The Daily Courier

Condo Smarts: Strata council bewildered by new marijuana laws

- TONY GIOVENTU

DEAR TONY: Our strata council is very confused about the new marijuana legislatio­n.

With seven volunteers all cruising through the internet, we have naturally developed seven different opinions on what we can do or what we have to do to protect out strata.

Our strata is a 16-unit townhouse complex, but I also own a rental unit in a 171unit highrise and have concerns about activities that could affect the comfort of my tenants and our investment. Please explain what we need to do if we want to stop the consumptio­n of marijuana in our properties. — Sylvia M. Port Moody

DEAR SYLVIA: The current legalizati­on of marijuana permits limited possession and consumptio­n of products and permits a limited growth of plants per occupant. However, strata corporatio­ns are permitted to adopt bylaws that prohibit cultivatio­n of marijuana plants and prohibit forms of consumptio­n or lifestyle behaviour that may result in nuisance, harm, or risk of endangerme­nt to other occupants or property.

The Schedule of Standard Bylaws of the Strata Property Act already contains a bylaw that addresses issues of nuisance.

If I am conducting an activity in my strata lot or on common property that causes a nuisance to an owner, tenant or occupant, the strata corporatio­n may apply the current standard nuisance bylaw.

Many strata corporatio­ns where the homes are attached and share walls, floors and ceilings or ventilatio­n systems have already adopted bylaws that strictly limit or prohibit smoking of any types of products on common property, limited common property and within strata lots.

Remember, when you live in a strata, your home is not your castle. If your activities are likely to cause or are causing a nuisance to a neighbour, your strata council will enforce nuisance bylaws. This not only applies to smoking or vaping, but it may also apply to other activities such as the use of barbecues.

A strata corporatio­n may adopt a defined bylaw that restricts or prohibits smoking of any type of substances and may prohibit the cultivatio­n of plants, with the exception of those people with a medical license exemptions.

If your strata corporatio­n is not restrictin­g cultivatio­n of plants, there may be unforeseen consequenc­es and damages if someone exceeds their limits or reasonable growing conditions.

For plants to reach successful maturity, they require significan­t growing/daylight hours, fertilizer­s, increased watering or hydroponic conditions, and ventilatio­n.

With 5-10 plants in a strata lot, compounded conditions may result in high levels of humidity in the unit and adjacent areas, unsafe demands on electrical loads, fire hazards, odours and the increased risk of mould.

If your building is not limiting or restrictin­g cultivatio­n, it would be valuable to monitor building interior conditions on a routine schedule to ensure no one has exceeded the permitted limits, resulting in a full-blown grow op.

What people consume is their business, but how they consume a product within your residentia­l strata corporatio­n may be controlled in your bylaws.

Edible cannabis products will become legal and are no different than someone coming home with a bottle of liquor.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n. Write: CHOA, Suite 200 – 65 Richmond St., New Westminste­r, B.C., V3L 595. Email: tony@choa.bc.ca.

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