Pubdate: Wed, 19 Sep 2007 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1056/a08.html Author: Matthew M. Elrod LEGALIZE, TAX THE MARIJUANA INDUSTRY I gather your parents never taught you that scratching a bug bite makes it worse. ("Driving them out," Sept. 12). In my day, hippies smoked low-grade Mexican weed, complete with seeds and stems. When the U.S. all but closed the Mexican border, traffickers switched to the Caribbean sea lanes. When the U.S. sprayed Mexican fields with the herbicide paraquat, traffickers switched to Colombian sources (and cocaine) and North Americans began to grow their own higher quality cannabis. When the police cracked down on the outdoor farms, the cultivators moved indoors, adopted hydroponics and bred stronger strains. A four-year study of police activity found that the number of grow ops in B.C. is increasing by an average of 36 per cent a year, outpacing efforts to close them down. According to the RCMP, the national annual seizure average is about 1.3 million plants. This translates into an annual production estimate ranging between 1,070 and 2,676 metric tonnes of herbal cannabis. Only 51 tonnes were seized in 2005, which works out to less than seven per cent. As with wolves and their prey, police predation culls out the weak. Grow ops get bigger and growers become more "organized." Large busts may cause other distribution networks to compete, sometimes violently, for the unmet demand, or they may create openings for new, more robust, distribution networks. When the methamphetamine labs move in, we will miss the cannabis growers. When all goes as planned, interdiction causes a localized shortage and subsequent rise in cannabis prices. When the value of cannabis rises, the incentive to grow and traffic rises. Einstein defined insanity as continuing to do the same things and expecting different results. Canadians should urge Ottawa to adopt the recommendations of the Special Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs: Legalize, tax and regulate the cannabis trade. Matthew M. Elrod Victoria - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake