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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Chilliwack Bylaw Gets Tough With Grow Ops
Title:CN BC: Chilliwack Bylaw Gets Tough With Grow Ops
Published On:2004-08-03
Source:Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 03:38:46
CHILLIWACK BYLAW GETS TOUGH WITH GROW OPS

Onus Put on Landlords to Keep Tabs on Their Buildings

VANCOUVER -- Chilliwack will respond to its reputation as "Colombia
North" today with what officials say is the toughest
anti-marijuana-growing bylaw in British Columbia.

Like other civic bylaws, it will put the onus on landlords to keep
tabs on their premises, but Coun. Sharon Gaetz says the city's
initiative goes further.

There is a $10,000 fine, which can be re-applied each day the offence
continues.

Water can be shut off. The city can fix up damaged homes and bill the
owner. Fire inspectors may enter if they believe the premises are unsafe.

There is a $200 fee for property inspection, $150 for occupancy
inspection and $2,500 to certify the building is safe.

The bylaw is up for first, second and third readings at a meeting of
council today. "Organized crime is running these operations. We don't
want them here," says Gaetz.

Mayor Clint Hames says Chilliwack is favoured because "we have single
family homes on large lots, where you're away from your neighbour."

Columbia Valley lies to the south, where drug-runners jump across the
border to Washington state, selling their half-kilos of pot for $5,000
Cdn, more than three times the price here.

Hames says, half-jokingly, that his biggest fear is $10,000 fines
being "paid in cash."

"When you're growing thousands of plants, that's chump change," he
says. Police estimate each house can bring in $130,000 worth of pot a
year.

With a population of 67,000 in the Fraser Valley about an hour east of
Vancouver, Chilliwack is a city of strip malls, 70-odd churches and
1,000 grow ops. RCMP Cpl. Sean Sullivan took down one pot growing
operation last week. It was concealed behind blanket-covered windows
in the basement of a commercial space.

Landlords are not overjoyed with the bylaws cropping up around B.C.,
but Lynda Pasacreta says it is necessary to protect
communities.

"Police show us over and over it happens to the same landlords," says
Pasacreta, of the B.C. Apartment Owners and Managers Association. "A
lot of landlords are not doing as much as they can."

She says credit, identification, references and sometimes criminal
records need to be checked.

Landlords in Chilliwack will not be held responsible if they can
demonstrate that they have done everything possible to monitor the
situation.

Changes to the Residential Tenancy Act last January allow landlords to
inspect every month providing that proper notice is given.

Other cities with anti-grow-op bylaws include Surrey, Vancouver, North
Van District, West Van, Burnaby and Coquitlam. Richmond is bringing
one forward.
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