Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jun 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Chantal Eustace Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) COUNCIL CONSIDERS BAN ON RAVES IN RICHMOND Mayor Believes Vancouver Will Be Last To Permit All-Night Events RICHMOND - A decade ago, Salim Lakhani, 32, helped take the local rave culture out of the underground. At that time, he successfully petitioned Richmond city council to legalize raves, something it has decided no longer makes sense in today's waning rave culture, rampant with illegal drugs such as ecstasy and crystal methamphetamine. However, Lakhani said banning raves would be "ridiculous." "I think you're going to see some people starting to look at underground venues," Lakhani said. "There's safety issues, fire-exiting, proper plumbing and toilets. You name it, all those things are going to be issues." He remembers taking members of Richmond city council to an unregulated rave in the mid-1990s and a gang fight broke out. Without police at events, he said, raves weren't as safe as they are now. But Richmond council is citing the slumping appeal of raves -- fewer parties and higher costs --and drug use by rave-goers as key factors as they consider banning them. "I believe they'll probably end up going somewhere like Vancouver," said Mayor Malcolm Brodie. He point out that Vancouver will be the last city in the GVRD to permit the all-age, all-night dance parties. "Raves are not fulfilling the same role as they did over 10 years ago." Back then, he said, raves were a big deal. "The feeling was, because they were popular with the youth that if we banned them, all we were doing was driving them underground," he said. "We regulated them." This approach seems outdated now that the number of licensed raves has dropped from 12 in 2000 to five in 2006, said Brodie, adding the bad side of raves, particularly rampant drug use, has gotten worse. "I am told the problem with the drugs has escalated and the abuse has escalated," Brodie said, referring to a report by Richmond's community safety committee. "It was always an issue but it is now far more of an issue," The report noted that increased prevalence of drugs required more of an RCMP presence, something that cost more than the $5,400 paid towards policing by rave organizers. The committee calculated that policing the last two raves cost an additional $11,000. "It is time we phased them out," Brodie said of raves. The motion to do so could be passed by Richmond's city council by July, he said. Vancouver city Coun. Kim Capri said banning raves isn't a good idea. "The permitted and licensed events make a difference," she said. "If we don't do that, you'll have unsecured premises without police presence." "At least there's a police presence monitoring the events." When an event is legal, police can work with organizers to make sure they are safe and have security, said Vancouver Const. Howard Chow. "If they're made illegal, the problem is, they'll be made underground like they used to be," said Chow. But the local rave scene is in sharp decline, said Sgt. Scott Rintoul of the RCMP drug and organized crime awareness service. Seven years ago, he said, RCMP used to see raves in Richmond every weekend, but that's not the case anymore. "It's not really a big deal," said Rintoul, who has been monitoring the scene for a decade. "What has happened -- probably for the good -- is that the whole scene has gone into the clubs." Lakhani agrees that club culture has absorbed a lot of the rave scene, but said rave parties still draw crowds. "Are they as popular as they were? No," he said. "They're still going on." They shouldn't be illegal, he said. "At what level does it seem like it's a smart idea to take away all the infrastructure and push people back into warehouses?," Lakhani said. "They're still going to want to do this." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek