Pubdate: Mon, 01 Apr 2002 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: David Carrigg GROW-OPS LEAVING TOWN The number of former Vancouver marijuana growers turning up in Ontario is soaring, according to a community policing centre that monitors the Vancouver Police Department's Grow Busters operation. Chris Taulu, coordinator of the Collingwood Community Policing Centre, said she started getting phone calls from Ontario municipalities-including Kitchener/Waterloo and Windsor-last summer. "They knew about our community involvement in the Grow Busters project and they were asking us what we are doing right to get them out of the neighbourhood," said Taulu. "They are finding more grow-ops and those grow-ops are often being started or looked after by people who have left Vancouver." While Grow Busters may be forcing growers out of the city, operators aren't doing time for their crimes. In most of the 22 cases followed by the Collingwood Community Policing Centre, only four-to six-month conditional sentences were handed out, meaning the grower did no jail time. "The only good thing is they are being driven to Ontario," said Taulu, noting another draw for growers is the fact that a pound of pot goes for $10,000 in New York compared to $7,000 in California. The Collingwood Community Policing Centre has been involved with the Grow Busters operation since its inception in late 1999. Insp. Val Harrison, who is in charge of District 3, said Collingwood is in the heart of the city's pot growing territory because of the number of rental homes available. "The centre was getting people coming in all the time complaining about suspected grow-ops in their neighbourhood. They told us about it and that became the impetus to establish a force dedicated to closing down grow-ops," said Harrison. Between July, 2000-when Grow Busters officially formed-and January of this year, the team shut down about 650 grow-ops. But there are still believed to be 4,000 left throughout the city. Police have a list of 600 possible grow-ops that are being investigated. Harrison confirmed that only a small percentage of the grow-ops shut down result in criminal charges. "We seize the equipment and the plants but we can't take all the cases to court because it's often too time-consuming to link the person found at the scene to the crime." Since July, 2001, Grow Busters has seized $80 million worth of pot, with almost all the busts occurring in rental properties. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth