Pubdate: Wednesday, April 21, 1999 Source: Kelowna Daily Courier (Canada) Website: http://www.ok.bc.ca/dc/ Copyright 1999 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Author: Don Plant COPS CAN'T KEEP UP WITH B.C. DRUG TRADE If you're a drug user, B.C. is the Shangri-La of Canada. Statistics Canada reports B.C. had the highest rate of drug incidents of any province in the country in 1997. There were 430 drug incidents for every 100,000 British Columbians that year, nearly twice the national average. More startling is the high proportion of drug offences in B.C. compared to the rest of Canada. In 1997, our province was responsible for 25 per cent of all the cannabis incidents in the country, 28 per cent of the cocaine offences and 61 per cent of all heroin incidents. Our population comprises 13 per cent of the nation's. B.C.'s rate of drug charges is 26 per cent higher than the national average. But the drug problem is so prevalent, fewer than one in three cannabis offences resulted in criminal charges. "We don't prosecute nearly as many narcotics charges as they do percentage-wise in other provinces," said Kelowna prosecutor Michael Dirk. "There are more marijuana charges in Alberta and Saskatchewan than in B.C." The Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics compiled the figures after consulting with police departments across the country. The stats show the farther west you go in Canada, the higher the crime rate, said senior analyst Robert Allen. "It's the same in the U.S., B.C. has historically the highest crime rate in Canada," he said. "B.C. and California have very transient populations." Police aren't surprised by the trend. B.C. is known as a major exporter of marijuana and importer of heroin and cocaine. And they blame a lax court system, not enough police funding and the West Coast lifestyle as contributing factors. Kelowna RCMP are struggling to keep up with the volume of information pouring in on marijuana grow operations. The local Mounties take down an indoor dope farm about once a week. Yet they receive about a tip a day on where to bust next. "With the resources we have... we're only touching the tip of the iceberg," said RCMP spokesman Garth Letcher. "With today's legal standards, there's only so much we can do." Other provinces have stiffer sanctions, which attracts users to B.C. The milder climate and the fact you can get free hypodermic needles also helps, said RCMP Cpl. Fergus Rodine. "A lot of people can afford it. Loggers and fishermen work hard and party. There's a market for it. You don't go to Estevan, Sask. to be a drug dealer," he said. Local police concentrate more on stopping the suppliers than charging the users. They'd sooner go after someone trafficking cocaine than someone who grows pot because a coke addict is more likely to rob a bank, said Rodine. The heroin problem plaguing the Lower Mainland is also spilling over into the Okanagan. It's getting "more and more prevalent" in the Valley, said RCMP Cpl. Randy Hundt. But people can't rely on police alone to fix the growing drug problem, said Letcher. "There have to be changes among all partners involved, the community, police and judicial system," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea