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Pubdate: Tue, 10 Jan 2006 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://209.115.237.105/kelowna/publish/include/letterToEditor.php Website: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) RENT-A-NARC TAKES AIMAT GROW-OPS The local Crime Stoppers board is going cap in hand to the community in an effort to dismantle the growing number of grow-ops and crystal-meth labs. The cash-for-tips program is the first in North America to seek private donations from companies and individuals to offset the costs of new police officers, Vern Nielsen, the board's vice-president, said Monday. Starting in July, three new RCMP constables will work exclusively on Crime Stoppers tips that point to drugs and property crimes in the Central Okanagan. Private donors have contributed more than $60,000 to the $250,000 annual cost of the three officers. A public fundraising campaign begins in February to make up the shortfall. The Crime Stoppers board conceived the Safer Communities Initiative when members realized the rate of anonymous tips was growing while the rate of closed files dropped. "Every day, we get further behind," Nielsen said. "We were concerned that if the RCMP wasn't responding to tips on a timely basis, the credibility of Crime Stoppers was at risk." The local Mounties just got approval from city council to hire eight new officers this year (in addition to the Crime Stoppers officers), but they're apparently not enough. With 390 calls per constable each year, Nielsen estimates the Central Okanagan has only two thirds of the officers it needs. About 197 will work in the district by the fall. Meanwhile, organized-crime groups become more entrenched. Two of the new officers will work alongside the RCMP's six-member drug section. The third officer will tackle property crime, which is often related to drugs. "By closing down the grow-ops, meth labs and property crimes, we'll make Kelowna a difficult place for organized crime," said Nielsen, who is running as a Liberal in the federal election. RCMP Supt. Bill McKinnon admitted Monday that in the last year, drug officers have gone after cocaine dealers at the expense of marijuana grow-ops an activity he links with organized crime. "We have all kinds of grow-op tips we can't follow up on," McKinnon said, "but we can do a whole lot better job than we have done in the past year responding to tips." A record 951 tips were called in to Crime Stoppers in 2005, said co-ordinator Bruce Baron. He was unable to say how many of those files police didn't pursue. The federal government is paying 30 per cent of the salary and equipment costs, $120,000 in total, for each new officer. The board's goal is to pay the remaining 70 per cent through donations and government grants until the provincial government absorbs the costs in its budget in the next couple of years. "Government should be doing it. Unfortunately . . . this is an urgent matter. That's why Crime Stoppers is getting involved, because the tips aren't responded to quickly enough right now," Nielsen said. "If there's no response, people will stop phoning in. It will implode the whole program." Anonymous sources called in 392 drug-related tips to Crime Stoppers last year. Even though only 24 arrests were made, $1.1 million of drugs were seized. Nielsen estimates more than 500 grow-ops exist in the Central Okanagan. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin