Pubdate: Sat, 03 Oct 2015 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Darrell Bellaart Page: 4 STOMPING DRUG HOUSES Nanaimo Serves As Model for Cleaning Up Drug Houses When Ladysmith officials reached the end of their rope on controlling nuisance properties this summer, they turned to Nanaimo for ideas. They weren't the first. A number of B.C. cities have approached Nanaimo for advice on how to clean up drug houses and nuisance properties, thanks to a groundbreaking city bylaw developed nearly 10 years ago that is being held up as a model for other communities. Nanaimo city staff were getting overwhelmed with complaints about drug houses in various neighbourhoods and needed a unique solution. "The mayor and council were getting all kinds of calls, it was frustrating everyone," said recently retired city bylaws manager Randy Churchill. "Neighbourhoods were getting concerned and wanted change." Ted Swabey, then a senior city planner, directed staff members to pool ideas to find a solution. "We wanted a different model," Churchill said. "We had good experience at that time dealing with (marijuana) grow-ops. Now the problem was drug houses. "We looked at it legally, and drafted a bylaw based on the authority we had, tackling it from a nuisance perspective, not a crime perspective." Ultimately, the goal is eviction. The solution was to force owners to be responsible for any problems on their properties - putting the onus for dealing with bad tenants on landlords using a carrot-andstick approach. City staff knew many landlords were afraid to face problem tenants. And that is where the "carrot" comes in. The city started a process where it approaches the homeowner about the problem, asks the landlord to do something about it, and backs them up with access to resources, including sending staff to accompany them when confronting troublesome tenants. "We tell them: 'You have powers under the Residential Tenancy Act. You need to take control of your property. We're here to support you in dealing with it,'" Churchill said. Often a single meeting between police, the owner and the tenants ends the problem. Sometimes landlords are unco-operative. Then city staff has to play hardball. The "stick," in this case, is a bylaw that hits landlords directly in the pocketbook any time police or city staff is required to deal with their alcohol and drug-fueled tenants. The property gets placed on the nuisance property list, and, if city council approves it, the owner is liable for all enforcement costs. Costs add up quickly for any visits bylaw officers, police, firefighters, public works personnel, building inspectors and other staff and agencies make to nuisance properties. As landlords started to understand how ignoring the problem costs them money, fewer properties went before council. The number of "target" nuisance properties - those involving drug houses - ranged between 27 and 50 in the years immediately before the bylaw was introduced. Thirty-six properties went before council in 2007, 38 the following year and the number has been 27 or fewer ever since. Churchill said the best measure of success is the shorter time it takes to end problems in neighbourhoods. Where criminal charges were once needed to close a drug house, now the city bylaws department can end the problem in a few months, he said. It's not a panacea; residents still get impatient waiting for drug houses to be closed. But the solution has earned kudos from affected neighbourhoods. Drug houses can be frightening to neighbours, who have to deal with noise at all hours, the impact of the sex trade, violence between drug users and even intimidation when neighbours speak out about the problem. "Neighbours are concerned, fearful and frustrated that there doesn't appear to be any fast resolution to the problem," said Douglas Hardie, president of the South End Neighbourhood Association. "(The process) does take time, and it is frustrating," Hardie said. But he and his neighbours appreciate that the city "found a way, in conjunction with RCMP and other departments, to act." The program was showcased at the Union of B.C. Municipalities convention, and it's brought councillors and staff members from Lower Mainland cities and elsewhere to find out how Nanaimo controls a difficult problem. The town of Ladysmith is ready to tap into Nanaimo's experience. "There's a couple trouble houses that are a decade old in our community that have a significant effect on our community," said Ladysmith Mayor Aaron Stone. "The challenges are not only enforcement but costs associated with reducing neighbourhood impact." Churchill, who retired late last month, takes pride in the program's successes, which he says was a team effort, with strong support "partners" in other departments and agencies. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom