Pubdate: Wed, 12 Sep 2007 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Kevin Diakiw Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) JUST 300 GROW OPS TO GO A marijuana grow busting program is being hailed as a tremendous success, with a 65 per cent drop in home plantations expected this year. The remainder will be wiped out this fall. Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis received B.C. Hydro records in January 2007 indicating the location of 1,000 homes with extraordinary power consumption - considered a "signature" for marijuana grow operations. Under the city's Electrical Fire Safety Initiative (EFSI), those homes are inspected, and statistically, 900 will have dangerous electrical connections - most of those due to marijuana grow operations. The EFSI team found that 280 homes had returned to normal power use before inspection, meaning the occupants had dismantled the operation or left. To June 30 this year, another 348 were inspected and shut down by the city. Garis estimates there are 300 grow operations left, and expects to have them eradicated by the end of November. The chief was unable to determine exactly where the grow operations are relocating, but believes they're going to eastern provinces and the States. "I think they're going to Quebec, I think they're going to the United States, where the market is," Garis said Monday. In addition, the number of children found in the dangerous homes has dropped dramatically. "Throughout 2004 to 2006, nearly one in four locations inspected by the EFSI teams had children present," Garis writes in his report to council Monday. "During the first six months of 2007, locations with children had decreased to approximately one in every 10 residences. Garis is attributing the drop to a series of stories published in The Leader last year. "I think it's due to your stories," Garis said. "It's all those stories that were around children and families, about seizing children, it's the only thing I can attribute to it, because it was an absolute shift of what we found routinely." The number of fires attributed to grow operations has also dropped dramatically, Garis said. In 2003, there were 15 fires because of electrical problems, many of which were suspected marijuana grow operations. In 2006 - the first full year of the EFSI program - those fires dropped to nine, and in the first half of this year, there were only two. As for the 300 grow operations that remain, the owners have good reason to be nervous, Garis said. "When I first walked into this thing, I never thought anything would have moved that fast, that quickly," Garis said. "It's the biggest movement I've ever seen in input versus output... it's mind boggling." In November, the program will shift its focus to public education. In the meantime, Garis is pushing for controls on the sale of hydroponics, the lighting and equipment used in marijuana grow operations. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom