Pubdate: Fri, 21 May 2010 Source: Now, The (Surrey, CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/surreynow Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1462 Author: Ted Colley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) COURT DECISION WON'T SNUFF POT PROGRAM, WATTS INSISTS SURREY - B.C.'s appeals court has struck down Surrey's anti-grow op inspection program, but Mayor Dianne Watts says the campaign will go on. In a unanimous ruling released Thursday, a five-member panel ruled Surrey's Electrical Fire Safety Inspection program violates Section 8 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Watts said the city will not abandon its crackdown on grow ops. "We may have to alter the way we do this. We'll adapt to the court ruling and carry on." The program was instituted in 2004 to combat the rapid spread of marijuana grow ops in Surrey. Teams made up of electrical and fire inspectors, bylaw officers and police would check residences with unusually high electrical consumption, a condition common to grow ops. Residents were given 72-hour notice of an impending inspection. If they agreed to allow access to the home, police would do a walk-through to make sure the home was safe for the inspectors, then the safety team would check that safety standards were met. Police officers were excluded from the inspection teams following a 2008 B.C. Supreme Court ruling that found fault with the practice. Now the entire program has been called into question. Chief Justice Lance Finch wrote that the home sits at the top of a "hierarchy of places" in which people have a reasonable expectation of privacy. The inspections carried out by the EFSI teams, he held, cross the line. "While the impugned inspections in this case are regulatory in nature, they constitute a considerable intrusion into an individual's reasonable expectation of privacy," Finch wrote. The court ruled an administrative warrant requiring the demonstration of reasonable grounds to show regulatory standards are not being met should be required before inspectors are permitted to enter a private residence. Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis said the ruling isn't a big hurdle to continuing a program he said is beneficial to public safety. A small number of administrative warrants were necessary to conduct inspections in the past, he said. "We go to a Justice of the Peace and get a warrant. We use the evidence that we use to decide on an inspection for the warrant. If that standard remains unchanged, then we shouldn't have any problems." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom