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Homegrown bud: Provinces and municipalities decide on limits of legalization

This week, Whistler announced a new bylaw allowing residents to grow weed at home once legalization takes effect on October 17. But home cultivation of cannabis is still a contentious issue especially for landlords and stratas.

As easy to grow as tomatoes, says one stakeholder, and grow boxes are making it even easier

Current federal legislation allows for up to four cannabis plants per household. (Matilde Campodonico/Associated Press)

This week, the Resort Municipalityof Whistler announced a new bylaw allowing its residents to grow cannabis at home once legalization takes effect on October 17. But home cultivation is still a contentious issue especially for landlords and stratas.

Currentfederal legislation for growing at home allows up to four plants per household, and technically, cities do not need to make any new legislation to allow it.

But provinces and municipalities do have the power to restrict how recreational marijuana is grown and sold in their area.

For example, provinces like Manitoba and Quebec have decided to ban home growing of cannabis altogether, and certain cities in B.C. like West Vancouver and Richmond want nothing to do withretail sales of cannabis at this stage, let alone home cultivation.

While the legislation is not needed, Whistlerdecidedto make the rules 100 per centclear to residents.

"Our understanding was we could actually pass a zoning amendment bylaw prohibiting residential cultivation of recreational cannabis. We haven't done that, we've taken the proactive step of allowing it," said WhistlerMayor Nancy Wilhelm-Morden.

For those who own their home, the only restrictions involved in growing cannabisis that residents keep their plants out of view, making indoor plants the most viable option.

The hydroponic grow boxes made by Surrey-based company B.C. Northern Lights can grow four or more marijuana plants or basil. (Rohit Joseph/CBC)

But as CEO of Landlord B.C. David Hutniak sees it, property owners are hesitant to allow tenants to grow cannabis in their rental units.

"I can tell you every one of them does not want personal grow-ops in their rental units. Our experience with the illegal production in our rental units goes back quite far and invariably there is opportunity for damage to the unit," Hutniak said.

Although the concern is legitimate, Adolfo Gonzalez, co-founder of Canna Reps a cannabis consulting and training company said the stigma attached to home growers is skewing everyone's understanding of what it takes to grow a small number of plants.

Myles Omand, growing consultant with B.C. Northern Lights, stands next to the company's standard personal hydroponic grow box affectionately called The Roommate. (Rohit Joseph/CBC)

"We're told that modern cannabis is a GMO product that requires chemicals to make it unnaturally potent, and that these processes, they destroy the properties that are used to produce them," he said.

"Cannabis essentially requires the same components that tomato plants would require to grow. Anybody who is a forward thinking, logical person could set up a safe grow environment for four to 12or 20plants in a home or a porch or in any of these kinds of settings," Gonzalez said.

This has created a booming market for businesses that sell home-cultivation equipment, or grow boxes.

B.C. Northern Lights is a Surrey-basedcompany that makes hydroponic grow boxes approved by the Canadian Standards Association.

Their box for personal growing is called "the Roommate" and looks a lot like your typical fridge. But open it up and you'll seespots for four plants, a fan, lights and pre-programmed settings for an optimal growing environment for tomatoes or weed.

Myles Omand stands in the Surrey warehouse of B.C. Northern Lights, which is stocked with grow boxes of varying sizes ready for home growers to start cultivating their own plants. (Rohit Joseph/CBC)

"You set your local time on it and everything else is pre-progammed. Most things that people forget, the box will take care of for you," said Myles Omand, growing consultant at B.C. Northern Lights.

While stakeholders recognize it willtaketime to shake the stigma from bad experiences landlords or stratas have had with the illegal market, people like Omand will be counting on the demand of budding growers to fuel their business.

To hear the full interview listen to media below:

With files from Rohit Joseph, On The Coast

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