Pubdate: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 Source: Niagara This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.niagarathisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3733 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) BAD SEED Marijuana grow-ops seem everywhere these days. Some people may consider it a victimless crime. The reality is that firefighters, police officers, postal carriers, even a neighbourhood kid chasing an errant rubber ball may be at risk of harm or death from these enterprises dominated by organized crime They're near schools. They're in upscale neighbourhoods and poorer districts. They're invisible to unwary neighbours who have no idea they're living next to an extremely dangerous fire hazard and dire electrical threat housing an operation that may well be the work of organized crime. They're marijuana grow-ops, and while once they were a rarity in Niagara, today they've become commonplace. Hardly a week goes by nowadays without yet another grow-op bust. What was once front-page news now rarely warrants a paragraph buried on the inside pages of a newspaper. Even police admit exactly how many more there are out there is a mystery. "That's almost impossible to tell," conceded Det.-Staff Sgt. George Ravenek, head of the Niagara Regional Police intelligence unit, which includes the new NRP guns, gangs and grow unit established last October. "It's hard to predict how many there are and where they are," said Ravenek. That's because grow-ops can turn up in gritty war-time homes or -- as shown a couple of weeks ago -- in an upscale neighbourhood in north Niagara Falls, where curious neighbours standing on manicured lawns watched police officers in full hazardous materials suits take down yet another grow-op. What is known is this. It has become a multimillion-dollar business in Niagara and the massive profits the operations can generate -- combined with what officials say are lax penalties for those caught -- are fuelling what is now a multibillion-dollar industry in Ontario. The industry, in turn, is fuelling trade in illicit guns, and trafficking of drugs such as cocaine and ecstasy, according to the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police (OACP). As many as 85 per cent of grow-ops are believed to be set up by organized crime, the association estimates. It can cost as little as $25,000 for the hydroponics, lighting and chemicals needed to start a full-scale grow-op, and growers can produce a street value of $1,000 worth of drugs from a single plant within just a few months. Recent busts at a St. Catharines grow-op, uncovered after the home caught fire, and another in Welland, netted marijuana with a combined, estimated street value of $350,000. In 2006, 45 grow-ops were busted in Niagara with marijuana plants with a street value of well over $7-million seized, NRP statistics show. In 2005, plants with an estimated street value of nearly $11-million were seized in Niagara grow-ops. A landmark report on grow-ops produced by the OACP recently, called "Green Tide: Indoor Marijuana Cultivation and its impact on Ontario," said the number of grow-ops in the province is growing exponentially with each passing year. It's still true that money doesn't grow on trees, but grow-ops come as close as possible to that old adage being tossed out the window. The OACP said a grow-op with a $25,000 investment can easily generate $600,000 in a single year, or much more than twice that if the marijuana is destined for the streets of the United States, which much of it is. Some are high-profile, such as the bust of a massive grow-op in the former Molson brewery in Barrie in 2004, in which marijuana with a street value of $30-million was seized. In late November, police were stunned when they discovered a Toronto high-rise building full of unwitting neighbours had no less than 22 grow-ops set up. Much more common, however, are smaller-scale operations quietly cranking out pot and boatloads of money in and among middle class homes. The bust at the Niagara Falls grow-op on Claude Avenue was the second time in five years police uncovered a marijuana growing operation in the house. Among the many disadvantages the operations pose is the theft of vast amounts of hydro -- possibly as high as $60-million a year according to the OACP -- from Ontario's already struggling hydro power grid. Grow-ops require huge amounts of hydro for the high-wattage lighting needed to accelerate plant growth, making them vulnerable to being red-flagged by hydro utilities, which then alert emergency officials. The Claude Avenue basement grow-op was wired to blast out up to 25,000 watts of light. So in many cases grow-ops employ crudely-made bypasses to divert power from main supply lines. Aside from the financial and electrical drain on Ontario's power grid, the bypasses pose potentially life-threatening risks. Police and fire officials say the ham-handed electrical work, which often includes bare wires and a lack of circuit breakers and fuses, can electrify the home's hydro conduit and the ground around it. Surrey, B.C. Fire Chief Len Garis, whose province experienced explosive growth in grow-ops even before Ontario did, said in a recent report that a person or animal within 10 metres or 33 feet of the home's ground rod -- usually located at the side of the house -- could be electrocuted. The NRP's Ravenek said anyone -- a postal carrier, neighbour or even a local kid chasing an errant ball -- could be at risk. They're not the only ones. Officials say homes rigged as grow-ops are 40 times more likely to catch fire because of the risk of electrical arcing, overheating of circuits or improper wiring that is commonplace. Jim Jessop knows all too well the risk that poses to firefighters. In 2002, Niagara Falls firefighters responded to a house fire on Beaverdams Road, not knowing it was a grow-op. One of the firefighters became entangled in wires and beccame disoriented because of false walls in the basement. He made it out alive, but with burns to his face. Jessop, the department's fire prevention officer, said when firefighters enter a burning home, visibility