Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2003 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Adrienne Tanner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) TENANT FINED $300 FOR MEDICAL POT THAT IRKED SECOND TENANT Vandale Smith had Otta-wa's blessing to grow marijuana in his rented Surrey basement suite for medical purposes. His landlord, Anna Grant, who did not live in the home, was sympathetic and gave him written permission to nurture a crop for personal use. But the upstairs tenant, a mother with children, was less than understanding. Her objections to what she perceived would become a dangerous "grow-op" downstairs led her to complain to the Residential Tenancy Branch. That decision in turn prompted Smith and Grant to file their own complaint to the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal. In a recent ruling, the tribunal tossed out the complaint in which Smith and Grant alleged the tenancy-branch ruling constituted discrimination on the basis of physical disability. The arguments began a year ago when the upstairs tenant took her concerns to the branch. The upstairs tenant wanted her landlord to ensure that the downstairs suite continued to meet health and safety regulations. She also demanded compensation for any extra hydro costs resulting from the grow lights needed to nurture the dope. A tenancy branch arbitration hearing was held Dec. 18, according to a recently released human rights decision. "In addition to discussing the claim, the upstairs tenant testified that the smell of marijuana escapes through the floor to her premises and she worries about her children inhaling this contaminated air," the ruling states. The arbitrator upheld Smith's right to grow pot but ordered Grant to pay her tenant $300 to compensate her for the pungent odour. Grant passed on the cost to Smith, along with a note stating, "I realize how unfair this situation is, especially as neither you nor myself had received any complaint about smell . . ." Smith went to the human rights tribunal early this year to argue that the tenancy arbitrator's decision directly affected him, because he was asked to pay the compensation. A month later, Grant joined her tenant's human rights complaint. But the tribunal found that because the arbitrator ordered the landlord, not Smith, to pay the $300, Smith was not entitled to file a human rights complaint. At the same time, it found that Grant was not entitled to make a complaint either because it is Smith, not his landlord, who is physically disabled. The tribunal said the proper place to resolve the dispute is in the courts. Neither Smith nor Grant could be reached for comment yesterday. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin