Pubdate: Thu, 02 Dec 2010 Source: Barrhaven This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Ottawa Region Media Group Contact: http://www.yourottawaregion.com/community/cityofottawa Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4767 Author: Jennifer McIntosh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) MPP TARGETS GROW OPS Realtors Advocate for Change In Ontario, it's home buyers beware when it comes to indoor marijuana farms, or grow ops. The costs associated with remediation of a property once the stash is seized or the owners take off, can cost upwards of $80,000 to $100,000, said Patricia Verge, Broker at the Riverside South Royal LePage office and the provincial director of the Eastern Ontario Ontario Real Estate Association. "I went into a house once with the thought of buying it and then started sneezing," she said. "I am allergic to mold and then we found out it had been used as a grow house, but most people with a new coat of paint and new floors would have no idea until the problems started." Enter Nepean-Carleton MPP Lisa MacLeod, who held a roundtable with the public, realtors and Ottawa Police Services in October to discuss the problem of grow ops in the capital. "The police told me that as many as 500 grow houses can be operating at one time across the city," she said. "They are in Barrhaven, Manotick and Riverside South - really everywhere - we can't just ignore them anymore." Three homes in Nepean were busted over the summer. One, in the Pinecrest area at 2522 Thorson Ave. had 170 plants hauled out in early June. Another appeared to be a small single-family home at 21 St. Claire Ave held 675 plants and over 413 grams of marijuana that were seized by Ottawa Police on June 25. According to the Ottawa Police website, high levels of humidity and can cause the wood to warp - including stair cases, handrails, floor finishes, roof joints and wooden studs in walls. Growers often steal electricity, and an Ottawa police summary of the problem says this may require drilling a hole in the foundation to hook up illegally. An estimate by BC Hydro, says grow ops steal about $100 million of revenue annually. "There's also holes in the floors and a whole host of other problems," Verge said. "It turns out to be a real nightmare. Imagine if you're a young family starting out in a new home, to be faced with that would be awful." MacLeod said there is no standard in Ontario and that homes are only listed on the Ottawa Police website for three months. "Most homes don't sell in that time, so we need something to protect home buyers," she said. "We also need to get people talking about this problem so we can bring it out in the open and fi nd solutions," she said. The province passed legislation in 2006 that calls on real estate agents to disclose whether a property was used as a marijuana grow house, assuming there are issues of safety and structural damage. The law is currently administered by the Real Estate Council of Ontario. Verge said the Ontario Real Estate Association is behind MacLeod's bill. "Any tools we can have to fight this problem are great," she said. "It's not going away." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake