Pubdate: Thu, 12 Apr 2012 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca/includes/email_forms/letters_to_editor.php Website: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Ron Seymour MARIJUANA GROWER'S INSURANCE GOES TO POT A Kelowna woman on a disability pension faces a fivefold increase in her house insurance because she has a medical marijuana licence. Nadia Kroll says her premium will jump from $600 to more than $3,000 because she has legal permission to grow 25 pot plants. The 56-year-old woman says she can't afford the big increase, and fears she won't have any insurance when her current policy expires May 2. "I don't think it's right that I should have to pay so much for insurance," Kroll said Wednesday. "I don't know what's going to happen . . . maybe I'll have to pitch a tent somewhere and go live in that." But the owner of a Kelowna firm that advises people with medical marijuana licences says Kroll shouldn't have to pay such a considerably increased premium for her house insurance. "This question does come up from time to time, and it's usually because some insurance companies just don't want to take on the extra risk they think is associated with a legal growing operation," said Don Schulz of Greenline Academy. "But if someone has all their paperwork in order, and they can show their insurer that they've got the right set-up in terms of their plumbing, electrical and HVAC systems, it's usually not that much of a problem," Schulz said. An insurer based on the Coast, Schulz said, will usually write policies for people with medical marijuana licences that don't result in significantly higher premiums than they were paying before. "It's like anything else, you just have to do some shopping around," Schulz said. "It takes time, but it's worth it." Kroll got her medical marijuana licence two years ago to help her deal with the arthritis in her hands. She's owned her home since 1999, but was told earlier this year that her provider would not renew her policy because she's now considered high-risk. "They just kicked me out," Kroll said. "I went around (to other providers) but they all told me 'No,' as well." She finally found a firm in the Kootenays that would provide her with a home insurance policy, but at a cost of $3,200. "It would be devastating to me if I have to pay that much," she said. About 5,000 Canadians have licences to carry and use marijuana for medicinal reasons, and about 4,000 have licences to grow pot for their own use. A spokesman for the Insurance Bureau of Canada says the organization fields a few calls every year from people with medical marijuana licences who are having trouble renewing their home coverage policy, or are facing big increases in their premiums. "Insurance is a competitive business, and having marijuana plants being grown in a house is seen by most, but not all providers as increasing a person's risk profile," Serge Corbeil said. "When they're applying for insurance, people should stress all the mitigating steps they've taken to reduce that risk, such as having alarm systems, measures to control water consumption, and anything else they've done to make things safer," Corbeil said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom