Pubdate: Sun, 23 Sep 2007
Source: Burnaby Newsleader (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 Burnaby Newsleader
Contact:  http://www.burnabynewsleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1315
Author: Leslie Dickson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)

BBY GROW-OP STRATEGY IS TAKING TOO LONG: RANKIN

Review of City's Approach Still Going on After Two Years

Two years after Burnaby council asked staff to review  the city's
tools to prevent and shut down marijuana  grow operations, changes
have yet to be made.

Coun. Lee Rankin, who requested the review at a Sept.  19, 2005,
council meeting, said the process is taking  too long. Council passed
Rankin's motion two years ago,  asking staff to evaluate the bylaws
Burnaby had in  place to deal with the illegal operations, and to
review bylaws other municipal councils had enacted.

"I'm very concerned about the length of time we've been  working on
that," said Rankin.

Rankin said he requested the review at about the same  time cities
like Abbotsford and Surrey were introducing  legislation with more
teeth to deal with grow-ops,  including bylaws to hold landlords more
responsible if  operations are set up on their property.

"We should be proactive and look at the best examples  and get working
on this," said Rankin.

Rankin said property owners need to be held accountable  for grow-ops
established in their homes due to the  associated health and safety
risks, including dangerous  chemicals used to grow marijuana, and
increased  occurrences of mould, mildew and fires.

Burnaby's failure to introduce tougher bylaws to deal  with grow-ops
could also be drawing more operators to  set up shop in the city,
Rankin added.

"I'm sure the message is Burnaby is more lax when it  comes to
cracking down on grow-ops," said Rankin.

But Mayor Derek Corrigan said the city is actively  working to close
the illegal operations.

"We're always cracking down on grow-ops," said  Corrigan.

But Corrigan added drug enforcement is a federal, not a  municipal,
responsibility.

"Generally, we've left the enforcement of grow-ops to  the RCMP," said
Corrigan. "There have been no requests  from the RCMP that they wanted
us to do something  differently."

Dan Mulligan, Burnaby's assistant chief building  inspector, said city
staff don't go into grow-ops until  after RCMP have shut them down,
due to safety and  staffing concerns.

Lou Pelletier, Burnaby's assistant director of long  range planning,
said the review requested by council  two years ago is still underway
with city staff  examining the city's current zoning and building
bylaws' effectiveness in addressing grow operations,  reviewing other
municipalities' strategies, and  consulting with the local RCMP.

Pelletier expected the report outlining current policy  and suggested
changes to go before council by early  next year. Pelletier noted a
staff member's recent  maternity leave delayed the report.

Burnaby is also currently without another tool used by  other cities
to crack down on grow-ops.

An amendment made to the provincial Safety Standards  Act in April
2006 allows municipalities to find out  from BC Hydro which residences
are consuming an  unusually high amount of electricity, often
considered  a tell-tale sign of grow operations.

BC Hydro spokeswoman Gillian Robinson said high  consumption is
considered to be 93 kilowatt hours per  month or more aE" triple the
average residential  monthly consumption of about 31 kilowatt hours.

Robinson said 14 B.C. municipalities have agreements  with the power
company to release a list of addresses  that have an abnormally high
rate of electricity  consumption when municipalities request it,
including  several Metro Vancouver communities: Surrey,  Abbotsford,
Pitt Meadows, Delta, Coquitlam and West  Vancouver.

Many of these communities use this information as part  of a grow-op
eradication strategy, sending teams of  fire and bylaw and building
inspectors to investigate  residences with a suspiciously high level
of electrical  usage.

Cities who have agreements with BC Hydro can also pass  on this
information to local police and fire  departments.

Burnaby RCMP strategic communications officer Corp.  Jane Baptista
said police can only access electrical  consumption information from
BC Hydro on a single  residence basis through the provincial Freedom
of  Information and Protection of Privacy Act.

Baptista said Burnaby police currently use several  different tools to
identify and close grow-ops  including search warrants and tips from
the public.

"We welcome any tool that people choose to give us. In  the meantime,
keep the tips coming," said Baptista. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake