News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: PUB LTE: Only One Way To End 'Grow Op' Problem |
Title: | CN ON: PUB LTE: Only One Way To End 'Grow Op' Problem |
Published On: | 2009-12-04 |
Source: | Intelligencer, The (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2009-12-05 17:17:32 |
ONLY ONE WAY TO END "GROW OP" PROBLEM
The laundry list of alleged harms resulting from indoor cannabis
production that Det-Const. Marcotte laid out was certainly
frightening. Accepting that these harms are, in fact, accurate and
not simply overblown fear-mongering, the question that must be asked
is: What do we do about it?
We've tried the prohibition route: police raids, arrests,
prosecutions, jailing. The problem is that there always seem to be
more people willing to take the risk of jail to fill the demand for
this plant. Police simply can't keep up.
Indeed, the very existence of suburban marijuana production is a
result of the need to hide from police detection. This means our
current approach creates a vicious cycle: growers use basements and
electricity theft to hide from police, who bust growers which leads
to more growers taking their place in different houses.
And since our appetite for marijuana is quite high (2 million
Canadians are weekly consumers), the situation isn't likely to change
unless we change our policies.
Now imagine if marijuana production was not illegal. The incentive to
grow in basements would immediately disappear. Marijuana would be
grown in greenhouses and on farms -- just like every other commercial
crop. No more destroyed houses, no more mouldy air "blowing into
your kid's window."
Aren't those goals we all share, regardless of how we feel about
marijuana use?
Kirk Tousaw
Executive Director,
Beyond Prohibition Foundation
The laundry list of alleged harms resulting from indoor cannabis
production that Det-Const. Marcotte laid out was certainly
frightening. Accepting that these harms are, in fact, accurate and
not simply overblown fear-mongering, the question that must be asked
is: What do we do about it?
We've tried the prohibition route: police raids, arrests,
prosecutions, jailing. The problem is that there always seem to be
more people willing to take the risk of jail to fill the demand for
this plant. Police simply can't keep up.
Indeed, the very existence of suburban marijuana production is a
result of the need to hide from police detection. This means our
current approach creates a vicious cycle: growers use basements and
electricity theft to hide from police, who bust growers which leads
to more growers taking their place in different houses.
And since our appetite for marijuana is quite high (2 million
Canadians are weekly consumers), the situation isn't likely to change
unless we change our policies.
Now imagine if marijuana production was not illegal. The incentive to
grow in basements would immediately disappear. Marijuana would be
grown in greenhouses and on farms -- just like every other commercial
crop. No more destroyed houses, no more mouldy air "blowing into
your kid's window."
Aren't those goals we all share, regardless of how we feel about
marijuana use?
Kirk Tousaw
Executive Director,
Beyond Prohibition Foundation
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