NPD To Move Ahead With Grow Op Bylaw Despite Court Of Appeals Ruling

The Nelson Police Department is forging ahead with proposed legislation on a marijuana grow operation bylaw despite a recent BC Court of Appeal ruling that says it would violate the rights of the individual against unreasonable search and seizure.

NPD Inspector Henry Paivarinta said the province's Safety Standards Act will still be the basis of the proposed bylaw to ferret out grow operations in the city, even though the Court of Appeal in Surrey said entry and inspection of homes without a warrant violates section eight of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The Safety Standards Act allows municipal electrical and fire inspectors to demand entry into anyone's home to do an electrical safety inspection if they suspect the home is being used for marijuana-growing.

Insp. Paivarinta said the appeal ruling that struck down provisions of a provincial law in Surrey will only add administrative process to the proposed bylaw in Nelson, and NPD and city council will still be going ahead with passing it into legislation.

If needed, warrants are still accessible through the Safety Standards Act and will fall in line with the electrical fire and safety inspection program they have in Surrey, he said.

"It will just require more legwork on their behalf, but I think the program is a valid program," he said. "It's a safety program. The police aren't even involved in the process and they don't even come on the property. It's conducted under the Safety Standards Act and that's why fire officials attend along with the electrical inspector."

The likelihood of the proposed bylaw ending up in a court challenge is possible, Insp. Paivarinta said, since every system and bylaw that is in place is open for challenge in the courts.

However, concerns the police will be showing up for each inspection is unfounded, he pointed out. The only time the police would get involved in an inspection is when a situation would arise that would jeopardize the safety of the officials doing the inspection – either through threats or they are assaulted on location.

"People have this misconception that police are accompanying them on these inspections, and that's not the case. Police aren't coming along with them," Insp. Henry Paivarinta said.

Out of 1,000 or so residences subject to inspections in Surrey – where the marijuana grow operation bylaw was instituted as a pilot – only four times have police required to get an administrative warrant to enter a property.

Under the Safety Standards Act, within 48 hours after posting a notice a fire official and electrical inspector can enter a residence if there is believed to be a grow operation in the residence. For police to enter they would still need a warrant, and would not be able to enter within 48 hours.


NewsHawk: Ganjarden: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: Nelson Daily News
Author: Timothy Schafer
Contact: Nelson Daily News
Copyright: 2010 Glacier Interactive Media
Website: NPD to move ahead with grow op bylaw despite Court of Appeals ruling

* Thanks to MedicalNeed for submitting this article
 
No.

Strike this down. The people do not consent to this.

The drug war has brainwashed people to the point that no-one cares for civil liberties and fundamental rights.
End the drug war. This cannot be allowed to continue.
 
If this by law is allowed to pass I feel all the people of Nelson Bc should just line up and sign power of attorney to the govt because if things like this continue to be allowed it wont be long before we have no rights whatsoever at which point the govt will probably start charging us a tax to breathe clean air.
 
Umm... If the grow setups are found to be well within the strictures of Canada's versions of the National Electric Code and the same for the plumbing and whatever else applies, do they just go away empty-handed?

Also, are all of the NPD officers and employees that might conceivably be performing such inspections qualified to perform them according to Canada's sanctioning/testing bodies? I would assume that they'd need to be qualified as electricians, plumbers, HVAC techs, etc. If not... Someone should sue the NPD on the grounds that they are not qualified to perform all of their tasks. If you decide that you're authorized to do something, you better first become qualified to do it.
 
Back
Top Bottom