'That's going to be an issue': Lawyers weigh in on apartment smoking and vaping ban - Action News
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'That's going to be an issue': Lawyers weigh in on apartment smoking and vaping ban

The issue of renters' rights versus landlords' preference for all-out prohibition is likely headed for the courtroom or human rights tribunals, say cannabis legal experts.

Issue of renters' rights likely headed for court or human rights tribunals, say cannabis experts

Legal observers say banning smoking and vaping in apartments, as one company in Saskatchewan has proposed, is bound to be tested in the court of law. (CBC)

A ban by landlords on tenantssmoking or vaping marijuana in their apartments is an issue that's bound to be decided in the courts, say two lawyers.

Last week a major Western Canadian property manager, Mainstreet Equity Corp., confirmed it will ban the indoor smoking of cigarettes and cannabis, plus vaping, starting this fall even for medical marijuana users.

"I believe that there is going to be litigation over these issues and we're going to get some court and certainly some human rights tribunals," said Trina Fraser, an Ontario-basedlawyer whose area ofexpertise iscannabis law.

"That is inevitable," echoed Robert Noce, a condominium, municipal and real estate lawyer in Alberta.

Sask. laws changed

Late last year, the Saskatchewan government amended its residential tenancy laws so that landlords can specifically ban the use, possession or growth of cannabis inside apartments, as long as the ban is "reasonable."

But exactly how accommodating landlords have to be, particularly with medical marijuana users, isleft unsaid and therefore open to interpretation, said Fraser.

Trina Fraser, a cannabis lawyer based in Ontario, says the degree to which a landlord must accommodate a medical marijuana user remains to be decided legally. (Submitted by Trina Fraser)

"I don't believe that an absoluteban on cultivating a plant or possessing plants or consuming cannabis in a rental unit for medical purposes would withstand scrutiny under the human rights code in your province," said Fraser.

"That's going to be an issue. I think that's where the concept of reasonableness is going to come in," she said.

"If it's a medical user, the landlord may have to make certain accommodations for that possession or cultivation or use."

'Less intrusive' alternatives

Noce believes prohibitors will be on "solid ground" as long as they are doing it "in the best interest of the overall population of that particular building."

But, he added, "Ultimately, one day a judge or a tribunal will say otherwise and we'll deal with it. We're in uncharted waters here."

Noce also pointed out that medical marijuana users do have options other than smoking the plant, and that some doctors even prefer to prescribe oils because the patients' use of the drug can be more easily regulated.

A cupcake 'edible' is shown at a stall at a 'Green Market' pop-up event in Toronto. Lawyer Robert Noce points out there are ways to ingest marijuana besides smoking it. (The Canadian Press)

"There are less intrusive uses of marijuana without impacting the other tenants in that building," he said.

But those alternatives don't work best for everyone, Fraser countered.

"Certainly there are many medical patients who feel that smoking cannabis is the most immediate and the most effective form of relief for the symptoms they're treating," she said.

Needs of the many vs. the few

Balancing the needs of the few with the needs of the many will prove thorny in the beginning of the post-legalization age, Fraser added.

"It becomes a very tricky issue of a landlord trying to minimize any disruption or annoyance to neighbouring tenants, maybe smoke damage to the building, but at the same time that has to be balanced against the medical patients' rights," she said.

"How far does that duty to accommodate exist is something that we don't know the answer to at this point. We're going to have to see how it plays out in human rights tribunals [or]in court."