Pubdate: Wed, 21 May 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Darah Hansen, Staff Writer A LIKELY STORY A huge pot-growing operation is busted in a tiny B.C. town. Good news? Not to the chamber of commerce. Seems like a lot of folks were making a pretty good living off the land It hasn't always been easy attracting new folks to the tiny northern community of Likely, B.C. The little gold rush town of about 250 residents -- located about 100 kilometres east of Williams Lake -- has seen more than its fair share of economic hard times in recent years with the collapse of the forest industry and a temporary shutdown in gold and copper mining. "A few years ago, you couldn't sell a house in Likely for $80,000," said Rob Hood, a longtime Likely resident and president of the local Chamber of Commerce. Then along came the pot growers and things started looking up. Properties left vacant as work dried up were suddenly bought up, and many locals found themselves employed putting in elaborate water systems and erecting huge windowless, barn-like structures on the land. Few questions were asked -- even when locked gates were installed across driveways, making it abundantly clear the town's new occupants weren't interested in anybody dropping in for coffee unannounced. "Everybody was happy," said Hood. Maybe not everybody. According to police, it was from some very unhappy citizens of Likely that they first learned of the growing operations. "It was definitely a mixed bag," Const. Craig Douglass of the RCMP North District said of public reaction. "Some liked this group being there ... and some were concerned enough to phone police." This week, a press release from the solicitor-general's office proudly announced that a rural property in Likely has become the largest marijuana-growing operation ever subject to civil forfeiture action. The forfeiture -- which means the seized land and buildings are turned over to the province -- comes almost two years after RCMP busted a massive marijuana operation on the one-hectare (2.5-acre) property on Cedar Creek Road, Likely's most upscale neighbourhood. The land and buildings were valued in 2008 at more than $250,000. "There were plants everywhere ... Virtually every corner of the residence and certainly the outbuildings were being used," said Douglass. More than 5,560 marijuana plants were seized during the November 2006 police raid. Douglass said the sheer size of the operation was enough to produce a marijuana cigarette for everyone in the province every year. Douglass said the growing operation is one of several in Likely -- many of which have since been busted, with more civil forfeitures possible. In March, two men -- 37-year-old Sambath Om and 42-year-old Kim Noun, both of Surrey -- were ordered to serve one year in jail in connection with the 2006 bust. Charges are pending against several other individuals -- all of whom, police say, belong to the same Vancouver-based organization. On Tuesday, Solicitor-General John van Dongen hailed the court's decision to grant forfeiture of the property as a victory for law-abiding citizens. No one wants growing operations and the associated crime in their community, van Dongen said, adding, "I'm hopeful that the public will see that we are working hard, through a variety of legal challenges, to control criminal activity better than we have in the past." Police, too, were pleased with the court's ruling -- the first successful property forfeiture in northern B.C. "By us shutting down the property, it eliminates that potential for those drugs to be on the streets. There is one less place to grow marijuana," said Douglass. But Hood, like many others in Likely, isn't so sure all the legal fuss was necessary. He called the growers "nice, polite guys," who didn't cause any trouble -- an assessment police didn't refute. "They were not violent, even to us," said Douglass. Now, since the various raids, many properties around town are once again sitting vacant and unkempt. Hood said the town is working hard to diversify from its once resource-based economy to one focused more on tourism. Likely has a lot going for it: It's on the original gold rush trail, has the only genuine Chinese ghost town in the country and is home to some of the best sports fishing and kayaking in the world, according to Hood. "We're trying to develop all that stuff," he said, adding, only half-jokingly: "We have to, now that the number-one crop is gone." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin