Pubdate: Sat, 18 Oct 2008 Source: Langley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Langley Times Contact: http://www.langleytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1230 Author: Monique Tamminga STANDARD RECORDS CALLED FOR Protecting home buyers from investing in a former grow-op or meth lab depends on each municipality's records or lack thereof, say realtors across the Fraser Valley who gathered in Langley City on Thursday. The Township doesn't keep records of illegal drug operations found in houses. But in Abbotsford, a grow-op would show up on the title search, say local realtors. In Surrey, a bylaw infraction shows up on the tax notice, but that flag would be taken off the title once the home was brought back up to code. In Chilliwack, a Freedom of Information request is required for privacy concerns. The inconsistency from community to community is the problem, says the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board, which held the community forum at Cascades Convention Centre. In the end, there was a call to standardize the reporting and remediation of properties used for illegal drug operations. More than 100 realtors, police and bylaw officers, politicians, firefighters and others from around the Fraser Valley and Vancouver area came together to look at ways of stopping grow-ops and financially penalizing those involved. Long-time Langley realtor Wilf Driedger sat on a committee for two years that researched the multi-jurisdictional problem. He found that every municipality is doing something different. "Realtors want to be part of the solution to protect the buyers," said Driedger. Realtors are obligated to disclose all information on a home, including if it once housed a grow-op, but if the municipality doesn't have records, they can't help their clients, said FVREB president Kelvin Neufeld. "We could be much more effective if it was standardized across the Fraser Valley. But we are not opposed to the province getting involved with some sort of legislation," said Neufeld. Every potential buyer should have access to a home's history, even if the grow operation has been cleaned up and re-occupancy permits have been issued. "Many people buy a home and find out afterwards that they can't get insurance on it because it still needs re-occupancy permits, etc.," said one realtor at the forum. "They all of a sudden have to come up with thousands of dollars for permits and clean-up." Realtors are hoping there will be a website they can access that will list homes that have had illegal drug operations. It could be the same way they access the Multiple Listing Site (MLS) for sale history on properties. Surrey fire chief Len Garis said that kind of disclosure could be put on the Fire Commissioner's website and it could be made public. "The criminal justice side has failed us. If [this disclosure] stays in the realm of public safety, I could dump four years of history onto the website tomorrow for the public to look at," said Garis. The Surrey fire department was the first to shut down grow-ops using B.C. Hydro consumption records. Since its inception in 2006, he said there's been a 50 per cent drop in grow-ops - something the police would never be able to do because of required judge approved warrants and other technicalities. Right now, organized crime will go to the communities with the weaker rules, warned one FVVREB realtor Jorda Massey. She'd like to see buyers have direct access to disclosure on each home. People wouldn't be able to get away with fixing up a grow-op home and using an out-of-town realtor to sell it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom