Pubdate: Fri, 14 May 2010 Source: Nelson Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Nelson Daily News Contact: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/section/nelson0303&template=letter Website: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/288 Author: Matthew M. Elrod Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n356/a06.html BETTER TO HAVE GROWS RUN BY HIPPIES To the editor, Concerning the proliferation of cannabis "grow ops" in Nelson, when Police Chief Dan Maluta asked his officers "if it would break their hearts not to go the Criminal Code route, and we were able to rid the neighbourhoods of these places through other means, like through use of the grow op bylaw," they answered, "No, absolutely not. The ultimate goal is to get rid of the grow." This is marvellous news, because it means the police finally support the recommendations of the Special Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs, who in 2002 concluded that the only way to rid Canadian communities of illicit cannabis growing operations is to legally regulate the herb. To put the problem into perspective, according to the RCMP, annual Canadian cannabis production is roughly estimated at between 1,399 and 3,498 metric tonnes. About 50 tonnes were seized in 2007, less than 5 per cent, less than cultivators lost to plant diseases and pests, and less than distributors would have paid in GST if cannabis were legal. At best, municipal bylaws cause cultivators to move to neighbouring jurisdictions. At worst, they cull out the least "organized" growers, attract gangs, who prefer to sell cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine, increase black market violence, and cause cultivators to adopt more dangerous and destructive counter-measures, such as the use of rented homes that they can afford to abandon and the theft of electricity. If all goes as planned, there may be a brief, localized scarcity of weed, and an increase in the "street value." However, when the price of cannabis rises, the economic incentive to grow and import rises in tandem. Cannabis consumers substitute other drugs, primarily alcohol, pharmaceuticals and solvents, causing addiction, violence, overdose deaths, domestic abuse, traffic accidents and all the other social costs associated with alcohol to rise as well. More pragmatically, does anyone know how much the Nelson economy depends on the cannabis industry? Can you afford to rid Nelson of B.C.'s largest cash crop and the cost of importing pot from Castlegar and Grand Folks? Like many police chiefs before him, Dan Maluta might find himself looking back fondly on a time when his cannabis market was run by non-violent, domestic hippies. Matthew M. Elrod Victoria, B.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom