Marijuana Grow Room Dangers

Carl Brahe

As medical and recreational marijuana becomes legal in more states it also becomes legal to grow at home for certain people. The number of houses and commercial buildings that are used for growing marijuana is increasing. Grow rooms are becoming more common. Grow rooms can cause great damage if improperly built or operated.

Poorly wired or overloaded circuits can result in fire, shock or damage to electronic equipment. The most common danger for grow rooms is overloading the circuitry. An average bedroom may share a 15 amp circuit with another room. This means that the wire is able to safely handle 15 amps of electricity at a time. To keep the wire from overheating from too much electricity flowing through it at one time a circuit breaker, or fuse, is wired into the circuit to stop all electricity flow if it gets to be too great. If the wire overheats a fire can result.

If a grow room is made inside this average room a 1000 watt grow light will require a little over 9 amps to operate. That leaves only 6 amps for all other equipment. Add in 100 watts for a circulating fan and 60 watts for an external light source. That consumes your entire available 15 amps. (amps = watts/110 volts)

A larger circuit breaker/fuse might be used to stop power interruption, but that drastically increases the fire hazard. The wire, and outlets, can only handle so much electricity at a time. Increasing the size of the fuse or circuit breaker will not increase the capacity of the circuit. It will increase the temperature that the wire, and outlets might be allowed to reach. In most cases additional circuits can be easily added by a licensed electrician.

Wiring type and quality as well as the kind and condition of breaker/fuse boxes and fixtures should be inspected by a professional. Aluminum wiring and certain breaker boxers increase the likely hood of fire. The cost is little compared to fire and what goes along with it.

Poor quality electrical work may not only endanger your life and property but may also lower resale value. No one objects to having extra, or larger, electrical circuits. It’s a plus, but handyman quality, or worse, wiring makes a house harder to sell and will probably sell for less.

Inadequate ventilation can cause several problems. If humidity is allowed to get too high, or if ventilation exhausts in improper places, like attics, chimneys or crawlspaces, mold, wood rot and mortar damage can result. Once moisture content reaches about 19% in building materials for 48 hours mold and rot will grow to begin digesting the building materials. An average cubic foot of air on earth has around 100,000 mold spores. When sufficient moisture is available mold grows.

Ventilated into chimneys the excess moisture can combine with creosote to produce acids that dissolve mortar. Chimney can then leak into living areas. As mortar crumbles bricks/stones are displaced and can fall out.

Growers require ventilation to exhaust heat, moisture and odor, and bring in fresh air, in most cases. Some growers opt for a completely sealed room with no ventilation. A sealed room presents even more dangers to building and occupants.

A sealed room may require a dehumidifier to keep moisture levels in the healthy range. This consumes more electricity. Materials to cover walls to attempt to keep moisture from the building materials may be used. Failure to control humidity can result in portions of the building requiring gutting to correct moisture, mold and wood rot problems.

Plants require CO2 to breath. Without it they die. If a room is sealed the CO2 is consumed by the plants and must be replenished. Propane powered CO2 generators may be used introducing the possibility of gas leaks and explosions. Where industrial propane burners are used to create CO2 to boost production ultrafine particles and CO can accumulate to lethal levels.

Another method is to vent furnaces and water heaters into the room. This probably works fine for the plants, but put all animals and humans at risk for gas poisoning. Besides CO2 which is fairly harmless to humans gas burning appliances produce carbon monoxide which is deadly and sulfur dioxide which is highly corrosive.

These vents are designed and installed specifically for the appliance. If the venting is altered toxic gases may leak into living areas. If vent gases allowed to cool too much sulfuric acid forms and damages vent pipes and appliances. Hot vent gases could cause a fire.

Excess humidity can cause burners, vent pipes and cabinets of water heaters, furnaces and boilers to rust. Moisture vented into areas with gas burning appliances or not vented from room with furnace air returns, can also cause this.

Another result of excess humidity is the growth of insects and rodents to eat them. The most common things that are hazardous to your property or that create an unhealthy environment involve too much water.

It is never a good idea to cut holes in a foundation. The entire building and all of its weight rest on the foundation. Any alteration to the foundation will affect everything above. In Colorado, at least, most grow rooms and even commercial grow houses probably pose few threats to future buyers and residents. People growing medical marijuana for their own use, in their own homes are probably not as likely as large-scale illegal growers to damage their own living environments.

