Pubdate: Thu, 03 Apr 2008 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Brian Lewis, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) SURREY FIRE PLAN SMOKES OUT AREA GROW-OPS As the small station wagon loaded with plastic water pipes sped around the blind corner north of Mission recently, I didn't notice anything unusual -- but the RCMP constable standing next to me certainly did. We were waiting for a tow truck following my involvement in a minor motor-vehicle accident and the officer immediately recognized the station wagon's cargo as marijuana grow-op equipment. His quick computer check showed the licence plate didn't belong on that vehicle, but it wasn't quick enough and the nervous-looking young driver escaped. As the officer subsequently explained, I'd just witnessed a sign of the times in the Fraser Valley, where grow-ops are arguably the region's most valuable agricultural crop, as they likely are elsewhere in B.C. However, the Valley is also where Dr. Darryl Plecas is located. This noted criminology professor at the University College of the Fraser Valley and his team have gained considerable success in fighting the prolific growth of B.C. grow-ops and the high public costs they inflict -- far more than our courts. In fact, the results that Plecas and his associates have achieved now attract worldwide attention. He recently returned from a prestigious conference on drugs at Oxford in the U.K., where he was invited to present a paper on his team's new ways of combating grow-ops. In a nutshell, his research team works on the premise that because the B.C. grow-op problem is so large, there's not nearly enough capacity by police or the courts to deal with it. So rather than attack grow-ops as a criminal offence -- which isn't working anyway -- attack them where they're most vulnerable -- namely as businesses that make huge profits. And the Plecas group does this by approaching the problem from a public-safety point of view. When a suspected grow-op is identified, often through abnormally high residential electricity consumption, civic bylaw, fire, police and building-code authorities descend en masse on the property and, after discovering the grow-op, they nail the occupant/owner with numerous compliance orders which, in effect, shuts the property down or at least burdens grow operators with massive remediation costs and fees. Once on the list, grow-op culprits are continually checked, harassed, etc., to the point where many of them simply move out of town. "The justice system is inept at dealing with this problem so, instead, we've created a system of major disruptions to a grow-operators' business," Plecas explains. "That's the program I outlined at Oxford." Officially it's known as the Electrical Fire Safety Initiative, primarily because a house containing a grow-op is 29 times more likely to catch fire than a regular house, Plecas says. And since it began in Surrey on an experimental basis more than a year ago, the initiative has achieved remarkable results. More than 1,000 in Surrey at the end of 2006 have been reduced to less than 100 a year later, and Surrey's grow-op restart rate is now virtually zero. "We're bringing the grow-op problem down to a manageable level," adds Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis, one of the initiative's co-founders. The program is now expanding to other communities, including Richmond, Coquitlam, Langley Township, Abbotsford, Chilliwack and Langley City.. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath