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Pubdate: Tue, 22 Jan 2008 Source: Standard, The (St. Catharines, CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Standard Contact: http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/676 Author: Grant LaFleche, Standard Staff TIPS ON GROW-OPS DRAINING CRIME STOPPERS Marijuana Is Slowly Bleeding Crime Stoppers Of Niagara. The community-based tip line's raison d'etre is to generate tips for police and pay cash rewards for those that result in an arrest or conviction. But Crime Stoppers has a limited budget. Most of the around $23,000 it needs to run its operations and pay for tips comes through fundraising. "We're not funded by the government, we are not an arm of the police," said Crime Stoppers of Niagara chairman Stu Black. "We get our money through donations." So it's simple math. The more successful tips that come in, the more money Crime Stoppers pays out. And in the last two years, it has been paying out a lot thanks to tips about pot-growing operations. "I was very concerned this past summer that we were in real danger," said Black. "We are getting so many tips about marijuana growing operations, particularly in St. Catharines and Niagara Falls, that we've been paying out more." Black said the exact figures on how much Crime Stoppers of Niagara has paid for grow-op tips aren't being released. However, he said it was enough that in the summer the organization was facing a financial crisis. With some funding from the Niagara Regional Police Services Board, Crime Stoppers hosted a training conference in June that raised enough money to get the organization out of trouble. More recently, a successful fundraising effort in conjunction with the Niagara IceDogs helped raise money to offset the costs of paying for grow-op tips. While the NRP provides an officer who co-ordinates activities between Crime Stoppers and the police - including taking and processing tips that come in through its 1-800 number - the service does not operate or fund Crime Stoppers. "We're an entirely volunteer organization," Black said. "There is a real misconception that Crime Stoppers is a government organization or somehow run by the police. "It's still a real struggle year to year," said Black. For example, the organization used to have a van marked with the Crime Stoppers logo that helped raise its community profile. But the van was lost to an accident a few years ago and Crime Stoppers has been unable to find a sponsor for a new one. He said Crime Stoppers of Niagara is trying to raise its profile and bring in new volunteers to help the organization build a better future. "You always have a core of people who do a tremendous amount of good work, but new blood always helps you look at things from a fresh perspective," he said. Ironically, the lure of being paid for tips has resulted in what Black describes as the "bad guys" ratting on each other, particularly when it comes to marijuana grows. "Some people who know there is a grow-op in their neighbourhood just want it out of there and they don't care about the money," Black said. "For others, well, they want the money and that includes the bad guys." Whatever the reason for the tips, however, Black says Crime Stoppers wants them. "Crime Stoppers does make the community a better a place, and that's why I'm involved," Black said. "And those inside tips are often very important." Tips are completely anonymous, Black said. Crime Stoppers gives a tipster a special ID code that is the only way the organization tracks tips. "So when a reward is paid out, the person takes their number to the bank we deal with and they are given cash, no questions asked," he said. Niagara Regional Police Chief Wendy Southall said Crime Stoppers is invaluable to police. "It's absolutely an important service and I and my staff certainly support it," said Southall. "Any information is useful for our members in the course of their investigations." But just as Crime Stoppers has its own problems, it's not always smooth sailing for the police, either. Southall said it is sometimes difficult to keep an officer in the co-ordinator's position. "If we have a member in that position who wants to move on with his or her career, there isn't anything I can do about that," Southall said. And because the service assigns only one person to that position, when that officer is not on duty, no one is there to process tips. "There is an answering service that will take the tip and forward it to the co-ordinator who can then process it later on," Black said. Southall said she hasn't talked to Black specifically about finding ways to have someone take tips when the co-ordinator is not working, but said she is willing to work with Crime Stoppers to find solutions. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom