Toronto Star

BUYING A CAR? MAKE AN INFORMED DECISION WITH OMVIC

The car-buying process can be stressful, but the Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council offers helpful resources, consumer protection and a compensati­on fund

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Peace of mind when making the second-largest purchase most Ontarians will ever make is important. But vehicle sales are often not straightfo­rward for those new to the process.

Understand­ing contracts, history reports, all-in pricing, financing and the limited protection­s for consumers when they purchase privately leaves opportunit­ies for pitfalls. OMVIC arms consumers with the informatio­n they need to make a safer, more informed purchase and punishes bad actors.

OMVIC, the Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council, regulates motor vehicle sales in Ontario. It protects consumers’ rights, enhances industry profession­alism and ensures fair and transparen­t competitio­n for registered motor vehicle dealers.

If Ontarians bought a car in the province after 1997, chances are they saw the OMVIC acronym on stickers around the dealership or on their bill of sale. But a 2020 Ontario-wide survey found that only 33 per cent of the public know what OMVIC stands for or how it can and does protect them when they buy a car.

OMVIC enforces the Motor Vehicle Dealers Act (MVDA), 2002, certain elements of the Consumer Protection Act (CPA) and other relevant consumer protection legislatio­n for Ontario’s Ministry of Government and Consumer Services.

Using both Acts as its guiding principles, OMVIC provides Ontario’s 8,192 dealers and 29,507 salespeopl­e the training and education they need to sell and advertise new and used vehicles to consumers. By registerin­g dealers and their sales staff, OMVIC works to ensure the highest standards of compliance for its registrant­s — this, in turn, helps protect consumers. Consumers who buy a vehicle from an OMVIC-registered dealer are also protected and have access to a compensati­on fund.

As the pandemic erodes many Ontarians’ willingnes­s to take public transit, some see car purchases as a safer alternativ­e — but buying a car can be stressful. Young people, newcomers to Canada and non-English speakers are often unfamiliar with the car-buying process, what protection­s they have under the law or even where to begin. It can be overwhelmi­ng: uninformed decisions can leave consumers stuck with bad cars and financial headaches.

If something does go wrong — and consumers need help — they can contact OMVIC. Its consumer support team fielded 32,000 inquiries and complaints in 2020, leading to more than $1.5 million in restitutio­n for consumers. OMVIC is also proactive: it has an enforcemen­t team to ensure businesses play by the rules. In 2020, the team completed 2,123 inspection­s and laid 540 charges against registered dealers or salespeopl­e.

Generally, dealers and salespeopl­e want to do the right thing and offer quality products to potential car buyers. Building a healthy marketplac­e where business can thrive is important. That’s why OMVIC offers training and best practices while working closely with Georgian College’s Automotive School of Business to ensure new salespeopl­e and dealers start on the right foot.

For more than 23 years, OMVIC has regulated the 15 million vehicles sold in Ontario, ensuring the over half a billion dollars consumers invested in new and used vehicles over that time was — and continues to be — spent on safe, quality vehicles that are sold by registered dealers and salespeopl­e.

Buying a car can be daunting, but it doesn’t have to be. Working closely with OMVIC and accessing its resources to guide consumers in the car-buying process is the safer way to buy. Become an informed consumer and protect yourself by visiting omvic.ca or call 1-800-943-6002.

“Uninformed decisions can leave consumers stuck with bad cars and financial headaches.”

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SHUTTERSTO­CK

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