BREA Members return full slate of officers

Mon, May 13th 2019, 09:00 AM

With a booming market and more luxury developments coming on stream than ever before, real estate leaders warned hundreds this week that a new era of compliance regulations would force every firm dealing with property to focus on not just what it was selling, but who it was selling to.

“This has been another interesting year with many obstacles and challenges,” Bahamas Real Estate Association (BREA) President Christine Wallace-Whitfield told a packed house at the Nassau Yacht Club May 1 as the 800+-member organization held its annual general meeting.

Record numbers turned out for what is considered the serious business highlight of the year for the real estate community but this year most subjects paled by comparison to the new issue of compliance.

BREA put its intended goal to update 20-year-old legislation on hold in 2018 so it could turn its attention to incoming regulations that mean before turning over a key and collecting a commission, every sales associate will have to be certain that his or her firm’s broker has every detail of information available on the buyer, bringing the real estate industry and developers in line with what is expected of banks and law firms.

In meetings with government officials, BREA has contended that all finances go through law firms which already have – or should have – all financial information on their clients and asking the client to re-submit extensive background information to yet another source creates an undue and onerous burden on both parties.

According to broker David Morley, president of Morley Real Estate and chairman of the BREA Compliance Committee, “regardless of whether you touch the money, the new regulations make all licensed brokers gatekeepers.”

Morley told developers and brokers they had more than five years to prepare.

“The legislation stems from guidelines set by the FATF (Financial Action Task Force) in 2012,” he said.

“The Bahamas waited until 2018. What is being asked of us is not unique to us in this country and it is not as onerous as it is in other countries.” In some jurisdictions, brokers are required to file know your customer background information before leasing.

In The Bahamas, it only applies to sales. Brokers who fail to comply can be fined $5,000 a day. Brokers are also required to hold that information on record for five years and then destroy. If records are held longer than five years, the fines can reach $20,000.

“The fines in this legislation are no laughing matter,” said Morley, who was thanked profusely for studying the 100+page Act, reviewing with legal authorities and reporting.

High on the list of non-compliance related matters, BREA stepped up education and ethics, offered an advanced course in luxury property sales marketing by the American-based National Association of Realtors (NAR) leading to NAR certification.

The course that was three years in the planning under sales associate Laura Kimble drew a record 35 persons.

BREA plans an appraisal course later this year and intends to strengthen its basic entry level curriculum. It also wants to re-charge interest in Family Island branches.

Its other goal – ending the practice of foreign sales agents and brokers coming in to the Bahamas to sell property without going through a Bahamian real estate firm, a practice that is against the law but is challenging to enforce without evidence of the transaction having taken place and the foreign agent being paid. According to Wallace-Whitfield, BREA is working closely with officials to build awareness and ramp up enforcement.

Sales associates, brokers and developers who attended the meeting returned the full slate of officers and elected new directors. Officers include Christine Wallace-Whitfield, President, Heather Peterson, Vice President, Cara Christie, Secretary, Sara Callender, Treasurer.

Directors include Lana Rademaker, Mike Lightbourne, Sally Hutcheson, Hartman Longley, Helen Dupuch, Elbert Thompson, Jolika Buckner, James Bernard, Kirk Ingraham and Kim Kikivarakis-Dillet.

BREA 2019-20 Board – With more than 800 members and the largest turnout for an annual general meeting in its history, the Bahamas Real Estate Association returned all of its officers for another term and added new directors. Pictured sitting l-r, Jolika Buckner, Christine Wallace-Whitfield, President, Heather Peterson, Vice President. Standing l-r, Kim Kikivarakis-Dillet, new Director, Kirk Ingraham, new Director, Lana Rademaker, Director, Hartman Longley, Director, Helen Aaron-Dupuch, Director, Cara Christie, Secretary, Mike Lightbourne, Director, Sally Hutcheson, Director. Missing from photo: Sara Callender-Treasurer, Elbert Thompson, Director, James Bernard-Director.

Full House – More than 125 licenced associates, brokers and developers turned out for the Bahamas Real Estate Association’s annual general meeting at the Nassau Yacht Club May 1. Bahama Islands Realty Sales Associate Rudy Carroll asks Treasurer Sara Callender, at podium, about a financial statement matter.

New era – Once they focused on sales, now associates and brokers have to focus on who they are selling to, according to BREA Compliance Committee Chairman David Morley, left. Government is imposing strict know your customer regulations on the real estate industry. Also pictured at the organisation’s annual general meeting BREA Director Sally Hutcheson of SALCO Realty, centre, and BREA President, Christine Wallace-Whitfield, Island Living Real Estate.

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