Landlord coming into my apartment

lg123456789

New Member
Did you live and rent the apt when you recieved your licence to produce?
Did you have to get landlords permission with form F in order to obtain the licence to produce?
 

bigmanc

Well-Known Member
If it is your primary residence there is nothing the landlord can do. Ive asked the Landlord tennant board and they told me that Federal Law (Health*>CANADA<*) trumps all local and provincial laws...grow away.
 

Sir.Ganga

New Member
Sadly your wrong bigmac...I am receiving $600 monthly from a x-tenant that grew and wreck my property. A tenant MUST ask for permission when altering ANY part of the property, it has nothing to do with HC forms. Property owners permission and signature on HC forms is a formality to make sure that a landlord can not come back and sue HC...that's it! Really you should read the tenant act because this is the issue not a form from HC.
 

bigmanc

Well-Known Member
I called in and asked the land lord tennant act they said we dont need permission, ive called health canada and they said as long as its my primary residence even if i lease. Im going to go with the answers that the governing offices of mmar and lltb gave me, sorry. If anyone wants to verify my answer the phone numbers are readily available. If your truely lazy you can look at the mmar forms and it states primary residence. Form F states if you do not OWN the property and you are NOT a primary resident. Im not going to argue what provincial and federal laws are that are already in stone.
 

ditrbag1

Member
I have experience on both sides, as a renter and Landlord, technically speaking you can grow in your rented place like Bigmanc is saying. However, if said tennant breaches lease/rental contract, by alteration to the property, the renter will be on the hook for repair/restoration, to bring the proerty back to original condition. Personally, if your landlord is a friend or someone thats on the level and cool with you growing, then I'd do it, but by and large I think most landlords/rental owners don't usually want their places messed with, especially if it involves growing mj. If my renters wanted to grow, I'd make some strict rules about humidity, and probably buy them a dehumidifier, and make sure they had a good electrical setup. I think most landlords would want to nail your ass to the wall if you're growing and they don't know, the first thing they're going to do is call the police, even if they know you're legal, so now you're on the cops radar, and that landlord is most likely going to give you an eviction notice for as legally early as he can. All I'm trying to get at is (like the rest of MMAR) there are so many grey areas that we encounter, a person has to be fuckin careful.
 

Sir.Ganga

New Member
Landlord tenant act is very clear about alterations to a rented property by the tenant. A simple tent cost over $40,000 damage in less than 6 months in my property People if you rent, you are responsible for any damage occurred to the property rented, it is your responsibility to ask even if it is your intension to improve the property, Anything less leaves you wide open for damages. It does not belong to you, why do you think you can do anything you want and not be held responsible? Trust me when I tell you if you have done a damage report before you moved in then your landlord will be the kind to check regularly and once you move out access the damage and invoice accordingly. This will all be mute soon as a federal policy is or has been tabled for the landlord to check, test the smoke alarm system monthly. The tenant being the check by signing off on the monthly report. Its you butts folks.
 

bigmanc

Well-Known Member
The arguement isnt if it can cause damage the arquement is over if a tenant with a mmar can grow at his/her primary residence. The patient can grow if it is there primary resident, end of story. For a owner to report a grow in there property would be absolutely stupid, good luck selling it in the future you just lost 30-50% on the tag. How can a tent cause 40k in damages? did it burn down and put a whole in the floor and damage the roof? seems far fetched unless you got robed.

On another note i seen a post on IC about a nova scotia woman winning in court against her landlord to provide appropriate ventilation and electricity in a safe manner, i looked but cannot find it.
 

Sir.Ganga

New Member
The arguement isnt if it can cause damage the arquement is over if a tenant with a mmar can grow at his/her primary residence. The patient can grow if it is there primary resident, end of story. For a owner to report a grow in there property would be absolutely stupid, good luck selling it in the future you just lost 30-50% on the tag. How can a tent cause 40k in damages? did it burn down and put a whole in the floor and damage the roof? seems far fetched unless you got robed.

On another note i seen a post on IC about a nova scotia woman winning in court against her landlord to provide appropriate ventilation and electricity in a safe manner, i looked but cannot find it.
If his/her residence is rented property they must ask permission, doesn't matter what the government has said or what contracts you enter into, the facts remain the same, its not your property and permission is required for any alteration. This also includes any items you may own that could do damage...a fish tank, hot tub, even a blow up pool all can do major damage and you will be responsible financially. Do you honestly think 40k is a lot? That was all mold...that's it! It doesn't take much for a major bill to add up
 

Sir.Ganga

New Member
Do you like fucking people over by telling them lies? potentially forcing them to go to over priced dispensaries to order meds. Anyone with grade 4 education can understand the forms say primary residence, or it would state differently. Just because you said its affected you doesnt mean you have to screw people not so wealthy. I really hope people infact just do what the forms say and decide not to listen to you, this is ridiculous.
Sadly my friend I'm not saying anything that isn't true in any province in Canada, You are proving exactly what I'm talking about. People get so hung up on this issue and the FORM when in all actuality HC could care less about you and your landlord. The FORM is a legality for HC ONLY. The form is put into your file and never seen again until someone sues them...Get it! You are 100% correct you don't have to tell anyone..."ANYTHING" and HC form will not stop the law suit against you if damages are incurred. I'm not telling anyone to do anything , what I want to let people know is any alterations or damage occurred can result in major financial obligations, licensed or not including grow ops, tents, anything you own and bring into the house that can potentially cause harm to the property.
 
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