Pubdate: Wed, 19 Aug 2015 Source: Langley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Langley Times Contact: http://www.langleytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1230 Webpage: http://www.langleytimes.com/opinion/322190461.html NOT A GREENHOUSE Imagine if the house next door to you was growing mushrooms or potatoes or some other kind of agricultural crop in the basement. Imagine that there were times when you could smell the odor of fertilizer wafting over the fence. If you lived in a residential neighbourhood, you might be unhappy about that. You might complain that a house should not be used as a commercial greenhouse. And if you were told the person has a legal right to do what they were doing, you might get upset, just as some people in a Langley neighbourhood became indignant when they found out a house on their street is running a legal grow-op, and that very little can be done about it. Because the grower has a federal licence from Health Canada, the best they can hope for is to get better filtering of the fumes and a safety inspection to make sure the wiring doesn't pose a hazard. A number of online comments posted since The Times wrote about the Walnut Grove situation have suggested the neighbours have no right to complain because medicinal marijuana is legal and the grower has a licence. Respectfully, they are missing the point. This isn't a question of pro-pot or anti-pot, it's about the federal government permitting the growing of a particular plant in residential areas without giving a lot of thought to the potential consequences. It wouldn't matter if the crop in question was kale, green beans or corn, the problem is cultivation is being carried out in locations that are not appropriate. According to one estimate, when the federal government first started licensing legal medicinal marijuana growing, it issued about 300 licences across the entire country. Now, a few years down the road, there are more than 600 licensed grow operations in Langley Township alone, or roughly one for every 60 houses, townhouses and apartment buildings in the municipality. Many have hundreds of plants. Their locations tend to be a secret until there is a fire or a grow-rip by criminals. Under new federal rules that were supposed to take effect last year, their number was to shrink to a handful of large-scale bulk growing operations that would be banned from residential neighbourhoods. Municipalities across the country prepared for the switch by ordering bans on small grow-ops in residential areas. But all of that is on hold, because the small legal growers objected to being rendered collectively illegal, and managed to get a temporary court injunction. Leaving people like the Walnut Grove residents, who think houses ought be used for housing, in limbo. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt