'Spot the grow-op' no easy game for homebuyers - Action News
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Ottawa

'Spot the grow-op' no easy game for homebuyers

The story of a woman in Limoges, Ont., who unwittingly bought a former grow-op highlights an ongoing challenge for homebuyers, experts say.

Prospective buyers still at risk despite efforts by lawmakers to increase transparency

Available information about former grow-ups varies from one Ontario jurisdiction to another after a private member's bill by Ottawa MPP Lisa MacLeod to create a provincial registry of the properties died. (RCMP)

The story of a woman inLimoges, Ont.,who unwittingly bought a former grow-op highlights an ongoing challenge for homebuyers, experts say.

Home inspectors in Ottawa contacted by CBC said homebuyersin this city have also fallen for properties that once housed marijuana growing operations, in some cases because they were so anxious to close a deal in a hot market that they bought without conditions and passed onan inspection.
Claudette Charron bought her fixer-upper bungalow as an investment, but the former grow-op has cost her $30,000 so far in cleanup costs. Experts warn other homebuyers are at risk, including in Ottawa. (Claudette Charron)

"They're waking up and smelling the coffee later on, when they realize there are issues," said Paul Wilson, who's worked as a building inspector since the1980s.

Withered plants in the attic of one home suggested agrow-opa few owners back, Wilson said. While thatkind of legacy might not cause the new owner too much hardship, other aspects of agrow-op's legacy are more difficult to live with.

No provincial registry of formergrow-ops

"There are issues like mould in the walls. A lot of them have structural issues," said Matthew Thornton, vice-president of public affairs and communications with the Ontario Real Estate Association, which represents the province's 70,000 realtors. "The grower will tamper with wiring or drill holes in the foundation to vent thegrow-op, that kind of thing.

"A lot of people don't know that they're buying agrow-op, and that's a problem."

In 2013, OREA supported a private member's bill by Ottawa MPP Lisa MacLeod to create a provincial registry of formergrow-ops.

That bill died, which means information about formergrow-ops still varies greatly from municipality to municipality.

Some homeowners in Ottawa have unwittingly purchased grow-ops because they agreed to forgo an inspection when buying a home, according to home inspector Paul Wilson. (CBC)

City of Ottawa tracks grow-ops busted by police

Ottawa seems to have more information available than most.

Ottawa police publish alist ofgrow-ops they have dismantled, and they alert the city clerk to busts large and small, according to Beryl Brownlee, a program manager inthe city's planning services department.

An Ottawabylaw requires the property owner to vacate the home after agrow-opis discovered. To be allowed to return, they must removegrow-opmaterial and equipment, and repair all related damage under the direction of a professional engineer, all at their own expense.

The city'sorder to comply with the bylaw is attached to the property title, a public document that can be viewed at the land registry office by anyone who might want to buy the house.

After repairs are completed and the home passes inspection by the city, however, discovering the house'sformergrow-opstatus becomes more difficult. The city's order is removed from the title, so to turn up evidence of that history at the land registry, the prospective buyer must tailor their search to include deleted documents, Brownlee said.

Police say they also remove the house from their own online list of dismantledgrow-ops which explains why a Google news search of Ottawagrow-ops turns up many properties that aren't on the police list.

Black mould and damage inside a grow op house. (Western Site Technologies Inc.)

No bust, no public record

The bigger risk to homebuyers is the grow-ops that aren't found by police.

If an owner discovers a tenant or relative running agrow-opon a property, he or she might simply shut it down and make repairs on their own.
Real estate agent Peggy Blair advises prospective buyers to chat with neighbours to find out more about a property, including whether it once housed a grow-op. (Courtesy Peggy Blair)

"There's no paper trail. You don't know what's behind the walls," saidPeggyBlair, an Ottawa real estate agent.

Prospective buyers also shouldn't assume that the agent for the seller will inform them about the former illegal operation, according to the Real Estate Council of Ontario, which regulates real estate professionals.

"If the property has gone through remediation and there are no lasting impacts to the structure of the home that was formerly agrow-op, then the seller is not required to disclose the property's history," said spokesperson M. Daniel Roukema in an e-mail.

A concerned buyer can still have his or her realtor ask the seller's agent specifically aboutgrow-up activity,Blairsaid. The seller is not permitted to lie in response to a direct question. Buyers can also talk to neighbours.

Blairknows first-hand about the information neighbours can offer. She lived across the street from agrow-opherself, and said she and the home's other neighbours in Westboro had suspicions long before police turned up, thanks to clues such as curtains that were always drawn,and the resident's oddly panicked reaction to a temporary break in water service on the street.

Tear it down, home inspector advises

Home inspector Peter Weeks secondsPeggyBlair's advice to talk to neighbours.

Even home inspectors don't always spot the signs of a former grow-op, Weeks said, because a typical inspection doesn't entail breaking into walls.

And while he's taken a specific course on identifying formergrow-ops and drug labs, many others haven't, he said. That situation is unlikely to change even with upcoming licensing requirements from the province.

If interviews or aninspection do turn up evidence of agrow-op, Weeks said he recommends moving on even if the property has been remediated.

"The guys who fix them up do it in all sincerity, but there's still problems," Weeks said. "There's mould behind the walls that you can't see."

He recently advised a young couple against buying a home that was formerly agrow-op, he said. Their realtor hadn't alerted them to the fact, but they called him for an inspection after their own Google search of the address turned up the history.

"If that house has been agrow-op, there's really in my opinion only one solution," Weeks said."Tear it down. Start again."

Think about resale: realtor

If abreak in price makes the purchase tempting anyway, then consider the resale potential, Blair said.

Removing the home from the police list of dismantled grow-ops doesn't magically erase its reputation with the public, she pointed out.

So adeal on the property now may not seem so sweet later, when a future buyer comes looking for a similar break, armed with the same bad news about its history.