Times Colonist

Eby ditches recommenda­tion for money-laundering chief

- GRAEME WOOD gwood@glaciermed­ia.ca

B.C. Premier David Eby has poured cold water on the formation of an independen­t antimoney-laundering commission­er responsibl­e for monitoring risks and the government agencies tasked to combat them.

“We don’t have any imminent plans around establishi­ng a money laundering czar [commission­er] but we are working closely with police, the Ministry of Finance, Revenue Canada and the land title office to make sure that informatio­n is as available as possible and effective as possible in fighting crime,” Eby told Glacier Media at a press conference Monday with Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon.

Eby held the news conference to provide an overview of his government’s housing policies aimed at combating speculatio­n, namely the house flipping tax proposed in the 2024 budget.

The tax is to be imposed on a sliding scale of up to 20 per cent of capital gains on all residentia­l property sales (and condo assignment­s) made within two years of an initial purchase. Exemptions include death, divorce, changes to employment and family membership and for constructi­on that adds at least one additional unit.

House flipping was considered a means to launder money in real estate, the Commission of Inquiry into Money Laundering in B.C. heard from experts between 2020 and 2022.

When asked if the commission’s work affected his decision to implement the tax, Eby said, “There is no question that flipping activity was identified as a serious issue in the money laundering public inquiry as well as some investigat­ive journalism, including issues like shadow flipping.”

But when asked about the status of creating a money laundering commission­er, Eby said his government is taking other action, such as a new unexplaine­d wealth orders regime via civil forfeiture and more robust mandatory identifica­tion measures when buying and selling a home, including a new beneficial ownership registry.

“And new agreements with the federal government around tax informatio­n has enabled us to better enforce our own tax rules and enabled Ottawa to better enforce their tax rules.”

Establishi­ng an anti-moneylaund­ering commission­er was the first recommenda­tion of Austin Cullen, who headed the inquiry and whose 101 recommenda­tions were outlined in his June 2022 final report.

The commission­er was to be responsibl­e for “monitoring, reviewing, auditing, and reporting on the performanc­e of provincial agencies with an antimoney-laundering mandate,” while “undertakin­g, directing, and supporting research on money laundering issues in order to develop expertise on money laundering issues, including emerging trends and responses, informed by an understand­ing of the measures taken internatio­nally.”

The commission­er was also to analyse data from provincial and federal government agreements for anti-money-laundering purposes.

Cullen recommende­d the province implement a universal record keeping and reporting requiremen­t for cash transactio­ns of $10,000 or more, meaning all businesses would need to comply. And, the commission­er would have access to this data to produce reports for the cabinet.

After learning federal RCMP financial crime units were understaff­ed, Cullen recommende­d the commission­er “monitor the response to money laundering within the RCMP federal police service by seeking detailed metrics concerning the resources dedicated to money laundering investigat­ions, the number of money laundering investigat­ions undertaken by the RCMP, and the results of those investigat­ions.”

Without the commission­er, at least 10 recommenda­tions cannot be fulfilled as envisioned by Cullen.

An analysis from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n provided to Cullen’s inquiry showed 28 per cent of all properties sold between 2005 and 2018 were sold within 12 months, and this excludes flipping of strata property pre-sale contracts. Activity was most pronounced in 2006, dropped significan­tly in 2009 and picked up in 2015. By 2017, seven per cent of properties were flipped in less than 12 months.

Kahlon said he did not have readily available data on how many homes the tax could target but the Ministry of Finance estimates revenues of $45 million.

Eby said the flipping tax is “not a silver bullet” and the purpose is to eventually not have to require the tax.

 ?? ETHAN CAIRNS, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. Premier David Eby says the province has no plans to establish a money laundering commission­er.
ETHAN CAIRNS, THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. Premier David Eby says the province has no plans to establish a money laundering commission­er.

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