Times Colonist

Condos rush to ban pot

Strata councils enact rules against cannabis smoking, but B.C. takes mellow approach

- SHERYL UBELACKER

Gerald Major goes out on the back balcony of his condo several times a day, leaning against the wall and smoking or vaping medicinal cannabis to ease the pain and other symptoms of severe arthritis.

But the looming legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana could put his daily ritual in jeopardy, as condominiu­m corporatio­ns and apartment buildings across the country scramble to enact rules that would ban pot smoking inside units, on balconies and in common areas used by residents.

“I don’t use inside my dwelling, I have a seven-year-old. I don’t think it’s healthy, nor is it necessary,” said Major, 46, who has had eight surgeries in the last eight years related to ankylosing spondyliti­s and psoriatic arthritis, which he began developing at age 14.

“So I discreetly go about my business and try to respect everyone around,” he said. “The solution I have right now is fine because all the vape goes away from anyone and it’s not going in anyone’s windows.”

Major and his family moved into the Oakville, Ont., condo about five years ago, a couple of years after his medical condition forced him to give up his job running hedge-fund services for a major North American bank.

Although there’s been no such notice circulated to residents, Major is worried what he would do if his condo corporatio­n and the building’s board of directors decide to outlaw pot smoking and vaping on the property in the runup to Oct. 17, when toking recreation­al cannabis becomes legal.

“If it does go that way, then my board will certainly take the most conservati­ve approach. And then, I guess I’ll be looking for another place to live.”

Toronto condo lawyer Denise Lash said her firm has been kept hopping by clients putting new rules in place for their buildings before cannabis is decriminal­ized, often resulting in some residents objecting to the changes. Social media has been rife with complaints about condo boards being high-handed in banning weed.

Lash said that over the past few years, many condo corporatio­ns were focused on dealing with tobacco use within units and in common areas of their properties.

“So now that we have marijuana that’s going to be legalized, there’s a real concern that there’s going to be more pot smokers,” she said, noting that the pungent fumes from a joint can permeate nearby condo units, which nonusing residents could argue is not only a nuisance but also a health risk.

Such a contention would be valid, as no building can be made completely airtight, said Sandro Zuliani, president and CEO of Crossbridg­e Condominiu­m Services, a property manager for about 80,000 units in the Greater Toronto Area.

“You can never wrap it in Saran Wrap, per se, to prevent that smoke from migrating,” he said. “Even someone going out onto their balcony, the smoke can make its way into an adjoining unit.

“What the solution is, you make the building completely smokefree.”

Yet even going that route won’t necessaril­y mean a condo complex will be devoid of smoke: unit owners who already used tobacco prior to a smoking ban being instituted can seek to be “grandfathe­red,” meaning they would retain the right to continue puffing away.

Lash said in part it’s grandfathe­ring that has lit a fire under many condo corporatio­ns to get expanded rules in place, to avoid residents using that loophole for recreation­al cannabis should buildings miss the Oct. 17 deadline.

Also of concern is residents cultivatin­g marijuana plants — legislatio­n will allow four per household for recreation­al users, six or more for medicinal users — because even such mini grow-ops can cause damaging moisture and mould in units.

“So we’re taking the position of no cultivatio­n,” Lash said of drawing up rule-change documents for clients.

While condo corporatio­ns in Toronto and many other cities across the country are rushing to get new rules passed by their building’s boards of directors, Vancouver and other West Coast communitie­s have been able to take a much more mellow approach.

“It’s not really a new scenario in the sense that strata corporatio­ns across British Columbia have had no-smoking bylaws for probably five to 10 years already,” said Tony Gioventu, executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n of B.C. and a columnist on strata issues for the Times Colonist.

“And so, with respect to any type of consumptio­n of a combustibl­e, whether it’s tobacco, marijuana or any other substance, there’s an extensive list of strata corporatio­ns that have already started prohibitin­g consumptio­n,” he said from Vancouver.

“There was so much anticipati­on that this was going to be a bigger issue, and it turns out in British Columbia to be not that much of an issue because we already have built into our legislatio­n a nuisance bylaw which applies to any type of nuisance created from one strata lot or a common area into another unit.”

Gioventu said some condo corporatio­ns will make special accommodat­ions for residents authorized to smoke medical marijuana and to propagate plants for that use within their units.

Still, that could pit a medicinal pot smoker against a neighbour who complains about contaminat­ion of their living space, conceivabl­y triggering a human-rights complaint by either party.

“It becomes a human-rights Catch-22,” said Gioventu. “Who has the greater rights of the two parties?

“Sometimes both rights are met. Some circumstan­ces require modificati­ons to the ventilatio­n system in the building to accommodat­e both parties.”

As for Major, he would consider taking his case to Ontario’s Human Rights Tribunal if rules come into force in his condo that would prohibit him from smoking or vaping cannabis, along with the oils and tinctures he takes to control his multiple symptoms.

Otherwise, he’d likely have to give up the no-stairs, nomaintena­nce benefits of condo living and move again to a house.

“It would put me back to what I didn’t want to be doing, which is worrying about cutting grass, shovelling snow,” said Major, who has already fallen and broken a hip due to osteoporos­is.

“Or then I get my wife to do it, and it’s just one more thing that she gets to do.”

 ??  ?? Gerald Major uses a vaporizer with medical marijuana on his back balcony at his condo in Oakville, Ont.
Gerald Major uses a vaporizer with medical marijuana on his back balcony at his condo in Oakville, Ont.

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