The Prince George Citizen

Northern towns to suffer from new regulation­s, realtors say

- Stuart NEATBY Citizen staff sneatby@pgcitizen.ca

In advance of new housing regulation­s due to take effect in March, local real estate agents are blasting new provincial regulation­s that ban limited dual agency.

The regulation­s, part of several new rules establishe­d by the B.C. Office of the Superinten­dent of Real Estate to govern real estate transactio­ns, will take effect on March 15. But members of the B.C. Northern Real Estate Board say the dual agency restrictio­ns will place an unfair burden on agents in smaller communitie­s.

Dual agency involves a real estate agent representi­ng both a buyer and seller in the same deal. Once the new regulation­s come into place, B.C. will become the first province to prohibit the practice. The regulation­s came about as a result of recommenda­tions made by an Independen­t Advisory Group on Real Estate Regulation­s in B.C. in June 2016. This group was establishe­d to examine problems related to the real estate industry, particular­ly within the red hot housing market in the Lower Mainland. Much of the regulation was spurred on by a series of media stories about practices such as ‘shadow flipping,’ which involved the practice of reselling of properties several times before the close of a deal and profiting from each transfer.

But John Evans, president of BCNREB, said the dual agency regulation­s are unduly harsh for real estate agents in the north. He believes that in smaller markets, the regulation­s will mean fewer options for consumers.

“In a community like Prince George, that may not be a big deal, they may know five or six other realtors, they’ll just move down the list,” Evans said.

“In smaller communitie­s with three or four realtors, that’s an issue.”

Evans, who is based in Prince Rupert, said that in the real estate market, representi­ng both buyers and sellers in a transac- tion is not necessaril­y a conflict of interest. In many cases, he said, it may allow agents to provide consumers with the best deal based on their preference­s.

“It’s ludicrous because that person has chosen me to represent them and I have to send them off to somebody else because I may have implied knowledge about this buyer. So in both cases, both the buyer and the seller who have chosen me to represent them, they have to be referred to somebody else who they may or may not want to work with,” Evans said.

The dual agency restrictio­ns will allow for some exceptions for real estate agents in remote or rural communitie­s, according to Mykle Ludvigsen, spokespers­on for the Office of the Superinten­dent of Real Estate.

Ludvigsen said the exemptions would allow for dual agency in regions where enforcemen­t of the regulation would be deemed impractica­l.

“In a situation where there just is no other option, the superinten­dent specifical­ly instituted a rule that would allow for that,” Ludvigsen said.

“Our expectatio­n is there will not be a lot of those.”

However, Evans believes that another effect of the regulation­s may be the consolidat­ion of smaller real estate businesses into larger chains. The majority of the offices represente­d by the BCNREB are smaller operators, who may be at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

“In our board area, I think we have 35 offices of less than seven people. These are small little mom and pop operations. That’s what’s concerning to us,” Evans said.

Ludvigsen said the primary concern of regulators is consumer protection in the sometimes volatile housing market.

“From our perspectiv­e it was a protection issue. There are all sorts of inherent problems when you are representi­ng both sides of the deal,” Ludvigsen said.

“People are going to have to adapt in this industry.”

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