Pubdate: Fri, 24 Jul 2009 Source: DrugSense Weekly (DSW) Website: http://www.drugsense.org LETTER OF THE WEEK LARGE RANGE OF ERROR WITH GROW-OP INSPECTIONS By Kirk Tousaw Editor: Your article on the Richmond grow-op bylaw program contained some interesting facts and assertions. I found it particularly telling that 89 per cent of the grow-op inspections in 2008 revealed no evidence of grow-ops. That's a pretty large range of error if the point of the inspections is to find grows. Of 54 houses searched, 48 homeowners were totally innocent of wrongdoing yet suffered the indignity, hassle and stigmatization associated with a search of their private residences. And this is a program the city wants to revive? The assertion that I found most interesting was that the city considered this program a success. The evidence of success appears to be a decline in the number of high-power-using homes which is assumed to mean a decline in the number of grows. The alternative explanation, and the more likely one, is that growers have gone back to stealing power to avoid detection. Stealing power, by the way, is the most dangerous part of indoor growing. I find it ironic that the city's "safety oriented" program is actually driving people into less safe practices. The bottom line is that getting rid of residential grow-ops is only going to happen when we come to our senses, legalize and regulate the marijuana industry and put the growing into the hands of farmers and legitimate businesses rather than black-market cultivators. Kirk Tousaw Vancouver Pubdate: Sat, 18 Jul 2009 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n714/a06.html Source: Richmond Review, The (CN BC) - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake