The Province

The many ways Realtors strengthen communitie­s across our region

REALTORS CONTRIBUTE MILLIONS TO CHARITY AND GIVE COUNTLESS VOLUNTEER HOURS TO A RANGE OF CAUSES

- BY ROBIN BRUNET

To be successful in real estate, you need to know your community. That means getting involved and helping out where you can.’ — REBGV president Jill Oudil

Arguably, no other profession­al group has a firmer grip on the pulse of communitie­s than Realtors. Their job is, after all, to find homes for clients, a service that requires deep knowledge about the health and needs of their neighbourh­oods.

Realtors are often on the front lines of charitable activity. Since it began tracking its members’ contributi­ons in 2007, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) has identified $43.4 million in charitable giving. REBGV is the profession­al organizati­on representi­ng over 14,000 Realtors in Metro Vancouver.

Last year, member contributi­ons amounted to $2.2 million, a figure that only tells part of the charitable story, says Jill Oudil, REBGV president. These donations were accompanie­d by countless volunteer hours to a wide range of causes, including the Ride to Conquer Cancer, the Children’s Miracle Network, the Richmond Hospital Foundation, Backpack Buddies and more.

Oudil says: “Our members are community builders. To be successful in real estate, you need to know your community. That means getting involved and helping out where you can. That’s what Realtors do. It’s innate to many of us in the profession.”

On occasion, Realtor contributi­ons can be spectacula­r. In 2012, longtime REBGV member William P.J. McCarthy made the singlelarg­est charitable bequest to a sole beneficiar­y in B.C.’s history: $21.4 million to the BC Cancer Foundation via the Jambor-McCarthy Legacy Fund.

Other initiative­s are more grassroots. Each November, the Realtors Care Blanket Drive collects clothes and blankets for the working poor and homeless. (The 23rd annual REALTORS Care Blanket Drive takes place Nov. 14 to 21.)

“Originally, Realtors collected and donated excess items from clients moving from one location to another,” Oudil says. “Today, that process is facilitate­d by volunteers at over 100 drop-off locations at real estate offices across the Lower Mainland.”

The program is the largest and longest-running blanket drive in British Columbia. Since it began in 1994, it has helped more than 300,000 people in our communitie­s. Charitable organizati­ons across the Lower Mainland rely on the Blanket Drive to help them keep people warm and dry during the winter months.

The fact that Realtors spend much of their working days within the communitie­s they serve has also proven beneficial to making the Lower Mainland a little safer.

The Realty Watch program is a partnershi­p between local police department­s, the RCMP and more than 17,000 Realtors across the region.

In emergency situations, Realtors respond to police requests to search for missing or abducted persons.

In July 2016, Port Coquitlam Realtor Risa Bassetto was integral to finding a missing person.

She checked her Realty Watch fanout, requested by police and sent by REBGV, and discovered it was a Vancouver resident who’d been reported missing.

“Risa was instrument­al in finding this elderly person,” says Vancouver Police Department Detective Const. Raymond Payette.

As REBGV members continue making their communitie­s stronger and safer, Oudil reflects on their efforts.

“The volunteeri­ng spirit within our Realtor community is widespread. In fact, it would be difficult to find a local charitable event, a parent advisory committee, a youth sports team or other volunteer group that doesn’t have a Realtor involved. Giving back is second nature to our members and I don’t think they realize how powerful a force they are across our communitie­s.”

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