is often zero. "You can't see your hands in front of your face," he said, meaning the electrical and structural risks of entering a grow-op you don't know is there are very real. Since that 2002 fire, the Niagara Falls fire department has become recognized as the country's most proactive department in the fight against grow-ops. In March of 2006, the department obtained the first conviction in Canada for Ontario Fire Code violations relating to a grow-up in the city: the owner of the building was fined $15,000. The department is also working hand-in-hand with police, hydro utilities, municipal officials and the five major banks to collectively attack the problem. Just over a year ago, the province passed new legislation largely aimed at grow-ops, allowing hydro companies to disconnect electricity without notice to homes suspected of being grow-ops. The legislation also doubled maximum fines under the Fire Prevention and Protection Act, and now allows the proceeds of seized assets from grow-ops such as cars and homes to be spent on enforcement, crime prevention and victim compensation. Jessop said the banks' role is that they can call in the mortgage of homes used as grow-ops, forcing the owners to carry out repairs of the property to the satisfaction of municipal building officials and the fire department. The Niagara Falls fire department recently demolished a Theresa Street home, in which about $400,000 worth of marijuana plants were found, because the owner failed to repair the site as ordered. The province announced June 6 that it plans to roll the Niagara Falls model out across Ontario, bringing the fight against grow-ops to cities everywhere. Grow-op operators often carry out radical renovations such as cutting holes through homes' foundations and altering furnaces to increase carbon dioxide and life-threatening carbon monoxide. That, plus mold caused by the hot and humid conditions inside the homes and contamination by pesticides and other chemicals used in the operations, pose serious health threats to anyone who lives there later, say officials. Ravenek said homes used as grow-ops often have to be completely gutted if they're to be safe to live in again. Often, it's landlords -- who rent out or lease homes to people who convert the properties into grow-ops and then abandon them after harvesting crops -- who are left holding the bag for repairs. One Toronto homeowner has spent $85,000 in repairs on the home he unwittingly rented to a grow-op operator, said Ravenek. The new powers in the recent Ontario legislation should make it easier for the coalition of police, fire departments, municipal building officials and banks to put the onus on landlords to carry out monthly inspections of their properties so they don't get stuck with such huge repair bills, said Ravenek. The recent demolition of the Niagara Falls home used as a grow-up should send a message to other potential operators in the region that Niagara is coming after them, said Ravenek. "We (can) make it so undesirable to grow marijuana in Niagara, you'll go elsewhere," he said. But Ravenek conceded those who operate grow-ops, spurred on by the massive profits, aren't stupid: one operator in B.C. who was caught recently had rotating crops in three rooms in a home. With only 18 plants per room, the grow-op was small enough that it could operate under the radar in terms of hydro usage, yet the man was hauling in $10,000 a month tax-free, said Ravenek. "These guys, unfortunately, are getting smarter." As police, fire and hydro officials have become more aggressive in the fight against grow-ops, those running the operations have, too. The OACP said the vast majority of grow-ops are run by organized crime. A disturbing new trend is for grow-ops to be booby trapped. In Peel Region and Hamilton in recent years, police have discovered wires and coat hangers jammed into electrical outlets near entry points in an attempt to deliver an electrical shock to anyone entering, jars of acid strategically located to spill on intruders, and something known as a "mousetrap" in which a plank of wood and some metal parts were rigged to detonate a shotgun shell if tripped. "We haven't found that yet here," said Jessop. "We've been lucky." Higher fines for those caught not withstanding, Niagara Falls' Jessop said the massive profits generated by grow-ops will continue to fuel their growth unless the court system begins to treat grow-ops for what they really are: life-threatening, criminal operations. While sentences for marijuana cultivation can range from 33 months to more than seven years in a federal penitentiary in the U.S., in British Columbia between 1997 and 2000 only 18 per cent of grow-op prosecutions resulted in incarceration, with the average sentence only 4.5 months, the OACP report said. "The courts haven't accepted that it is a public health risk," said Jessop. "Unfortunately, it's going to take someone getting killed. "If I told you you could make a million dollars and get six days of house arrest, would you do it? "There's a ton of them out there, and they're not going away." [sidebar] WARNING SIGNS Many people are shocked when they learn a neighbouring home has been busted for being a marijuana grow-op. Signs a home may be a grow-up often include common clues: Residents of the home rarely appear to be home and are only home for short periods of time; They usually enter the home through the garage or back entrance to conceal activity; The radio or television are left on; Junk mail piles up; The home's exterior is often untidy with uncut grass, garbage bags and used soil and plastic pots; Windows are boarded and may have a layer of condensation; Signs of digging are evident near the hydro box; The property has warning signs such as "Beware of Dog" or "Guard Dog." Strange smells, especially a skunk-like odour, come from the home; Equipment such as large fans, lights and plastic containers are carried into the home; Sources: RCMP, Surrey, B.C. Fire Department Next Friday, Part 2 of This Three-Part Series Explores the Impact of Today's Increasingly Potent Marijuana - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake