Vancouver luxury rental firm says regulator's 'unfair' order freezing its accounts has been lifted
A Vancouver property management company has had its trust accounts unfrozen and its licence reinstated, two weeks after a regulator's "urgent" order against it.
Rent It Furnished Inc. hired former B.C. Attorney General Wally Oppal to defend itself against what it and Oppal called "unfair" order from the B.C. Financial Services Authority, which regulates a variety of industries in the province, including real estate.
In a statement Friday, the company said the BCFSA had rescinded its order "following an urgent legal hearing that included results from KPMG's third-party forensic audit, which Rent It Furnished commissioned to vindicate itself."
The company stressed that the BCFSA's July 25 order contained "zero evidence" of a public complaint about it, nor of any misappropriation of trust funds. Rent It Furnished also claimed the BCFSA didn't give the company a chance to defend itself before issuing the order.
"The BCFSA has a legitimate role to protect the public, but this suspension didn’t fit the circumstances and caused widespread disruption to the business and members of the public who depend on it," said Oppal, in the release.
"While Rent It Furnished had some administrative issues, the order was unnecessarily punitive, especially considering the business is classified as an essential service. I am pleased the BCFSA took a second look and rescinded it."
The regulator issued its order – and a "consumer alert" – late last month, saying they were the latest steps in "a series of escalating actions" the BCFSA has taken over the last year in response to the company's "repeated failures to provide compliant financial records."
According to the BCFSA, the company and the regulator entered a consent agreement last August, in which RIF admitted to failing to identify six shortages in its trust accounts between February 2017 and September 2020. The shortages totalled roughly $5,700.
RIF also admitted to failing to take immediate steps to rectify the shortages and failing to notify the BCFSA of a negative balance within 10 days of when it occurred.
According to the BCFSA, RIF has shown a "repeated inability to reconcile its rental trust accounts" since entering the consent agreement.
"Without complete and accurate reconciliations, trust accounts cannot be assessed to determine if funds are handled correctly in accordance with the Real Estate Services Act," the BCFSA said in a news release when it first announced the order.
"RIF was unable to identify and track specific amounts held in trust for its clients, or how much money its clients were owed."
Documents posted on the BCFSA website Friday afternoon confirm that the order has been rescinded and that Rent It Furnished must provide monthly reconciliation of its trust accounts to the regulator until a discipline hearing scheduled for Nov. 12 to 14.
"Since the urgent order, RIF has hired KPMG and provided BCFSA with trust account reconciliations that show that consumer funds are no longer at risk," the regulator said in an updated consumer alert.
"BCFSA has varied the order to allow payments from the trust account to resume."
The company maintains that consumer funds were never at risk.
In RIF's statement Friday, founder and CEO Erika Weimer again characterized the misconduct her company admitted to as a matter of "issues with how reports were being reconciled and generated on the company’s automated systems," and said she and her staff were working with the BCFSA to resolve the issues when the regulator's order "blindsided" them.
"I am still numb from what happened because there was zero evidence of misappropriation of trust funds, which we fought relentlessly to prove," said Weimer, in the release.
"Though the suspension was brief, thousands of our landlords and tenants were disrupted and had to seek temporary assistance outside of our company to pay and receive rent, and we were forbidden from tending to building maintenance emergencies."
Rent It Furnished said it has resumed operations and "is working diligently to process rent transactions between landlords and tenants and tend to maintenance emergencies."
The company describes itself as "a leading provider of luxury rental property in Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa and New York," with more than 5,000 "luxury furnished properties" under management, serving "local and international clients."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Bloc MPs will vote confidence in Liberal government next week: Blanchet
The Conservatives' first shot at toppling the Liberal government is doomed to fail, after Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-François Blanchet told reporters his MPs will vote confidence in the government.
RCMP feared they didn't have enough evidence to hold terror suspect sought by U.S.
Court documents filed in the case of a Pakistani man arrested in Quebec for an alleged plot to kill Jews in New York City reveal the RCMP didn't have enough evidence to hold him in Canada.
Federal government to further limit number of international students
The federal government will be further limiting the number of international students permitted to enter Canada next year. It’s the government’s latest immigration-related measure to address Canadians' ongoing housing and affordability concerns.
Teen faces new charge in Sask. high school arson attack
A 14-year-old student who allegedly set her classmate on fire is facing a new charge.
'I'm here for the Porsche': Video shows brazen car theft in Mississauga
Video of a brazen daylight auto theft which shows a suspect running over a victim in a stolen luxury SUV has been released by police west of Toronto.
DEVELOPING Exploding electronic devices kill 14, wound 450 in second day of explosions in Lebanon
Lebanon's health ministry said Wednesday that at least 14 people were killed and 450 others wounded by exploding electronic devices in multiple regions of the country. The explosions came a day after an apparent Israeli attack targeting pagers used by Hezbollah killed at least 12 and wounded nearly 3,000. Here are the latest updates.
Canada abstains from UN motion calling on Israel to end occupation of Gaza, West Bank
Canada abstained today from a high-profile United Nations vote demanding that Israel end its 'unlawful presence' in the Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank within a year.
What to know about the deadly electronic explosions targeting Hezbollah
Just one day after pagers used by hundreds of members of the militant group Hezbollah exploded, more electronic devices detonated in Lebanon Wednesday in what appeared to be a second wave of sophisticated, deadly attacks that targeted an extraordinary number of people. Here's what we know so far.
Record-breaking Lotto Max jackpot tickets sold in Ontario, Quebec
Two lucky people in Ontario and Quebec will split Tuesday’s record-breaking $80-million Lotto Max jackpot.