Specific Topics of Lobbying Communications |
Intended Outcomes |
Associated Subject Matters |
Anti-money laundering BCREA, member boards and BC’s REALTORS® are committed to doing their part to prevent money laundering in real estate. BCREA and member boards have worked to combat money laundering by: • participating in the Cullen Commission of Inquiry into Money Laundering in British Columbia on February 17, • launching a nine-week Mastering Compliance: Anti-Money Laundering Training for Brokers program in October 2020, • recommending mandatory anti-money laundering education. In January 2020, the Real Estate Council of BC implemented this through the launch of a Anti-Money Laundering in Real Estate course, • providing a series of updated anti-money laundering resources with help from managing brokers and compliance officers. In 2020, these resources included four blog posts, sixteen newsletters, 12 social media posts, as well as infographics, podcasts, FAQs and digital workshops, • developing cashless deposits as a best practice in real estate transactions in April 2019, • working with four other real estate organizations to make a joint statement on antimoney laundering in April 2019, including providing recommendations to the BC Government, • meeting with Maureen Maloney’s Expert Panel on Money Laundering and Peter German and sending submissions to them in March 2019, and • working with Deloitte to look for money laundering vulnerabilities in real estate in February 2019. We recommend: • invest in public education campaigns focused on how to detect and avoid red flags in the mortgage process, • let the Cullen Commission of Inquiry Into Money Laundering in British Columbia complete its work before implementing additional significant anti-money laundering measures, and • coordinate actions with the federal government to create a comprehensive, efficient enforcement and regulatory regime.
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Non-Profit Organization
|
BCREA recommends the provincial government take the following actions: 1. Consult with real estate sector stakeholders and homeowners before requiring energy assessments on existing homes. 2. Ensure that an energy assessment tool is available to owners of all existing homes. 3. Coordinate an energy assessment tool with other programs.
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Non-Profit Organization
|
Energy Efficiency and Homes, Improving Housing Supply
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Housing
|
Improving Housing Supply First, we’d like to see Official Community Plans – or OCPs – empowered to reduce unnecessary public hearings. Our second recommendation is for the province to leverage transportation funding and OCPs to encourage local governments to increase gentle densification.
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Non-Profit Organization
|
In recent months, the cost of strata insurance has increased significantly for many BC buildings. We wish for improvement in the handling of strata documents during sales transactions.
For the second time since 2016, the regulatory system for REALTORS® is being changed. We wish to ensure the regulatory structure and changes to the practice of real estate meet the needs of professionals and protect the interests of consumers.
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Consumer Issues
|
Real estate practice; For the second time since 2016, the regulatory system for REALTORS® is being changed. We wish to ensure the regulatory structure and changes to the practice of real estate meet the needs of professionals and protect the interests of consumers.
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Industry
|
Speculation and Vacancy Tax In 2020, BCREA’s economists published a Market Intelligence report, estimating the impacts of the Speculation and Vacancy Tax (SVT). To date, this is the only quantitative assessment of the impact of the SVT. The report found that the SVT had negative impacts on home sales and prices, but the impacts were temporary and appeared to be limited to Metro Vancouver. Within Metro Vancouver, it is difficult to disentangle impacts of the SVT on the rental market with impacts from the Empty Homes Tax and short-term rental regulations that were implemented around the same time. We recommend eliminating the SVT
|
-
Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Consumer Issues
|
Subject matters added through an Lobbying Activity Report:
Subject matters added through an Lobbying Activity Report:
|
BCREA recommends the provincial government take the following actions: 1. Consult with real estate sector stakeholders and homeowners before requiring energy assessments on existing homes. Realtors and other stakeholders can provide on-the-ground expertise on how to implement energy assessments in ways that will increase their efficacy and fairness. Realtors should not be required to provide energy labelling information, because they are not the property owners. Realtors facilitate transactions, rather than participate in them. The current proposal in the Minister of Finance’s mandate letter poses several challenges: • only homes listed for sale on Multiple Listing Service® systems would be impacted, • to avoid the requirement, sellers may choose not to work with Realtors, • if on-site assessments are required and there is a shortage of energy advisors, especially in rural or remote communities, there could be a significant delay in listing homes. This could result in added costs, which could be passed on to buyers. Adequate consultation with stakeholders can further increase effectiveness when understanding which homes should be exempt from energy labelling requirements. Some exemptions to be considered include new homes, which may already have energy labels and will be required to have higher minimum Energy Step Code standards under the 2022 BC Building Code. Other exemptions to be considered include properties that are marketed for redevelopment and situations where owners must sell homes at short notice or due to financial difficulties. 2. Ensure that an energy assessment tool is available to owners of all existing homes. Energy labelling support should be made available for all homeowners, not just at the time of listing. BCREA understands that the BC Government is in the early stages of developing a remote energy evaluation tool to be used by homeowners. We are unclear whether this tool would be available to assess all homes or only those about to be listed on MLS® Systems. We support the implementation of an energy assessment tool that would examine energy, GHG emissions and cost implications of design and retrofit options for most building models within the National Building Code of Canada. The tool will allow users to see different costs and changes to utilities that could result from renovations. Making a low-cost, easy-to-use energy assessment tool available to all owners of existing homes could result in a larger transformation of the existing housing stock. 3. Coordinate an energy assessment tool with other programs. To increase accessibility and uptake of a new energy assessment tool, link it with other tools and incentive programs to support homebuyers and homeowners. Specifically, we recommend coordinating with the following programs: • current CleanBC retrofit incentives, • local government programs and incentives, • private sector programs and incentives, such as those provided by financial institutions, utilities and equipment providers, • EnerGuide for Homes. Coordinating with Natural Resources Canada to look for commonalities between a provincial tool for existing homes and the federal EnerGuide for Homes, which is used for new homes, will allow for consumers to make comparisons.
|
- Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Non-Profit Organization
|
Improving Housing Supply Opportunity Government support for homebuyers helps British Columbians access the most appropriate housing for their needs. The British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA), BC’s ten real estate boards and more than 23,000 REALTORS® look forward to continued collaboration with the BC Government to increase housing options and supply for residents that are not needlessly delayed. While this will not solve housing affordability challenges in a day, it will help to better match supply with demand over the long term. Background Affordability is an issue in many BC housing markets, causing hardships for a growing number of residents. Housing affordability constrains economic opportunities and causes dreams of home ownership to become increasingly difficult to achieve, especially for first-time buyers and lower-income families. Home prices are out of reach for many households and rental supply is inadequate to accommodate demand. Since 2012, BC average housing prices have risen by 52 per cent. Growth in home prices is a function of many factors, influenced by both demand and supply. For the period of 1982-2020, the BCREA economics department found that the most important economic variables that affect home prices are housing demand (24 per cent), mortgage rates (22 per cent), price expectations (18 per cent) and supply (16 per cent), which collectively explain 80 per cent of the variance in home prices during the period. 1 There is no silver-bullet solution to stabilize housing prices. While demand is a very important driver of prices, it is largely influenced by a strong labour market and healthy population growth and should be encouraged by policy choices rather than limited by them. For example, immigration is the most important driver of population growth in BC, and also affects housing demand. While the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a sharp temporary drop in immigration, the federal government aims to welcome about 401,000 immigrants across the country in 2021. Many of those people will settle in BC, contributing to BC’s economy and culture, and they will also add to existing demand for housing
|
- Development of any legislative proposal by the government of British Columbia, a Provincial entity or a member of the Legislative Assembly
|
Non-Profit Organization
|
|