Pubdate: Fri, 11 May 2007 Source: Prince George Free Press (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.pgfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2135 Author: Arthur Williams LANDLORDS VICTIMS TOO A growing call by the public to hold landlords financially accountable when a crack shack, grow operation or meth lab sets up in their property is off base, according to Rental Owners and Managers Society of B.C. CEO Al Kemp. Landlords are the victims of organized crime groups which run these illicit operations, Kemp said, often causing major damage to the rental property. "Too often there is a knee-jerk reaction to blame landlords," Kemp said. "We don't cause grow operations or methamphetamine labs - the people in the houses do." Under the Residential Tenancy Act, landlords have the right to inspect their property monthly - with 24 hours notice. If the tenant refuses to answer the door, the landlord must give a further 96 hours notice that he or she will inspect the property without the tenants' consent, Kemp said. There are approximately 600,000 rental units in B.C. and less than 0.1 per cent are being used for illegal drug operations, he said. The Act protects the large majority of tenants, which are law-abiding, from random inspections. "Once the people are in, it's a very difficult process to evict them," he said. "The landlord needs to get significant evidence of illegal activity." Knowing someone is selling or making drugs in a property is a long way from being able to prove it in court. And evicting tenants can be dangerous. On Tuesday, Nanaimo landlord Milan Milanovic, 75, died of injuries sustained while trying to evict a 55-year-old male tenant from an apartment. A methamphetamine 'cook' can, "set up a lab the size of two kitchen tables in half an hour and take it down in five minutes," he said. Meth labs produce toxic waste which is often dumped on the property and labs can explode, causing major damage to the property. "I've seen a house lifted off its foundation and moved six inches by an explosion," Kemp said. Crack shack operators can conceal their drugs even easier, he said. Grow operations are harder to hide, but can turn around major profits in a short period of time - then be abandoned for another site. "If you know what you're doing, it takes about eight weeks to plant, grow and harvest a marijuana crop," Kemp said. "If you have two crops... the house is ruined." The heat and humidity cause mould and black rot, while the pesticides and herbicides can build up residues in carpets, drapes and walls. Grow operators often cut ventilation holes in the walls and modify the wiring to run grow lamps. "In a grow op. a landlord can be looking from $10,000-12,000 to tearing down the house and building a new one," he said. "What a landlord can do is due diligence in selecting tenants. " Kemp said the Society hosts workshops to teach landlords what information to look for and how to interview potential tenants. "The majority of rental properties in the province are one, two or three units. Almost all of these are managed by owners who are part-time landlords," he said. "We're not building apartment buildings in Canada anymore because of tax disincentives. That demand is taken up by secondary suites and small, part-time landlords." Kemp, who owns and rents a triplex as a part-time landlord himself, said he, "can put a landlord in a position to be effective in one full-day session." However, drug producers and dealers have tricks to avoid being spotted for what they are. "The professional drug operators often have three or four identities that can survive a credit check," Kemp said. Fining landlords who become victims of drug dealers, "just tells landlords to get out of the business," he said. As real estate prices rise, more people cannot afford to buy property and need to rent. At the same time, the high prices are an incentive for landlords to sell their property - shrinking the rental market. The real solution lies in taking a stronger stance against drug dealers and producers, Kemp said. "When Richard Coleman was solicitor general, he said there was 6,000 grow ops. busted in the Fraser Valley in 2002. "In Whatcom County in Washington there was six. In Washington they get a minimum five-year jail term. I've spoken with the RCMP and for every 100 grow ops. they bust, only 22 are prosecuted. Of the 21 [of those 22] that get convicted, only one and a half get a jail term," Kemp said. "Is this a problem caused by landlords, or legislation? I think the latter." Kemp will be hosting a landlord education seminar in Prince George on June 6, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Civic Centre. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek