UPDATE, Oct 22. 2015: Another group featured in W5âs investigation has been convicted of curbsiding - selling cars illegally through an unlicensed dealership â by OMVIC, Ontarioâs car sales regulator.
In W5âs hidden camera investigation with the APA â a car that was presented in good condition and as a private sale was actually linked to Monterey Auto Repair â the owner of which had previously been convicted and fined for curbsiding. W5 also discovered the car had been in fact a total write off after a previous accident.
In addition to the , the group was also convicted of engaging in an unfair business practice for selling cars that had been written off and rebuilt after accidents without disclosing the carsâ true history to purchasers. The total fine amount for the convicted parties was $54,500 plus a 25% victim fine surcharge â to be paid within 12 months.
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Itâs an annual investigation: W5 teams up with the Automobile Protection Association (APA) to examine the Canadian car industry.
This year, APAâs secret shoppers and their expert mechanic looked for a decent used car in an ad and then visited the dealership or private seller to listen to the sales pitch and inspect the cars up close.
The APA surveyed 21 car sellers in the Toronto area and turned up everything from dealers who added extra fees to their advertised price, to dealers who misrepresented a carâs accident history and even dealers who misrepresented themselves, as private individuals selling their personal vehicles.
However, as W5 watched through our hidden cameras, we discovered a serious safety problem: rebuilt cars that the APA says were so poorly repaired after an accident that they should have never passed a government approved structural inspection.
âI donât think there was one that we shopped that was properly rebuilt,â said APA President George Iny.
In Ontario, if a car is rebuilt after an accident, it must pass structural and mechanical safety inspections in order to ensure the car has been rebuilt properly and is safe to go back on the road.
However, some of the cars the APA found for sale raise questions about the oversight of that inspection system â particularly structural inspections at government licensed Motor Vehicle Inspection Stations.
âSome of the cars we saw never should have been put back on the road,â said Iny.
One car in particular stood out -- a 2012 Mazda 3 for sale at Toronto Used Cars. The salesman admitted that the car had been in an accident but claimed it was only cosmetic damage and that there was âno frame damageâ. He even showed the shoppers a photo showing only minor damage to the car.
There was just one problem: the photo he showed as his proof was a photo of a completely different car. W5 tracked down the carâs real accident photos and the damage was much worse than the salesman claimed. The car did indeed have frame damage and whatâs worse, the repairs were substandard according to the APA. Iny told W5 the car had been ârepaired by a butcher and (inspected) by somebody with bad eyesightâ.
Among some of the problems the APA found:
- the car was improperly welded (they had used torch welding to patch up ultra-high strength steel);
- the bumper was improperly attached (welded instead of bolted); and
- the car was poorly aligned.
âWhen (our mechanic) drove it, it pulled hard to the left, we suspect itâs still bent,â said Iny.
The Ministry of Transportation told W5 that deficiencies like this should have been spotted in a structural inspection. However, when W5 investigated, we found that the car had indeed passed a structural inspection and been given a certificate despite the defects the APA found.
Mechanic Nick Lagoudis also inspected the car and found a litany of other problems, that according to the MTO, most of which wouldnât be addressed in the structural inspection: the dashboard was coming loose, each wheel was missing a lug nut and not fully secured to the car, the ground wiring had been installed improperly and was a potential fire hazard, the oil pan had been badly dented in the impact.
With the car up on a hoist Lagoudis found that the power steering hoses were improperly secured; attached with a plastic tie wrap rather than a metal bracket. Lagoudis noted that if that plastic tie wrap holding the power steering hoses broke, it could cause further problems. âYou (would) have no steering to drive the carâ. In fact, the APA says that power steering could fail even sooner, within weeks, due to an active power steering fluid leak.
Iny added that if you got into accident while driving the car âyou would have the dash in your teeth because it wouldnât stay attached to the car, on the day we saw it.â
The Mazda would also have to go through a second, mechanical safety inspection, before being sold, but the car had not yet had that inspection. However, according to the MTO, many of these issues would not be addressed in that subsequent inspection.