Ignorance is likely the biggest threat to these home growers and the people and property around them. Industrial Hygienist Caoimhin Connell writes: “Remediating a grow house is not difficult and does not usually require gutting the property. The biggest problem in remediating a grow house is getting rid of the odor of marijuana; that can be very difficult.” As an afterthought Mr. Connell warns that the airborne levels of THC are high enough that any person living in a grow house, or in an adjacent living unit, will test positive in a urinalysis without actually consuming the marijuana. People in positions that require UAs, such as airline pilots and professional drivers, may be fired or prosecuted as a result of the positive test. All residents of multi unit buildings can be adversely affected in this way.

Hazards Discovered in Grow Houses:

Electrical

  • Unsafe wiring
  • Oversized fusing
  • Damaged fixtures

Structural

  • Holes for ventilation and electrical access
  • Wood rot
  • Rusted hollow columns

Ventilation

  • Damaged vents from water heater and furnace
  • Rusted gas burning appliances like furnaces
  • Mold from venting to interior, attic or crawlspace
  • Deterioration of chimney mortar from venting to fireplace

Environmental

  • Pollution from hydroponics wastes
  • Groundwater
  • Wastewater
  • Improper use of insecticides
  • Health
  • CO2 Devices
  • Mold
  • Insecticide
  • Fertilizer

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Industrial Hygienist Caoimhin Connell rates some hazards associated with grow rooms:

  • One of the most hazardous situations common in each of the grows was the presence of ultrafine particles and excessive levels of carbon dioxide (CO2). The growers typically will use industrial grade propane powered burners to purposely produce elevated levels of CO2 to promote plant growth. The propane burners also inadvertently produce huge quantities of ultrafine particles and carbon monoxide. As a result, normal residential ventilation is incapable of handling these contaminants. The concentration of these contaminants can be so high that they can kill a person – and I performed a criminal investigation wherein this is exactly what happened and a five month old little girl was killed by the presence of the grow.
  • The next most common hazard is the electrical wiring situation. Very extensive and elaborate wiring is present inside these houses. The wiring never meets electrical code (obviously), and treacherous exposed and convoluted wiring arrangements are almost always found. The residential wiring system is simply incapable of handling the electrical needs of a grow, and as a result, growers frequently tap directly into the overhead power lines to obtain the necessary electrical power.
  • Next greatest hazard is the grow-lights used. The grow lights produce massive exposures to UV light. In turn, the UV spectrum can not only damage unprotected surfaces, but also, the UV light is energetic enough to break down airborne materials (such as vapors or pesticides, etc) into a soup of other unknown contaminants with unexpected and unpredictable health consequences.
  • The majority of grows in which I have been involved, involve growers who essentially consider themselves “environmentally conscience” and as such don't typically use 24D, 24T, chlordane, lindane, or the like. More often, they choose to use grow products that market themselves as “organic” (the fact that the other compounds are also truly organic is not important to the grower).

Issues for home buyers:

  • The primary issue for a home buyer will be the residual odor.
  • The second most notable concern will be the liability associated with the proper disposal of chemicals that have been used at the property. Have hazardous materials been properly discarded? If the property is on city sewer, it is likely that most of the chemicals will have been illegally dumped down the sewer. If the property is on septic, the septic system should be evaluated for explosive vapors and corrosives, before it is pumped. The leach field may also have been killed off or the soils may now contain hazardous materials.
  • The third most notable concern will be residual chemical exposure in the property. The primary chemicals will be whatever the grower used, and the THC from the grow. Also, in our experience, illegal drug use/manufacturing and dealing are associated with many of the grows (even the legal ones). Therefore, testing for meth is not inappropriate (we have only encountered one grow that did NOT have meth). Proper trash-out cleaning should be adequate for restoring virtually all of the properties thus effected. A small portion of them will require industrial type cleaning.

Meet Colorado's Marijuana-Friendly Real Estate Broker
Posted: 01/09/2014 5:24 pm EST

Now that Colorado is the first state in the nation where adults 21 and over can purchase recreational marijuana legally, it was only a matter of time before other businesses started to capitalize on the green rush. Enter the "420 Friendly Realty Broker."

