Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Half Of Canadian Homeowners Say Cannabis Use Will Hurt Property Values: Poll

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2018 12:45 PM
    TORONTO — More than half of Canadian homeowners recently surveyed say they would be less likely to consider a property if they knew cannabis had been grown inside, according to a poll released Tuesday.
     
     
    Real estate listings company Zoocasa, which commissioned the study, found that 52 per cent of homeowners would think twice about buying a home that had been used to grow even a legal amount of marijuana.
     
     
    Set to go into effect on Wednesday, the new federal Cannabis Act will permit the consumption and purchase of the previously-illicit plant. It also allows Canadians to grow up to four plants for personal use inside their homes.
     
     
    But Zoocasa said those involved in their survey generally expressed negative sentiments towards consuming, cultivating and living in close proximity to cannabis use.
     
     
    Fifty-seven per cent of those polled believe even growing the legal amount would devalue property values.
     
     
    Meanwhile, only 15 per cent of all respondents indicated they would consider growing cannabis in their homes. 
     
     
    Nearly two-thirds (64 per cent) of homeowners polled say smoking marijuana inside a home would harm a property's value; while 21 per cent disagreed and 15 per cent were neutral.  
     
     
    Penelope Graham, the managing editor at Zoocasa, says these are still early days and there are still a lot of unanswered questions about how cannabis legalization will impact property values.
     
     
    "A lot of the negative sentiment in our findings is stemming from this uncertainty among homeowners," she said. "(Your home is) your largest financial investment. The last thing that you want to do is accidentally devalue it doing something you think is legal."
     
     
    Among condo and apartment dwellers, a majority (61 per cent) of those polled say that people who live in these properties should not be able to smoke inside their units, while 64 per cent say condo boards and property managers should have the right to ban residents from using the drugs in their units.
     
     
    The survey also found that nearly half of respondents don't want to live near a cannabis dispensary either.
     
     
    Forty-two per cent of those polled say that having this type of business in their neighbourhood would harm nearby property values, while 48 per cent of respondents say the presence of a dispensary nearby would reduce their desire to purchase a specific property.
     
     
    Zoocasa conducted the online survey of more than 1,300 Canadians from Sept. 27 to Oct. 3.
     
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Barrage Of Cards For N.S. Widower: 'I'm Amazed And I'm So Thankful'

    A Barrage Of Cards For N.S. Widower: 'I'm Amazed And I'm So Thankful'
    SYDNEY, N.S. — A delighted Nova Scotia widower has received nearly a thousand letters from around the world, days after his daughter invited people to send him cards as he approached his first birthday without his late, beloved wife.

    A Barrage Of Cards For N.S. Widower: 'I'm Amazed And I'm So Thankful'

    Puerto Rican Woman Convicted In Murder-For-Hire Of Canadian Husband

    Puerto Rican Woman Convicted In Murder-For-Hire Of Canadian Husband
    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A Puerto Rico woman accused of hiring a hit man to kill her wealthy Canadian husband more than a decade ago was found guilty on Wednesday.

    Puerto Rican Woman Convicted In Murder-For-Hire Of Canadian Husband

    Don't Take Pot On International Flights, Transport Minister Warns

    Don't Take Pot On International Flights, Transport Minister Warns
    OTTAWA — Canada's transport minister says travellers aboard domestic flights will be allowed to carry a small quantity of cannabis with them after Oct. 17.

    Don't Take Pot On International Flights, Transport Minister Warns

    'We've Never Seen This Kind Of Abuse,' Says Woman Who Found Duct-Taped Face

    'We've Never Seen This Kind Of Abuse,' Says Woman Who Found Duct-Taped Face
    An Ontario woman says she's shocked by the depths of human cruelty after discovering a young cat with duct tape wrapped around its face.

    'We've Never Seen This Kind Of Abuse,' Says Woman Who Found Duct-Taped Face

    Canada's Largest Real Estate Board Sues Listings Website Mongohouse For $2M

    Canada's Largest Real Estate Board Sues Listings Website Mongohouse For $2M
    TORONTO — The Toronto Real Estate Board is suing Mongohouse for $2 million, alleging that the anonymously-run property listings website is illegally accessing, copying and distributing its proprietary data.

    Canada's Largest Real Estate Board Sues Listings Website Mongohouse For $2M

    Liberals Agree To Hike Pre-Writ Spending Limit For Political Parties

    The Trudeau Liberals have agreed to increase the amount of money political parties can spend in the run-up to a federal election — a price they've paid to end Conservative stalling of an omnibus bill to reform election laws.

    Liberals Agree To Hike Pre-Writ Spending Limit For Political Parties