The shop that signed off on the carâs structural inspection certificate was Nagu Auto Collision Centre. In an email to W5, the company indicated that it was ânot involved with any repairs to this vehicleâ and that another facility had completed the wheel alignment. Nagu also stated that the car passed inspection because âit was repaired properly to its measurementsâ and that the company has âbeen audited regularly by the Ministry and Transportation for which we have met our compliance requirements.â
Initially, Ontario Transportation Minister Glen Murrayâs office declined W5âs request for an interview about the APAâs findings but when W5 confronted him at the Ontario legislature he readily acknowledged that the sale of unsafe rebuilt cars is a problem.
âThis is a vehicle in which people get into everyday and they should be able to rely on the standards of government and the ethics of companies,â he said.
In March 2014, the government introduced that Murray believes will remedy many of the issues raised by the APA survey. According to Murray, the new bill will âsubstantively improve enforcement and inspectionsâ and that they will âbe engaging a third party with a very specific contact for more rigorous enforcementâ.
As far as Iny is concerned changes to the industry canât come soon enough. âWhen youâre buying a rebuilt vehicle, absolutely the current situation in Ontario, you cannot trust the rebuild standard or the government oversight.â
- SIDEBAR:
This year, the APAâs survey of used car sales reached a new low: out of the 21 used car sellers they surveyed â only two passed, the other 19 failed their survey.
âThe numerical result is dismal,â said APA President George Iny.
By the numbers, this is the worst result the APA has seen in the time they have been testing used car sales. However, the vehicles at many dealerships appeared to be in better overall condition this year than in previous investigations in the Toronto market. And, used car dealers as a group, offered more professional vehicle presentations than in other years.
So why did so many fail?
Mostly because of extra fees on top of their advertised price. Ontario requires dealerships to have all-in pricing and with the exception of taxes and licensing, itâs usually illegal to charge more than the advertised price. Despite those industry regulations, the APA found fees that âare out of control,â said Iny.
Some dealers asked for a so-called âadministration feeâ on top of their advertised price. Others charged inflated prices for safety and emissions testing.
âSome dealers include it in their price. But a very large percentage of them mark it up and they mark it up by an exaggerated amount,â said Iny.
He noted that in some cases, dealers are allowed to charge for safety and emissions tests, however, he determined those tests should only cost about $80,
âIf youâre going to say that youâre charging for an e-test, itâs $30. Thatâs what you charge. If youâre charging for a safety, itâs $50. Thatâs what you should be charging.â
The APA found dealers charging up to $695 for safety and emissions testing, although some said they would let the shoppers take it elsewhere for that testing.
âAPAâs position is that all-in is all-in,â said Iny. His advice to consumers is to raise the issue and try to negotiate a larger discount or remove the fees. He also advises that if you are certain the charge is prohibited, you should report the incident to the Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council (OMVIC) along with a copy of the dealerâs advertising and any other paperwork you may have obtained regarding the price.
Who passed?
So, who are the dealerships who passed this yearâs survey? There were only two and they were both used car dealers: Auto Select and Good Fellowâs.
The APA found that Auto Select had a good selection of well-priced cars -- and those prices were all-in. During the APAâs visit, the salesman had no problem letting the shoppers take the car for a pre-purchase inspection.
At Good Fellowâs, the APA reported that the salesperson was knowledgeable about his cars and gave good advice on which cars would be the best value for the shoppers. He also had the accident history on hand to tell shoppers about the condition of the cars and pointed out which cars were former rentals. Good Fellowâs also allowed the shoppers to take the car for a pre-purchase inspection, providing they left a deposit, and their advertised price was all-in including safety and emissions testing.
The APAâs George Iny noted that recently Good Fellowâs was disciplined by OMVIC, over disclosure and marketing issues, and was required to send its sales staff for training. âPerhaps that experience contributed to this yearâs good result,â said Iny.