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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: UBCM - Convention In Vancouver Fighting Crime And Drugs
Title:CN BC: UBCM - Convention In Vancouver Fighting Crime And Drugs
Published On:2005-10-04
Source:Williams Lake Tribune, The (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 11:32:09
UBCM - CONVENTION IN VANCOUVER FIGHTING CRIME AND DRUGS

VANCOUVER - Delegates started off the Union of B.C. Municipalities
convention Wednesday with a call for provincial help to deal with
their two main community drug problems, crystal meth addiction and
marijuana grow operations.

Led by delegates from Vancouver Island, the convention unanimously
endorsed a resolution calling for increased education about the
hazards of methamphetamine use and on-demand detox beds for addicts
who are seeking help to get off the drug.

Esquimalt councillor Ruth Lane told delegates about a recent tour of
Victoria streets with B.C. Solicitor-General John Les, in which they
met young people using meth.

"One hundred per cent of those kids said, get me off this drug, this
poison," she said.

The problem is that there are only five beds for youth drug detox for
all of Vancouver Island.

Saanich councillor Bob Leslie said education is need in schools to
reach the preteens who are now being exposed to the drug and don't
understand its health hazards.

"It's the 13-, 14-, 15-year-old boys and girls being open on the
street with sales," he said. "Mentally they can be ruined for life."

A delegate from the District of Kent gave an example of a "catch and
release" effect of law enforcement.

A meth addict broke into his mother's home, she called 9-1-1, but
police released him.

He broke in again and cut himself, threatening suicide, but he wasn't
held for medical reasons, and broke in a third time. "She eventually
had to flee the home."

The UBCM also endorsed resolutions from Kelowna and Abbotsford aimed
at eliminating residential grow operations.

Kelowna called for a provincially funded pilot project in Abbotsford
and Surrey to be extended province-wide.

The pilot project used a team of electrical inspectors, fire and
police staff to conduct safety inspections of grow houses, and shut
them down based on municipal fire code and other regulations.

Abbotsford Mayor Mary Reeves received unanimous support for her
community's call for better regulation of sales of hydroponic systems
used in marijuana grows.

Municipalities want sellers of hydroponic equipment to be required to
submit records of customers and transactions to local police, similar
to regulations governing pawn shops and second-hand stores.

The resolution notes that children are present in about 20 per cent of
marijuana grow operations, which contain often hazards such as
weapons, booby traps and other drugs as well as fire hazards
associated with wiring and hot lights.
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