The vexed question of public security of grow-op-busting hit for home inspection teams youth mother Amy Keer last Thursday.

Last Wednesday (January 26), a town settlement agent informed Keer, who is eight months pregnant and has two children aged two to four, inspect the home. It has been reported due to the high electrical and water use, she said.

She informed the property management company who rents the House on the street James. They sent a plumber and an electrician, who found no faults. Keer verified its hydroelectric project of the Act, and it does not reflect high usage.

The inspection team included four Abbotsford Police cars and six officers, who first searched the residence. They were followed by a city, settlement agent construction inspector, agent of fire prevention, who performed their inspections.

Keer said that it was annoying to have neighbors to see her strong police presence. She was in tears for Deskbar.

“They shouldn’t be able to come like that in my house,” she told The News.

It lasted about 15 minutes, nothing has been found, and it faces without inspection fees.

Keer asked what prompted research and declared regulation, high water use. She asked if she could see the documents reflecting that and he said that it would have to get to City Hall.

She called the research a “waste of time and a waste of money”.

Regulations City Manager Gordon Ferguson discuss no details of any research team.

With a litigation be commenced against team inspection Mission, Ferguson has recently reviewed the activities of the Abbotsford with The News Group.

He said that the team had been reduced back and especially work carried out after the end of the Abbotsford Police had – a growth-op, inspect the House for security, vulnerabilities by putting a notice on the title and in perception of $4,500 in costs of inspection.

Ferguson has confirmed that the team will be always a minimum number of search based on high hydro readings, water use, condensation on windows, public boards or any other evidence.

He said a lessee would receive documents showing HWM readings, but the owner of an immovable may be obtained.

Ferguson said that inspections are usually not emotionally upsetting enough to have people in tears.

“We will force our way”, he said.