Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: March
8, 2010
Sen. Ballenger Wins Approval for Bill Protecting
Renters From Meth Properties
The full Senate has given approval to a measure ensuring
greater consumer protection for renters through passage of the Clandestine
Drug Laboratories Remediation Act. Senate Bill 2241, by Sen. Roger
Ballenger, D-Okmulgee, and Rep. Wade Rousselot, D-Wagoner, would require
property owners to remediate an apartment, hotel room or residence used
to make meth before it could be rented to anyone.
“Under current law, the owner of a property that’s been used
for a meth lab can rent that unit or house back out once the dangerous
material has been removed, but there’s no requirement for the property
to be tested and remediated to ensure it is safe,” Ballenger said.
“My legislation would require law enforcement to post notice that
a meth lab had been discovered there and require testing and remediation
before it could be rented again.”
In addition, anyone living in the unit at the time a meth lab is discovered
would have to be evacuated until the property was deemed safe.
“For years we’ve seen declines in meth labs due to tough laws
passed in Oklahoma, but now newer, easier methods of making meth have
been discovered, and these ‘shake and bake’ labs are popping
up in every part of the state,” Ballenger explained. “We don’t
know what the long-term effects are, but we know the substances that result
from these meth labs are toxic and highly flammable, so we need greater
protections in place for prospective renters.”
SB 2241 must now be considered by the House of Representatives.
For more information contact:
Sen. Ballenger: 405-521-5588
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