Pubdate: Thu, 15 Dec 2011 Source: Stayner Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 Metroland Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/generalform Website: http://www.simcoe.com/community/stayner Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3886 Author: Michael Gennings, Staff FIRE DEPARTMENT GETS ITS MAN CLEARVIEW TOWNSHIP - A man who ran a marijuana grow-op out of a rural Clearview Township home he rented has pleaded guilty to charges laid by the Clearview Fire Department. The man pleaded guilty last Tuesday in Wasaga Beach Provincial Court to three charges and was fined $2,000 on each count. Fire Chief Bob McKean said that under the Fire Protection and Prevention Act (FPPA), the man was charged with Plant Growing Without Design or Approval and Use of Temporary Wiring for Plant Production. Also under the FPPA and the Ontario Fire Code, he was charged with having no working smoke alarms in the home. McKean and a member of the Office of the Fire Marshal (OFM) visited the Highway 26 home, east of Stayner, immediately following a raid by the Ontario Provincial Police in May 2010. The visit allowed them to collect evidence by filming and photographing the home. McKean said that in June 2010 he traveled to the provincial corrections facility in Penetanguishene, where the man was incarcerated, and formally charged him with violations under the FPPA and the Ontario Fire Code. "We're taking a very pro-active approach and saying if you want to come to Clearview and you want to set up a grow-op or drug lab and get caught...you're going to be dealing with us. We're going to hit you with both barrels. We're taking a very staunch approach with this," McKean said. Laying charges following drug raids is a fairly new practice for Ontario's fire departments. "I'd say in the last two or three years the OFM is getting more involved. It's about enforcement," McKean said, adding: "This is the second one we've done for a grow-op in our community. The last one we did, we only got the smoke alarm [conviction] because our evidence collection wasn't as detailed as this time." When the OPP is ready to raid a grow-op or drug lab, McKean said they advise the Office of the Fire Marshal and its members then advise the local fire department. "Once the OPP goes in and makes the place safe, we can collect our evidence," he explained. Grow-ops and drug labs pose a real public safety threat, McKean said. "One of the things we want to highlight is these grow-ops create a hazard for the community, not just for our residents but our first responders," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.