Denver residential real estate agent Bob Costello launched his "marijuana-friendly" campaign and website on Jan. 1, when legal recreational sales began in the state. Colorado's Amendment 64, which legalized marijuana for recreational use, also allows homeowners to grow up to six pot plants for personal use. In just a week, he's had plenty of interest, Costello told The Huffington Post.

"I've had about 30 calls about this, and for a real estate broker it's great, you want a lot of leads," Costello said. He noted that despite the many stereotypes and stigmas that still exist about the marijuana-user, even in 2014, the people who have contacted him thus far are “nice, normal people, very friendly."

He has even heard from one set of parents who had been growing marijuana in their apartment in secret, but are finally looking to buy their first home in the spring, and hope to continue to grow there in the privacy of their own home.

What Costello offers is an understanding of Colorado's marijuana laws and a marijuana-positive attitude for clients who happen to enjoy pot.

"I don’t give the attitude or lectures on lifestyle choices," Costello said. "So we can have this open discussion about the concerns of household with marijuana users, perhaps they want to also grow -- we can talk about all of this without judgement."

Costello said that prospective homebuyers in Colorado who are interested in the possibility of growing marijuana need to be aware of the laws and some of the issues that can crop up when setting up a grow room. According to Costello, it all starts with location.

"First of all, you want to be in a marijuana-friendly city like Denver, Edgewater, Wheat Ridge or Pueblo," Costello said. "You probably also want to get a house that’s not too close to a school, maybe not too close to something controversial."

The next most important things for potential homebuyers and home-growers are mold and electrical service at the property.

"The number one thing to be concerned about is mold. You need to have proper ventilation and you’ve got to have dryers and you have to put some thought into the way you want to set up your grow room so it doesn’t cause you a mold problem," Costello said. "But the other thing that’s important is the kind of amperage you can pull in at the home. Some older neighborhoods can be limited in how much amperage you can even get into the house without putting a new panel for larger distribution. So I can help them work out solutions for issues like these.”

Costello said he's already spoken to one couple who is excited to move to Colorado now because of the recreational marijuana laws. "They already like skiing and now they can live the lifestyle they want as well," he said. "It’s the exact opposite of what some of the politicians say that it’s going to scare people away.”

Despite the success he's seeing with his new marketing campaign, he said not everyone at his office, the Brokers Guild, which is home to about 700 agents, was supportive of his new strategy.

“There’s a bigotry, a stigma," Costello said. "When I announced this marijuana-friendly plan and wanted to make sure it was approved by the company, some of the older owners and managers said, ‘This is terrible, this is ruining America. How could you do that?’" But Costello said the younger agents in the office were much more accepting, "They told me, ‘Damn, I wish I would have thought of that!'"

Costello said being a marijuana-friendly residential real estate broker is just part of his plan -- he is also beginning to develop a hotel for marijuana tourists. Right now he calls it “The Mary Jane Motel," but the project is still in the discussion stages.

"Depending on the laws, the Mary Jane Motel will probably be in Denver because Denver is most friendly," Costello said. "We’ll allow smoking in the rooms -- but the rooms won’t be traditional motel rooms, instead they’ll have big screen TVs, sleeper sofas, couches and refrigerators."

The potential profit is great; Colorado is already a major tourism destination, generating nearly $17 billion from over 60 million visitors in 2012, a record for the state. Beyond tourism, the taxes from recreational marijuana sales are expected to generate roughly $70 million for Colorado in 2014. And as for the appetite for both, marijuana tourists have flooded the state since Jan. 1, waiting in long lines and participating in first-of-their-kind marijuana tours.

"We won’t even call them hotel rooms, we’ll call them ‘party rooms,’" Costello said of his future motel development plans. "We’d allow smoking in the rooms, perhaps in the common areas, whatever we can figure out is legal.”

Fire Burns Northern Colorado Pot-Growing Operation
April 9, 2013 5:17 PM

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) – Sheriff’s officials say a fire has destroyed about 60 marijuana plants in a garage being used to grow pot in Larimer County.

- Read More -

Firefighters Put Out Blaze Inside Marijuana Grow Operation

May 7, 2013 5:42 PM

Commercial marijuana growers sometimes make mistakes using electricity sometimes ending in fire and loss.

- Read More -

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