Pubdate: Tue, 28 Oct 2008 Source: Peace Arch News (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Peace Arch News Contact: http://www.peacearchnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1333 Author: Kevin Diakiw Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) POLICE BANNED FROM HOME POWER INSPECTIONS A landmark B.C. Supreme Court decision has upheld Surrey's initiative to clamp down on homes suspected of containing marijuana grow operations. However, police are no longer allowed to attend the home inspections. Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis launched the initiative in March 2005 after a successful pilot project in this city. Homeowners with high power consumption are notified they will be subject to an inspection. If the homeowner refuses, or a grow operation is found, the home's electricity is shut off. In May 2007, the inspection team attended the home of South Surrey residents Jason Arkinstall and Jennifer Green, who said city staff could enter, but police could not. The team left without inspection, and shut off power to the home. Arkinstall took the city to court over it, raising questions about the constitutionality of the inspection program. In a judgment released Friday, Justice William Smart ruled the Safety Standards Amendment Act, which allows electrical inspection teams to enter residences suspected of containing grow operations, does not violate the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. However, bringing police along for the inspection breaches Section 8 of the Charter, which protects the public against unreasonable search, Smart found. "A police search of a private residence, even when conducted in aid of an electrical safety inspection, is intrusive," Smart wrote in his ruling. "The search and police presence during the safety inspection add a significant stigma to the inspection, imbuing it with an aura of criminality absent from a typical electrical safety inspection. These factors must be considered together with the very high expectation of privacy that attaches to a private residence." He also noted that the disconnection of power to the Arkinstall residence was a further breach of their rights. Garis said Monday he's extremely pleased with the ruling. "It's an absolute win," Garis said. "What was preserved first and foremost is the legislation." The Supreme Court ruling validates the working relationship between the provincial and municipal governments to shut down grow operations using the new method, Garis said. The fact police officers won't be able to come to the door is an easy workaround, he said. "It doesn't preclude them from being on the street," Garis said. "It doesn't preclude us from using security, we still haven't wrestled that one to the ground yet. Either way we can make work." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin