Pubdate: Sat, 26 Apr 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Gerry Bellett MUZZLING OF SNIFFER DOG USE WON'T ALTER PRIVATE BUSINESS There's Still Money In Detecting Illegal Materials In Buildings, Ships, Trucks A Supreme Court of Canada ruling that outlaws the use of police sniffer dogs to do random drug searches in public places won't affect private industry's use of such dogs, Margrett Donley says. Donley is the owner of Surrey's Canadian K9 Detection Group which supplies dog teams to conduct security sweeps of buildings, cruise ships, commercial trucks, charter boats, fishing vessels, mining camps, movie sets, anywhere illegal drugs, weapons or explosives might show up. "I'm not surprised by the court ruling," she said Friday. "The police have known for a long time that they couldn't do random checks because they are supposed to have 'just cause' for a search." Abbotsford school district used private drug-sniffing dogs years ago but has since stopped the practice, said school superintendent Des McKay. "It's not something we are involved in," McKay said. But if school authorities suspected drugs were in a school, he added, they could do a search under the authority of the School Act. Surrey school district at one time considered using sniffer dogs in schools but eventually decided not to. Donley said the ruling won't affect her business, which is largely working for property owners to ensure their property isn't being used for illegal purposes. That service is in such demand business has tripled in the last year, she said. "Property owners want to make sure that their premises aren't being used to manufacture drugs or used for drug dealing," she said. "Last week there was a meth lab found in a very nice apartment in Vancouver [in the 800-block of Burrard Street]. If we had been called to that building we would have found it right away. Meth labs are very easy to detect, but are very dangerous as there's the risk of an explosion that could result in people being killed. "The fact is, the owner would not be covered by insurance in those circumstances, so it's in their best interests to avoid having drug operations in their buildings," she said. Her company was founded six years ago with just one detection dog, a golden retriever called Honey Bun. Now Canadian K9 has 12 dogs and a growing demand for services. The company buys the dogs at a cost of $6,000 each from training companies in the United States. It costs $150 an hour with a two-hour minimum for a team of two dogs and a handler to conduct a sweep. Donley said her company has contracts with a number of apartments and condominiums in Metro Vancouver to do periodic searches. "We vary our routine and in some buildings the owners have put up notices saying our company has been contracted to do drug searches. This has led to a some tenants leaving quickly," she said. The dogs are allowed into common areas such as hallways and storage rooms, and if something is detected it is up to the building owner or management to deal with it, she said. "Under the Residential Tenancy Act a landlord can enter a dwelling after giving 24 hours written notice. Usually, if it's a growing operation, the tenants clear out within the 24 hours and take everything with them," she said. Donley said the sniffer dogs are not used for small jobs, such as discovering a tenant smoking marijuana. "We are looking for grow-ops or drug labs or if someone is using an apartment to distribute drugs," she said. One marijuana-growing operation the dogs found in a Burnaby apartment complex cost the owner $60,000 in repairs, she said. If a drug distribution business was being run from an apartment that would be found, too "The dogs will smell traces of those drugs around the door," she said. During this time of year, K9 works on the Vancouver waterfront checking cargo and stores being loaded aboard Holland America line cruise ships calling at the port. The company will check all 80 sailings from Vancouver by the shipping line this year. Donley said dog teams have found items in cargo that were being loaded on to the ships but wouldn't say what they were. Sometimes the dogs will indicate hits that turn out to be emergency flares or fireworks or the projectiles used to launch lines being loaded aboard. "These are legitimate items the company doesn't tell us about but they know when we find them we are doing our job," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek