Pubdate: Wed, 26 Jul 2006 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2006, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Matthew Kwong Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) B.C. GROW OPS CREEPING EAST VANCOUVER -- As Vancouver drug squads crack down on marijuana growers, more B.C. operations are setting up shop in Ontario, police say. Under pressure from city "growbusters," marijuana grow ops have declined in Vancouver over the past five years, Vancouver Police Inspector Kash Heed said during a news conference yesterday. But he said pot operations have sprouted up in nearby municipalities and are migrating to Ontario. "To coincide with the decreases in Vancouver, the increase is felt outside of Vancouver, and Ontario is now experiencing some of our problems," he said. Detective Don Cardwell of the York Regional Police's drugs and vice squad in Ontario likened the trend to any other business venture. "Simply put, they're going to expand their markets and the eastern market looks like one of the areas they've chosen," Det. Cardwell said. "It's usually based out of B.C. and going coast to coast, so of course we're in touch with [Vancouver police]." In 2003, Insp. Heed, then the commanding officer of the drug unit, sent two sergeants to Ontario to offer suggestions on how police there could deal with the rise in grow-op activity. "They wanted to talk to us and [hear about] what we're doing . . . because other law-enforcement agencies confirmed the same growers we had here were showing up in Ontario," Insp. Heed said. "There were a few that came out here. They're the ones around Peel, York [Region], Hamilton-Wentworth, that area there, and I believe Durham," he said. Vancouver Police statistics released yesterday indicate that officers raided 23 grow houses in 1991, seizing pot valued at about $2.6-million. More than 3,000 operations have been removed since, totalling $750-million worth of marijuana. Stopping those operations is becoming a challenge as growers adapt to police techniques. "They're not stealing the hydro any more," Det. Cardwell said. "The odds are they're harder to detect and are just going to be detected a lot less." Insp. Heed, a 28-year police veteran, never even suspected that a grow-op had been operating for months just three doors from his own Vancouver home. He found out from a neighbour's tip. Dangerous wiring and overloaded electrical outlets commonly used in crop-harvesting equipment are a fire hazard, and mould spores and pesticides used in grow-op houses also pose a health risk. In recent years, marijuana growers have bought homes in quiet suburbs to grow their crops. Some growers place children's toys on the lawns so as not to appear suspicious. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek