News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: UCFV Looks At Meth Lab Menace |
Title: | CN BC: UCFV Looks At Meth Lab Menace |
Published On: | 2006-11-14 |
Source: | Abbotsford News (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 22:05:30 |
UCFV LOOKS AT METH LAB MENACE
University College of the Fraser Valley researchers are trying to
determine what tools in the global fight against meth have been most
successful.
"I think the extent of the (meth lab) problem in B.C. is probably
much more significant than it has ever been," the college's RCMP
research chair Darryl Plecas said.
"There's even some concern about the likelihood that we'll see more
of them," he added.
The extent of marijuana grow-ops, as well as the enforcement and
prevention models have become well-known, he argued, but the same
cannot be said about the murky underworld of meth labs, which are
often much harder to detect.
Canada's larger and more sophisticated type of "super lab" contrasts
sharply with the smaller, user-based "cook operations" more typical
in the U.S., Plecas noted.
As municipalities tighten up laws to prevent grow-ops from being set
up, some of those criminals may switch into meth production.
He has pointed to calls for tougher penalties and sentences emerging lately.
"So if you said, 'How many known meth labs could we see in a year?'
you could figure a dozen, which may not seem that many. But you don't
need that many meth labs before you cause havoc.
"It's conceivable that a single lab could supply the so-called market
demand for the entire province."
University College of the Fraser Valley researchers are trying to
determine what tools in the global fight against meth have been most
successful.
"I think the extent of the (meth lab) problem in B.C. is probably
much more significant than it has ever been," the college's RCMP
research chair Darryl Plecas said.
"There's even some concern about the likelihood that we'll see more
of them," he added.
The extent of marijuana grow-ops, as well as the enforcement and
prevention models have become well-known, he argued, but the same
cannot be said about the murky underworld of meth labs, which are
often much harder to detect.
Canada's larger and more sophisticated type of "super lab" contrasts
sharply with the smaller, user-based "cook operations" more typical
in the U.S., Plecas noted.
As municipalities tighten up laws to prevent grow-ops from being set
up, some of those criminals may switch into meth production.
He has pointed to calls for tougher penalties and sentences emerging lately.
"So if you said, 'How many known meth labs could we see in a year?'
you could figure a dozen, which may not seem that many. But you don't
need that many meth labs before you cause havoc.
"It's conceivable that a single lab could supply the so-called market
demand for the entire province."
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