Vancouver Sun

Home inspectors associatio­n wants province to roll back licensing-fee increase

Consumer Protection B.C.’s licence renewal to cost almost double by 2020

- JENNIFER SALTMAN jensaltman@postmedia.com twitter.com/jensaltman

The president of an associatio­n representi­ng B.C. home inspectors says an upcoming licensingf­ee increase is a “money grab” that will hike prices for consumers and prevent people from entering the industry.

Bob Hamm is also calling on the provincial government to roll back the increase — 95 per cent over three years — and look into the activities of Consumer Protection B.C., the agency that licenses home inspectors and approved the fee hike.

“There’s absolutely no rational reason why they should be getting more money,” said Hamm, head of the Home Inspectors Associatio­n of B.C. and a Kelowna-based home inspector. “They should be able to tighten up their process.”

HIABC is the largest of four associatio­ns representi­ng home inspectors in the province. There are more than 500 licensed inspectors in B.C.

On Dec. 29, home inspectors received notice from Consumer Protection B.C. that their licensing fees will go up starting April 1.

Renewals will increase by 25 per cent each year for three years, and the cost of a new licence will go up by 36 per cent this year, followed by 25-per-cent increases in 2019 and 2020.

By April 1, 2020, the cost of a licence renewal will almost double, to $1,025 from $525.

The cost of a new licence will more than double over the same period, from $525 to $1,114.

Service Alberta charges a business with three or fewer licensed inspectors $500 for a two-year licence.

There will also be a two-per-cent annual increase for other charges over the next three years.

Fees for replacemen­t licences, late renewals and associatio­n accreditat­ion have been eliminated.

In response to an interview request, Consumer Protection B.C. provided a statement from spokeswoma­n Tatiana ChabeauxSm­ith.

“These fee increases reflect our need to recover costs for additional responsibi­lities we took on as a result of the changes made to the home-inspector regulatory model in September 2016,” the statement said.

According to the agency’s website, the responsibi­lities include assessing qualificat­ions, administer­ing new requiremen­ts and assuming responsibi­lity for consumer inquiries.

However, Hamm alleged Consumer Protection B.C. isn’t doing the work as well as it should be, and that standards have fallen since it took over some regulatory duties from associatio­ns.

“This is a process that’s not working, that’s broken and that is damaging the industry when we could be going in a different direction and actually improving the industry,” Hamm said.

“It may be that government doesn’t really appreciate exactly what Consumer Protection is not doing and it might be good for them to be aware of.”

That’s why when HIABC submitted an argument against the fee increase during stakeholde­r consultati­on in October, they copied Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor-General Mike Farnworth, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Selina Robinson and Premier John Horgan.

Farnworth, whose ministry is responsibl­e for the legislatio­n covering Consumer Protection B.C., was unavailabl­e for comment, but said in an emailed statement the agency is a non-profit that operates at arm’s length from government, and is responsibl­e for determinin­g fees for the sectors it licenses.

If the licensing fees increase at the expected rate, Hamm said the higher cost could dissuade people from entering the profession and be a burden on new inspectors.

“That’s almost a hidden tax on consumers because businesses are going to pass that down to consumers — they have to, to stay in business,” he said.

 ??  ?? Bob Hamm, head of the Home Inspectors Associatio­n of B.C., is speaking out about licence fees.
Bob Hamm, head of the Home Inspectors Associatio­n of B.C., is speaking out about licence fees.

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