all levels. Instead of each agency, such as the police, fire and city staff, dealing with crime issues on their own, they are meeting and discussing issues, and creating plans of action quickly to tackle shared problems. "Nobody works in isolation now," she says. "It takes the wisdom of a large group of people to do things effectively. That's really well reflected in this committee." The committee's next step is to work with BC Hydro to cross-reference erratic power usage with addresses suspected of growing marijuana. "If there are concerns about a huge spike in energy use, we'll know about that," she says. The reports, supplied by BC Hydro, could also potentially point out addresses which appear to have someone living there, but there is no hydro being used. A situation like that would indicate the dangerous and illegal practice of bypassing electrical boxes or stealing from main hydro lines, common in the drug trade. Gaetz says a major focus of the committee is to deter criminals from re-offending. And while they believe that can be accomplished in part through stiff fines, penalties and longer jail sentences, they also see the need for social reform along the way. The mayor's committee on social issues has joined the fray, in hopes of picking up the falling pieces and provide a "one-stop shopping" agency for rehab, affordable housing and job placement. "Our committees dovetail," says Mel Folkman, city councillor and chair of the social issues group. "We are just in the initial throes," he explains. "We've only had about three meetings, so we're basically just establishing what our role will be, identifying the key social roles and coming up with a key plan of action to make sure we're addressing those issues." What they've discovered so far is an urgent need to "provide for those who have the greatest need, and make sure we're not sending them from one agency to another to another to another. We would create a one-stop-shopping centre, one referral point." The danger in sending someone from agency to another, he explains, is that people get lost along the way, back to crime, poor mental health, drug use or prostitution. The group has already made plans to send a delegation to Calgary, where a cohesive agency has already accomplished what Chilliwack hopes to set forth. "There are a number of programs there that we think are really quite exciting," Folkman says. He hopes to have continued support from the community, and believes the teamwork between both the public safety advisory committee and the social issues committee will make each group stronger. "There is the crime aspect and then the social aspect, and the two are the same. Often the people who are committing crimes are the ones who have social issues that have not been resolved," Folkman says. Both committees take suggestions and letters from the public to be discussed at meetings. They also try to steer individuals to the proper agency to quickly resolve crime and social issues. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek