News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: LTE: Telltale Signs That A House Has Been Used For Drugs |
Title: | CN BC: LTE: Telltale Signs That A House Has Been Used For Drugs |
Published On: | 2008-11-01 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-11-02 13:27:53 |
Telltale Signs That A House Has Been Used For Drugs
Re: Drug house buyers risk health, front page, Oct. 27
Your recent articles on drug homes rightly remind all of us of the
dangers to anyone who purchases a home that turns out to have been
used as a growing operation or drug lab.
Prospective home buyers who don't hire a qualified and experienced
home inspector should be aware that there are certain warning signs a
house has been used as a growing operation. These include holes or
patches in the ceiling in unusual places or a patch in the drywall
close to electrical services; painted-over staple marks or evidence of
plastic stapled to walls or ceilings; disconnected toilets or
dismantled furnace connections, and extraneous ductwork or piles of
unused duct pipe.
These indicators don't mean a house must have been used as a growing
operation, but they do mean you need to pay attention and ask
questions, since buying a home is the single largest financial
decision you are likely to make in your life.
Owen Dickie
President
Canadian Association of Home and Property Inspectors of
B.C.
Kelowna
Re: Drug house buyers risk health, front page, Oct. 27
Your recent articles on drug homes rightly remind all of us of the
dangers to anyone who purchases a home that turns out to have been
used as a growing operation or drug lab.
Prospective home buyers who don't hire a qualified and experienced
home inspector should be aware that there are certain warning signs a
house has been used as a growing operation. These include holes or
patches in the ceiling in unusual places or a patch in the drywall
close to electrical services; painted-over staple marks or evidence of
plastic stapled to walls or ceilings; disconnected toilets or
dismantled furnace connections, and extraneous ductwork or piles of
unused duct pipe.
These indicators don't mean a house must have been used as a growing
operation, but they do mean you need to pay attention and ask
questions, since buying a home is the single largest financial
decision you are likely to make in your life.
Owen Dickie
President
Canadian Association of Home and Property Inspectors of
B.C.
Kelowna
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