Pubdate: Mon, 23 Jul 2007 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant CITY, POLICE CLOSE IN ON CRACK SHACK BYLAW Kelowna RCMP and city staff start discussing a bylaw to crack down on crack shacks today. The meeting follows several police raids of rented houses occupied by drug users and dealers. Neighbours complain the tenants resume selling drugs as soon as they're released from custody. "We are working with the City of Kelowna, looking at a new bylaw to deal with crack houses," Supt. Bill McKinnon said Monday. Many are pointing to Vernon, which allows city officials to shut down drug houses on grounds that they're unsafe to live in. Landlords are told they must get rid of their tenants and clean up the house before they can rent it again. McKinnon wants something similar for Kelowna. "We need to take the landlords to task. There has to be some mechanism in place to make the landlords of these crack shacks accountable. And there has to be consequence . . . "We're going back and raiding the same crack shack time after time. Landlords are well aware of what's going on." Kelowna has a bylaw that pertains to marijuana grow-ops. Because the plants emit moisture and cause mould, bylaw officers can shut them down as a health hazard. Changing the bylaw so it pertains to crack shacks as well may not be a simple task, said city manager Ron Mattiussi. "They're more of a nuisance than a building code issue. A lot of the grow-op bylaw deals with physical problems with the building structure," he said Monday. "As a city, we can't become engaged in criminal matters. We look at safety from a building code point of view or nuisance. We have to stay within those areas." Kelowna's grow-op bylaw is based on legislation passed in Chilliwack. The city's lawyers are now reviewing it, Mattiussi said. "At this point, we're waiting for a legal opinion," he said. "We're holding off to see how it can be beefed up to deal with crack shacks." Sgt. Terry McLachlan, former head of the RCMP drug section, has been inside numerous crack houses. Most of the ones he's seen are uninhabitable, he said. "It's hard for landlords to get rid of (offending tenants). They shut off the power . . . We've had a couple burn recently. People live by candlelight. They cook their crack. "The environment they harbour is not conducive to safe living." Police want authorities to have the power to forfeit a crack shack to the city, said McKinnon. They could be destroyed or the landlord could face heavy fines. "I get constant letters of complaint from citizens of this community who live near a crack shack (asking) what can be done about it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek