News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Call for Fire Services to Be Given Addresses of Legal Pot Growers |
Title: | CN BC: Call for Fire Services to Be Given Addresses of Legal Pot Growers |
Published On: | 2010-01-08 |
Source: | Province, The (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2010-01-25 23:35:55 |
CALL FOR FIRE SERVICES TO BE GIVEN ADDRESSES OF LEGAL POT GROWERS
Bad Wiring Can Lead To Grow-Op Blazes
Fire chiefs across the country are calling on Health Canada to give
them information about legal marijuana grow-ops with the aim of making
their communities safer.
Health Canada licenses people who need marijuana for medical reasons,
or a designated grower to grow the drug, but their locations are kept
secret for privacy and safety reasons.
Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis said legal growers' addresses should be
available to fire and electrical inspectors, especially if they are in
residential areas.
"Electrical systems are being altered for the lights in the grow
operations," Garis told The Province on Thursday. "Safety issues are
absent from the federal licensing process and we're asking for that
process to be connected."
Surrey became one of the first places in Canada to take advantage of a
court ruling allowing electrical inspectors to look for illegal
marijuana grow-ops based on electricity-consumption data.
"Through our processes for inspecting homes of illegal growers, we
have discovered nine [legal grow-ops] in Surrey," said Garis,
spokesman for the B.C. Fire Chiefs Association on marijuana issues.
"In four of them the electrical inspector disconnected the power
immediately because of the shoddy workmanship and concerns he had over
the safety of the [electrical] systems."
He said between 2003 and 2005, Surrey firefighters dealt with 17 fires
a year sparked by badly wired grow-ops. That fell to four last year.
Jeet-Kei Leung, a spokesman for the B.C. Compassion Club, said Health
Canada could do more to ensure the medicine is grown safely.
"We certainly agree that there needs to be safe operation of any
cultivation facilities for medicinal cannabis," he said. "Currently
there are no resources or support being offered around either
effective use as a medicinal user or around production."
"We understand the privacy issues and the medical reasons, we're not
disputing any of that," Garis said. "We're simply saying, 'Let's do it
safely.'"
Bad Wiring Can Lead To Grow-Op Blazes
Fire chiefs across the country are calling on Health Canada to give
them information about legal marijuana grow-ops with the aim of making
their communities safer.
Health Canada licenses people who need marijuana for medical reasons,
or a designated grower to grow the drug, but their locations are kept
secret for privacy and safety reasons.
Surrey Fire Chief Len Garis said legal growers' addresses should be
available to fire and electrical inspectors, especially if they are in
residential areas.
"Electrical systems are being altered for the lights in the grow
operations," Garis told The Province on Thursday. "Safety issues are
absent from the federal licensing process and we're asking for that
process to be connected."
Surrey became one of the first places in Canada to take advantage of a
court ruling allowing electrical inspectors to look for illegal
marijuana grow-ops based on electricity-consumption data.
"Through our processes for inspecting homes of illegal growers, we
have discovered nine [legal grow-ops] in Surrey," said Garis,
spokesman for the B.C. Fire Chiefs Association on marijuana issues.
"In four of them the electrical inspector disconnected the power
immediately because of the shoddy workmanship and concerns he had over
the safety of the [electrical] systems."
He said between 2003 and 2005, Surrey firefighters dealt with 17 fires
a year sparked by badly wired grow-ops. That fell to four last year.
Jeet-Kei Leung, a spokesman for the B.C. Compassion Club, said Health
Canada could do more to ensure the medicine is grown safely.
"We certainly agree that there needs to be safe operation of any
cultivation facilities for medicinal cannabis," he said. "Currently
there are no resources or support being offered around either
effective use as a medicinal user or around production."
"We understand the privacy issues and the medical reasons, we're not
disputing any of that," Garis said. "We're simply saying, 'Let's do it
safely.'"
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