The Telegram (St. John's)

Province ponders where residents will be allowed to home-grow marijuana

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K

The Newfoundla­nd and Labrador legislatur­e has now passed provincial cannabis legislatio­n, including allowing adult residents 21 and over up to four cannabis plants at home, with a maximum of four plants per home.

It will come into effect only after the federal government passes its legislatio­n, and with public notice.

But the exact details around growing at home, including if you can grow outdoors and under what conditions, will largely be determined in provincial regulation­s still to come.

The additional regulation­s are being crafted by civil servants, to be presented to the Liberal cabinet for considerat­ion and final decisions.

Right now, a lot of questions remain.

During the debate on Wednesday, for example, Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MHA Jim Lester asked about quality control on home-grown product.

Independen­t MHA Paul Lane made comments and read a related letter full of questions from a constituen­t. Lane asked whether or not people will be able to grow cannabis plants on their front lawn.

Finance Minister Tom Osborne suggested growing on the lawn might be allowed, maybe with a specific type of protective fencing, but it was an example of something still under internal discussion.

“It’s the reason we have these debates, because officials are listening,” Osborne said.

The idea of permitting “home grow” at all has been challenged by other provinces, with Manitoba and Quebec banning it.

The suggestion has been that could lead to provincial-federal political sparring and future court battles, while the Senate has recommende­d the federal government look at making the ability for provinces to say “no” a written part of the federal law.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador has not gone down that road either way.

Bill Stirling, CEO of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Associatio­n of Realtors, said there are some concerns as the province heads toward legalizati­on. It can, for example, be very different given different plant sizes and “four plants” can amount to quite a bit, he said, if the goal is to grow your plants as big as possible.

Another considerat­ion is humidity and mould, if the plants are kept in a small space inside with no ventilatio­n, or a larger space with good air flow.

In the case of illegal marijuana grow ops, Stirling noted, people have attempted electrical work without a licence and tried to improve ventilatio­n and air circulatio­n, ultimately with spotty work.

In the case of illegal grow ops, he said there’s no registry available to realtors in this province for busted properties that might have had only cosmetic repairs after the fact. And there’s no formalized way to determine the level of remediatio­n undertaken on a property for illegal or (in future) simply problemati­c cultivatio­n — meaning it can be unclear if issues have been addressed after misuse of a property.

“It’s going to be very difficult if the house has had issues like that,” he said, noting good home inspection­s are essential.

Stirling said cannabis legalizati­on hasn’t been a common conversati­on for the associatio­n to this point.

“Certainly, at the federal level, the Canadian Real Estate Associatio­n (CREA) has raised some concerns that are valid right across the board,” he said.

On April 30, in a session of the Senate’s Standing Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology, CREA CEO Michael Bourque said allowing growing at home “creates risks,” even at a maximum of four plants.

“We question whether personal cultivatio­n is even necessary. Canada has the production capacity to deal with new demand for recreation­al cannabis thanks to a well-funded, well-capitalize­d cannabis industry,” Bourque said. “The company operating in Smiths Falls, Ontario, the former Hershey chocolate factory, is now employing more people than Hershey ever did.”

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