Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jul 2010 Source: Monday Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Monday Publications Contact: http://mondaymag.com/contact/ Website: http://www.mondaymag.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1150 Author: Jason Youmans Cited: Greater Victoria Housing Society http://www.greatervichousing.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Philippe+Lucas Pot Shot FEDERAL EXEMPTEE FIGHTS WEED-SMOKE EVICTION An Esquimalt woman says a local social housing organization is trying to evict her from her home of two-and-a-half years for using cannabis to treat her chronic conditions. Christina Goluch, who suffers from debilitating arthritis and lupus and has Health Canada permission to possess and use medical cannabis, says she is the target of a campaign by the site manager of the Greater Victoria Housing Society's Lions Lodge to rid the building of marijuana smokers, many of whom, says Goluch, are elderly and disabled and consume the drug to treat a variety of maladies. "I've never gotten any real legal advice and so don't really know where I stand," says the 58-year-old. "I'm just sort of bobbing in the ocean alone, and really, everyone's looking on to see what's going to happen, because it will be a major victory for the medical marijuana community if I get the right to stay." On April 29, Goluch was issued a one-month notice to end tenancy for cause on the grounds that her behaviour-which Goluch says is limited to smoking cannabis-"significantly interfered with, or unreasonably disturbed another occupant or the landlord," and that her actions, "seriously jeopardized the health or safety or lawful right of another occupant or the landlord." While the particulars are not spelled out in the documents Goluch provided Monday, she says the matter hinges on a complaint-real or fabricated-about the smell of marijuana emanating from her apartment when she smokes. But Goluch says that her door is sealed to BC Hydro standards and she jams a mat under it when she lights up. There's a ventilation system immediately outside her door that circulates the air in the hallway, as well as a window usually left open immediately adjacent to her apartment, which is at the end of a corridor. Despite what Goluch says are her ongoing to attempts to mitigate any odour emanating from her apartment, documents served by the landlord insist that, "Breach of material term of the tenancy was not corrected within a reasonable time after written notice to do so." A further twist to Goluch's story is the fact the Lions Lodge is a smoke-friendly building, which is to say, residents are permitted to puff tobacco to their hearts' content inside their units. Goluch missed her initial Residential Tenancy Branch arbitration hearing on the matter, citing a dispute with a neighbouring tenant that aggravated her conditions and made it impossible to attend. At that point, Goluch was given two days to vacate the apartment and faced homelessness. The Residential Tenancy Branch has granted her another opportunity to appeal her eviction, but the boxes remain packed in her apartment if her pleas should fall on deaf ears. A letter from Goluch's physician, Dr. Daniel Buie, to the housing society hints at the toll the ongoing eviction is taking on his patient. "This decision seems totally unfair and is definitely very detrimental to the health of this seriously ill woman. Please reconsider. I would be willing to discuss this with any officials," reads Buie's missive. Greater Victoria Housing Society executive director Kaye Melliship would not comment on the specifics of Goluch's case, citing privacy concerns. She did, however, add, "All I can say is that perhaps you are not getting all of the story. We have a good process. As a landlord, we use the Residential Tenancy Act and all the procedures and policies of the Residential Tenancy Act and we are using that. And we strongly encourage our tenants to participate in that as well, because it can often result in some good outcomes. But people have to make choices and sometimes they don't always want to participate." Al Kemp, CEO of the Rental Owners and Managers Society of B.C. says the RTB adjudicator hearing Goluch's appeal will be less concerned about her medication regime than how it affects her cohabitants. "It's not really whether you're allowed to smoke," says Kemp. "It's whether or not your smoking disturbs other tenants, and the wording in the Residential Tenancy Act that's relevant is "seriously disturbs" other tenants quiet enjoyment. The bottom line is that she may have a federal exemption permitting her to smoke, but she does not have in that certificate permission to disturb other tenants." Philippe Lucas, a Victoria city councillor and former executive director of the Vancouver Island Compassion Society, has planted himself in Goluch's corner. He says he will attend her appeal hearing in an effort to educate the adjudicator about current legislation governing the use of medical cannabis for federal exemptees. "If it was a non-smoking building she would be at the losing end of this argument," says Lucas. "But because it's a tobacco-smoking building and if she was smoking tobacco rather than cannabis there would be no issue at all, that creates a big problem for me in terms of her personal rights and her medical needs." Lucas continues, "I just see this as a wrongful eviction of a chronically ill woman who is in her full legal rights to be using a medicine that, yes, is controversial, but quite frankly that deserves some level of sympathy, compassion and understanding from the Greater Victoria Housing Society." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake