Pubdate: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Matthew Claxton SAFETY TEAM'S FUTURE MURKY A Court Decision Puts The Existence Of Public Safety Inspection Team In Peril Langley's Public Safety Inspection Team (PSIT) is once again on hold, as the Township's lawyers examine a B.C. Supreme Court decision issued this week. The decision could block RCMP officers from participating in the program. "We are reviewing that, because the RCMP in our view are an integral part of the team," said Township Mayor Kurt Alberts. He doesn't want civic officials to enter suspected marijuana grow operations without a police escort. Langley's team was composed of a bylaw officer, two RCMP officers, an electrical inspector, a clerical worker and a firefighter. In some cases, weapons or even booby traps may be present, Alberts said. "That would be of great concern to me," said the mayor. Langley's RCMP are also talking to the Township about the matter. It remains to be seen how closely Langley's team followed the procedures of Surrey's team, and whether the decision applies here, said RCMP Insp. Richard Konarski. "The decision may have a narrow application, or a wider application," he said. He noted that police never entered a home with the teams to make arrests or gather evidence. Their only goal was to safeguard the other members of the team. "That was the sole purpose," Konarski said. Justice William Smart ruled this week on whether police can enter a home as part of an inspection team. The teams, which go by various names, have been used to indirectly crack down on owners suspected of growing pot. Homes with a large electrical consumption tend to be targeted, because they may be using the power for hydroponic grow lights. Pot growers often rewire the homes, and a number of fires have resulted from sub-standard wiring. In 2004, a Langley man died when electrocuted in a grow op in a shed on his property. Municipal authorities have a right to inspect homes for electrical problems, provided they give at least 24 hours notice. The legal case in Surrey began after a team composed of civic staff and firefighters arrived to inspect the home of Jason Arkinstall, a Hells Angels associate, in 2007. He refused to allow police to enter the property, and the rest of the team would not enter without an RCMP escort. BC Hydro then cut off Arkinstall's power. A later electrical inspection found no grow op, just numerous appliances. Smart ruled that the core concept of safety inspection teams does not violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. However, he ruled that the police did not have the authority to enter and search the property without a warrant. Smart also noted that it might fall to provincial governments to include police under entry warrants in certain situations. Entry warrants allow bylaw inspectors to do their work on private property. In Langley Township, as in most other jurisdictions, no charges have been laid as a result of a search by the inspection team. In most cases, even when a grow op is discovered, it is simply cleaned up by the police, and the building's owner is then ordered to pay the cost of clean-up, and to repair unsafe wiring. More than 220 properties were inspected in a year by Langley's PSIT before it was shut down in May. The shut down was ordered after a firefighter was accused of stealing a halogen work light from one of the homes being inspected. In most of the Langley cases, they have discovered hastily abandoned grow ops. In some cases, the high electricity bill turned out to be because of avid power tool use, hot tubs, or other issues. In Coquitlam, a similar team targeted a Lions Club fundraiser whose hot tub was using a lot of juice; he was told his power would be cut off. - --- MAP posted-by: dan