Pubdate: Sat, 07 Feb 2009 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2009 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/feedback/?form=lettersToTheEditorForm Website: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Christie Blatchford Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) SEEING POT THROUGH BENIGN SOFT LENS IGNORES HARD REALITIES OF GROW OPS I've never been big on marijuana. Though I did smoke it one long-ago adolescent summer, it was all about lust for the boy who was selling it, not out of any particular affection for weed. That particular boy, whatever he was selling, I would have bought just to be near him. Anyway, I found the whole accompanying exercise tedious, all that hideous pacifism and the cross-legged sitting and the stupid stoner vocabulary and the long drum solos. It made me crazy. I didn't touch the stuff again until seven or eight years ago and then again once last year; each time a toke or two was more than enough to remind me I didn't like it. And the drug has changed dramatically in the intervening years. It is usually estimated to be between 10 and 25 times stronger than it was in its hippie heyday. So, where dope once made me sleepy and crabby, today's version goes right to my tiny brain, and as a control freak, I can't have that. I am far better behaved on tequila. Still, I'm not sure I subscribe to the reefer madness/gateway drug theory (one toke and you're on a direct path to crack or heroin), and in a general way, I don't much give a hoot what people do in their own lives so long as it doesn't harm anyone else. Thus it is I reacted to the recent picture of that poor giant-footed swimmer Michael Phelps smoking dope out of a bong with a bit of a yawn. What was interesting about that to me was the fact that he was ratted out by whoever sold the photo to the News of the World, presumably someone who was with him at the time. This modern penchant for squealing on others - especially celebrity others - by taking and selling pictures of their various indiscretions is way more repugnant than any amount of dope-smoking. All that said, I don't see marijuana wholly through the benign soft lens of the Sixties. Dope is fabulously lucrative, its profits attracting the involvement of organized crime (now a big player in the business) with attendant weapons and violence. Illegal grow operations, with their electrical bypasses and jerry-rigged lights, pose a major fire hazard, a recent example occurring just this week, when a late-night blaze that razed a house in Toronto led to the discovery of a suspected grow op. Fires are almost 25 times more likely to start in a house with a grow op than a regular house. And the damage doesn't end there. Grow ops are also breeding grounds for disgusting moulds and fungi, with health problems for those who live nearby, and woe be to the poor home buyer who unknowingly buys such a place superficially tarted up for sale. Three and four years ago, in two separate parts of the country, grow ops found themselves with an unlikely opponent - their local friendly, beloved-by-everyone firefighters. In 2004 in Niagara Falls, a fireman was trapped in a fire and burned; the building turned out to be a grow op. Pat Burke, then the city's fire chief and now the Ontario Fire Marshal, had Deputy Chief Jim Jessop examine how the department could apply the Ontario Fire Code and Building Code to grow ops - and if necessary to the clandestine labs producing meth and ecstasy. With a new protocol in hand, the fire department then began supporting the local police when they moved to take down a grow op or lab, and the department would lay charges for any violations of the fire code. The fire service then enlisted the help of the City of Niagara Falls - through its building, legal and finance department - to make sure that no one would buy or rent such a home unless and until it was properly fixed up as good as new. They had remarkable success. At the height of their grow-op problem, Deputy Chief Jessop says, one in every 257 homes in the city contained an illegal marijuana grow operation. Between 2004 and 2009, working with the police and the municipality, Niagara has seen a 500-per-cent reduction in the number of grow ops. And the fire department has earned back more than $500,000 in fines and won more than 17 custodial sentences for those involved in grow ops. In fact, Deputy Chief Jessop says, the fire department has consistently received "more jail time and higher fines" for fire-code violations than the police have prosecuting offenders under the Criminal Code. About a year later, in Surrey, B.C., Fire Chief Len Garis noticed two disturbing trends: first, the police weren't able to respond to the increasing number of complaints from the public about grow ops, and second, the number of house fires in his city was rising, at one point averaging more than one fire a month associated with a grow operation. To cut a long story short, Surrey took a sober, considered approach much like Niagara Falls - it formed electrical-fire safety-initiative teams, composed of firefighters, electrical inspectors and police, and, acting on the unanswered tips police had received, began conducting inspections on homes where the hydro bills were at least three times higher than the norm. They gave notice, and did it in a lawful manner so that with one proviso (the police presence, which was found to violate homeowners' right to privacy and breach the Charter), the teams were deemed legal and proper by the Supreme Court of British Columbia last year. In the first three years, the teams inspected 1,002 addresses in Surrey, the police marijuana-enforcement teams hitting another 623, and sure enough, the number of fires began dropping (last year there were three or four), ads for hydroponic shops dropped, and in the process, the fire service recovered $3.7-million for Surrey taxpayers. "If [only]we can separate the product [marijuana] and the situation," Chief Garis says. "In terms of marijuana, I don't give a damn what people do. But the fires, tampering with the electrical system, drive-by shootings" that are the byproducts of grow ops are genuine public-safety issues. Mysteriously, municipalities in the B.C. Interior and on Vancouver Island have recently reported huge increases in hydro consumption. Grow-op owners there would be wise to remember that old bit of Sixties' wisdom: Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean someone's not out to get you. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin