Pubdate: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Doug Ward Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) DRUG SETUPS EMPTY 13 OF 28 HOUSING UNITS Inspector Wants Prospective Buyers Of Townhouse Units Warned About Potential Risks VANCOUVER - The City of Vancouver is trying to clean up a townhouse complex in East Vancouver where nearly half the units were used as marijuana growing operations. Warnings stating "Not safe to occupy" have been posted on 13 of 28 doors at the strata unit near Kingsway and Joyce. "We've never had a strata building with this many marijuana grow-ops in it," said city building inspector Carlene Robbins. She said police raided the four-storey building at the corner of Senlac and Wessex in September and took away 3,700 marijuana plants. The police and city inspectors closed all the units and disconnected the power and gas. Robbins has recommended in a report going to a Vancouver council committee next week that the city file a notice against the title to the properties used for the marijuana operations. The notice would warn prospective buyers that the units were used as marijuana growing operations and that there could be potential mould contamination and other damage. The same notice would be applied to a 14th unit used as a clandestine ecstasy lab. So far none of the owners have responded to the city's actions. "The only response I got was from one innocent owner of one of the other units who is very upset. She has children and feels quite victimized. She said she can't afford to move." Robbins said that many of the growing operation units were owned by the same people and that she has been unable to determine whether the owners actually lived in the complex. One person owned at least four of the strata units -- two of which were used for growing operations and a third for making ecstasy. "The police told me that the units didn't appear to be occupied," said Robbins. "They were simply used as grow-ops." Chris Taulu, coordinator of the nearby Collingwood Community Policing Centre, said the 13 growing operations are a disaster for the owners of the other units. "If you want to move out of there, is someone going to want to buy it? "If you were a buyer, would you buy a unit in there?" Taulu said that growing operations always damage the building where they are located. "The water, the seepage, the mould. Can you imagine living in there and being in one of the other apartments and trying to sell them." Robbins said the growing operation owners are going to have to hire an environmental inspector to assess the mould contamination and cover the cost of bringing their units back up to code. She said the owners have already been fined $1,700 for the cost of the police bust. "If the owners don't respond to us and have the problems corrected, we'll have to talk to our legal department," she added. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman