Working with a Realtor


Friday, February 25th, 2011

Other

In real estate, like many other fields, professional representation is available for every step of the process. How much or how little representation you need or want will depend on your knowledge and background in real estate, as well as the amount of time you have to dedicate to the process.

The purchase or sale of real estate has significant financial implications for those involved, although the way in which the transaction unfolds can have more significant consequences for those involved than the price tag.

“ It’s critical to understand your comfort level going in. Buying or selling a home is the largest financial transaction that most people will ever be a part of and you want to ensure that all aspects of the transaction are handled in an efficient manner that helps protect you,” Jake Moldowan, Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver president said. “ Realtors provide clients with professional representation in a real estate transaction. As your agent, they are duty-bound to work and advocate in your best interest.”

Realtors provide a broad range of services, depending on individual business models and the agreement between you and your Realtor as to which services you want.

Depending on that agreement, services may include helping you determine the value of your home if you’re a seller, or helping you establish a reasonable purchase offer if you’re a buyer. It may include listing a property for sale on the Multiple Listing Service ( MLS) to bring it to the attention of Realtors working on behalf of buyers. It may include marketing a property on www. realtor. ca or www. realtylink. ca, in a local newspaper, on signs, via open houses or other advertising vehicles. It may include help negotiating the sale if you’re the seller, or the purchase price and conditions if you’re a buyer. It may include seeking advice on conditions and appropriate subjects.

There are a lot of ‘ mays’ in the range of potential services, again depending on a Realtor’s specialties, i. e. residential, commercial, the types of services a Realtor offers, and the types of services you choose.

What’s equally valuable is the level of protection you gain from hiring a Realtor. Buying a home is the most significant purchase most people make in a lifetime. A Realtor brings assurances and safeguards to the process.

Each stage of the transaction occurs in front of a well-regulated backdrop created over many years to protect the public. This includes Realtor insurance, an assurance fund, and multiple avenues of recourse if someone feels their agent did not act in accordance with their professional and contractual obligations. Those avenues include the BC Real Estate Council and the appropriate real estate board.

Here’s a more comprehensive list of the protections that come from working with a Realtor:

Standards, legislation and requirements

The real estate profession is one of the most highly regulated in the country. The Real Estate Council of BC is a regulatory agency established by the provincial government to protect consumers through the licensing of all individuals who practice real estate in the province. The conduct requirements for all real estate licensees and brokerages include: 1. Undivided loyalty. The brokerage must protect the client’s negotiating position at all times, and disclose all known facts, which may affect or influence their decision. 2. Obey all lawful instructions of the

seller. 3. Keep the confidences of clients. 4. Exercise reasonable care and skill in

performing all assigned duties. 5. Account for all money and property placed in a brokerage’s hands while acting for the client.

The above speaks to the minimum required under the Real Estate Services Act. Realtors are subject to a higher standard. As members of their local real estate board, Realtors are also required to adhere to the Canadian Real Estate Association’s REALTOR ® Code and Standards of Business Practice.

Both the Real Estate Council of BC and the 12 BC real estate boards use a comprehensive investigatory and disciplinary process to deal with complaints. Realtors who are found to have breached either the legislation or the REALTOR ® Code are subject to sanctions by their board and/ or the Real Estate Council.

Realtor duty to disclose

In 1991, the BC Real Estate Association, the provincial association for Realtors, introduced the Property Disclosure Statement ( PDS). This document is a detailed form that asks a property seller to disclose any defects to a prospective buyer. This document is not required by law, however, the Realtors of BC decided to make the PDS ( and associated forms, the Strata Property Disclosure Statement and the Rural Property Disclosure Statement) available to any client wanting to list a home on the MLS. The PDS can be legally incorporated into the Contract for Purchase and Sale.

The PDS goes beyond current legal disclosure obligations and requires that potential problems be itemized for prospective buyers, such as buried fuel storage tanks, asbestos insulation, unauthorized rental suites, renovations done without a permit, moisture problems, unregistered easements or encroachments, and whether the home was ever used as a grow-op or drug lab.

Although the PDS is never a substitute for a thorough, professional home inspection, it is a great place for buyers to begin their due diligence investigation into any home they are hoping to purchase.

By choosing to make the PDS mandatory, the Realtors of BC sought to provide the public with an additional level of certainty when they purchase a home.

Special Compensation Coverage

The Real Estate Compensation Fund Corporation is authorized by the Real Estate Services Act and provides protection for consumers who have lost deposit monies entrusted to a real estate licensee ( or an unlicensed individual related to the brokerage, for example, a receptionist, director or officer) that is misappropriated, wrongfully converted, intentionally not paid or accounted for or obtained by fraud. As a condition of licensing, it is mandatory for all Realtors to participate in the fund.

Transaction deposits held by real estate brokerages are protected by the Special Compensation Corporation and are held by the Realtor’s brokerage as the stakeholder until the transaction completes or the parties give instructions as to the disposition of the deposit. Deposit monies can only be removed from a brokerage trust account under specific circumstances – check with your Realtor for more information.

Errors and Omission insurance

Anyone licensed to engage in real estate in BC is required to have Errors and Omission Insurance. This provides coverage for professional errors made in the contract phase.

Recourse for the public

Both the Real Estate Council of BC and the 12 BC real estate boards have an investigatory and disciplinary process to deal with complaints. Realtors who are found to have breached either the legislation or REALTOR ® Code are subject to sanctions by their board and/ or the Council.

Real estate boards deal with breaches of the REALTOR ® Code. The Real Estate Council of BC deals with breaches of the Real Estate Services Act.

The Professional Standards Department at the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver ( REBGV) educates members about professional conduct, and resolves and mediates complaints and concerns of both members and consumers. Where a resolution isn’t possible, files can be forwarded to the Board’s Professional Conduct Committee for further review. The REBGV website is www. rebgv. org.

The Real Estate Council enforces entry qualifications, investigates complaints and imposes discipline under the Real Estate Services Act. The Real Estate Council of BC website is www. recbc. ca.

Realtor education

Realtors complete educational and licensing requirements and must be of good reputation in order to become licensed.

Realtors are committed to continuing education and consistently refine and improve their skills and professional knowledge through participation in the profession’s required Professional Development Program.

Every two years, Realtors must complete a required number of course credits as a condition of continued membership in their Board. These courses are designed to keep Realtors up-to-date with new and changing information relating to real estate.

As licensees, Realtors are also required by the Real Estate Council of BC to complete a re-licensing education program every two years.

(* REALTOR ® and MLS ® are trademarks owned by the Canadian Real Estate Association.)

 copyright© REBGV



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