Pubdate: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 Source: North York Mirror (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 North York Mirror Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/northy/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2202 Author: David Nickle FOR SALE: FORMER GROW HOUSE? City Wants Home Buyers To Know If Building Was Used For Growing Pot Three bedrooms, two baths, central air and vacuum - and a former illegal marijuana grow house. Soon that last crucial bit of information will be something potential homeowners and occupants will have available to them, as a part of the City of Toronto's beefed up procedures for dealing with grow houses. "This will protect people from occupying properties that are not healthy or safe," said Ann Borooah, Toronto's chief building official. "And it may protect them from purchasing a property they don't know is a potential health hazard." Under measures introduced this week, the city will now be registering property standard orders on title at the Land Registry Office. As well, the city will be preventing occupancy of any grow operations until they're considered safe. "We're dealing with occupancy in areas where we've got issues of safety that haven't been complied with," Borooah said. "We're looking at a number of situations where we may provide orders to prohibit occupancy." Marijuana grow houses have cropped up across Toronto over the past few years with a high concentration in Scarborough and the northwestern parts of North York. Converting the houses to a marijuana grow operation involves, among other things, making illegal and potentially dangerous electrical connections outside the home, and also often leads to mould problems that may not be visible to a prospective buyer or tenant. "The risks are around mould and a lack of ventilation, and electrical alterations to the property that may not be safe as well as structural issues," Borooah said. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPF Florida)