Pubdate: Tue, 25 May 2010 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Matthew Claxton ANTI-POT TEAM WILL NEED WARRANTS: COURTS A new ruling will require warrants before electrical inspectors can search for pot. To get the Public Safety Inspection Teams (PSIT) back up and running, Langley Township will have to jump through a few extra hoops. On Thursday, the B.C. Court of Appeal ruled that Surrey's similar program violated the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The programs are based on sending municipal electrical inspectors and bylaw officials into homes with suspiciously high power consumption. In many cases - well over 90 per cent in Langley's experience - such homes were using the extra power to light and heat indoor marijuana grow operations. The judges ruled that at the very least, administrative warrants would be needed before allowing inspectors to search homes. However, it will not stop Langley from moving ahead with plans to revitalize its own PSIT unit. "We will incorporate the case into the bylaw," said Township administrator Mark Bakken. The case has clarified what is needed for municipal workers to inspect a home, Bakken said. He isn't sure yet who will issue the administrative warrants. They might be issued by a Justice of the Peace, or possibly by a third party appointed by the Township. Bakken said the Township still hopes to have a new bylaw written by June or July, and to get the team operating again by the fall. Langley's PSIT operated in 2008, and found more than 220 grow ops, along with some homeowners who simply had bad wiring, or a large number of power tools. Residents got advance notice of visits, and no criminal charges could be laid. In almost all cases, the grow ops they found had been hastily dismantled or abandoned. The intent of the teams was to eliminate the hazard caused by the bad wiring in grow ops, which often leads to fires. Another objective was to disrupt the growers' activities. The team was at first shut down after a firefighter, who had accompanied the team, was charged with theft for taking a flashlight from one home. The team's return was stalled as local officials waited to see the outcome of the Surrey court case. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D