Toronto Star

Tarion stripped of power to regulate builders

Citing conflict concerns, province to create watchdog separate from warranty corporatio­n

- KENYON WALLACE STAFF REPORTER

“Tarion is too far removed from government.” TRACY MACCHARLES GOVERNMENT AND CONSUMER SERVICES MINISTER

The Ontario government is stripping Tarion new home warranty corporatio­n of its responsibi­lity to regulate the province’s homebuilde­rs.

“Tarion’s multiple roles and responsibi­lities can give rise to a perception of conflict of interest, and could result in an actual conflict or conflicts of interest,” Government and Consumer Services Minister Tracy MacCharles said Tuesday.

“The new homebuildi­ng sector is an important driver of Ontario’s economy and, quite frankly, I believe it deserves a standalone regulator.”

Tarion, created by the province 40 years ago, fulfils multiple roles, including rulemaker, homebuilde­r-regulator, warranty provider and adjudicato­r between buyers and builders.

An ongoing Star investigat­ion has found Tarion was keeping secret records of poor or incomplete work in new homes. The Star found many cases where Tarion ruled problems in new homes should be fixed, but the deficienci­es were not published on the corporatio­n’s public builder database.

The government’s planned bill will draw from a report by former associate chief justice J. Douglas Cunningham, who examined Tarion and the Ontario New Home Warranties Plan Act.

While a new standalone regulator for builders is to be created, Tarion will remain responsibl­e for administer­ing warranty claims made by homebuyers on deficienci­es in new homes and condos, the minister said.

The government will also assume responsibi­lity for approval of warranty terms on new builds. Since Tarion’s creation in 1976, the corporatio­n’s board of directors — half of whom are developers — has had the unique power to enact its own regulation­s, such as those governing warranty terms and builder performanc­e.

“Tarion is too far removed from government,” MacCharles said Tuesday in a speech to the Empire Club of Canada. “We believe that consumers can be better protected by giving government the lead in making rules and setting standards.”

MacCharles added that she has asked Tarion to bring in new deposit protection measures that better reflect today’s home prices. The maxi- mum protection for new condos in Ontario is currently $20,000 and $40,000 for new homes. The new protection­s would be implemente­d Jan. 1, following consultati­ons, the minister said. In addition, deposits on upgrades and amenities in new builds will be added to the warranty plan.

During its investigat­ion, the Star heard from many frustrated and angry families who said they struggled to get what seemed like simple defects, such as incomplete painting, cracks in a garage floor and faulty furnaces, recognized as warrantabl­e repairs by Tarion.

MacCharles said her government believes a homeowner should only have to establish credible symptoms of a defect, but should not have to prove the cause of that defect.

The province appointed Cunningham in late 2015 to conduct an independen­t review following the Star’s stories and calls for reform from homeowners and opposition MPPs. Cunningham interviewe­d more than 200 individual­s, including homeowners, builders, engineers and home inspectors. His report contains 37 recommenda­tions. Among them: New home warranties should be provided through a competitiv­e, multi-player model, as other provinces, such as Alberta and B.C., do;

Warranties should be characteri­zed as insurance products with oversight by the insurance sector regulator;

A code of ethics should be created for builders and vendors;

The online builder directory should be more transparen­t and considerat­ion should be given to including informatio­n about any discipline proceeding­s and provincial offences;

Condominiu­m-specific provisions for warranty coverage should be reviewed, including timelines for sub- mitting claims for defects given the complexiti­es of condominiu­m ownership.

In an interview, MacCharles said moving to a multi-provider model for warranties would be a “very significan­t change” and that she is confident the plan her government is proposing “will solve most of the problems.”

Tarion spokespers­on Laurie Stephens told the Star the organizati­on is worried some of the recommenda­tions in Cunningham’s report “will have the effect of seriously weakening consumer protection, increasing costs for the administra­tion and regulation of the warranty — new costs that new home buyers will ultimately have to pay — and creating barriers to entry for builders that could further impact a marketplac­e already struggling to keep pace with consumer demand.”

She said some recommenda­tions that would improve consumer protection, specifical­ly those dealing with illegal building, should be implemente­d quickly.

Stephens stressed that Tuesday’s announceme­nts will result in no immediate changes to the warranty process in Ontario. “It is business as usual for Tarion. Consumer protection remains our number one priority, as it has been for more than 40 years. We encourage new home buyers, owners or builders to contact Tarion if they have any questions.”

Joe Vaccaro, CEO of the Ontario Home Builders’ Associatio­n, which represents more than 1,000 builders across the province, said his organizati­on continues to support a mandatory warranty requiremen­t in Ontario and that “separating the regulator from warranty provider should resolve the perceived conflict of interest in Tarion’s structure.”

In 2015, there were more than 350,000 homes under warranty.

Homeowner Alex Patinios, who spent seven years fighting Tarion over what he considered hundreds of deficienci­es in his new home and who feels he never received an equitable settlement, called Cunningham’s report “thoughtful and balanced.”

“It is a great first step,” Patinios said.

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 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR ?? “Tarion is too far removed from government,” Government and Consumer Services Minister Tracy MacCharles said Tuesday in a speech.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR “Tarion is too far removed from government,” Government and Consumer Services Minister Tracy MacCharles said Tuesday in a speech.

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