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 TORONTO 鈥?The Ontario Real Estate Association says fines should be doubled for realtors who break the rules, at a time when agents are collecting big commissions in the province   inflated housing market.In a white paper published Wednesday,  stanley thermos mug the association proposed that the maximum fines for salespeople who violate a code of ethics under the Real Estate and Business Brokers Act should increase to $50,000. OREA also wants the maximum fine for brokerages doubled to $100,000.Practices, laws, foreign investment. All these different component pieces of the industry have changed and the regulation needs to change, said Brad Henderson, CEO of Sotheby   International Realty Canada, who was on the task force t stanley en mexico hat wrote the paper.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        OREA says the average fine per case last year was just $6,000 and that the effectiveness of fines as a deterrent has eroded in today   real estate landscape, where property prices have reached record highs.The current ru stanley canada les were set in 2002, a lifetime ago for Ontario   real estate market when the average cost of a home in the province was $211,000. Today it   $619,000 in Ontario while the average price of a Toronto home has reached $759,000.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 For those who willingly break the rules, these fines are the cost of doing business, ; OREA said  Lnak Fix it   : Clark tells B.C. real estate industry
 Judge rules state must disclose records, pay legal fe stanley puodelis esApril 18, 2019 Associated Press,  Credit: Pixabay Share This StoryFacebookTwitteremailPrintLinkedinRedditFRANKFORT, Ky.  AP  鈥?A Kentucky judge has overruled a decision by the state to release only do stanley spain cuments with blacked-out details of allegations of sexual harassment and discrimination made by a former top social services official.The Courier Journal reports that Franklin County Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd ruled Wednesday that the state must disclose the records and pay the newspaper   legal costs.The newspaper sought the records after Adria Johnson resigned last year as commissioner of the Department for Community Based Services.Shepherd rejected the state   argument that it could withhold the information because the state   internal investigation hadn ;t substantiated Johnson ; stanley cup s allegations.A statement from the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, where Johnson worked, said it would appeal the ruling in order to be able to continue to protect the privacy of public servants when allegations can ;t be substantiated.Connect with News 40Follow @wnkytvDownload the WNKY News 40 Weather App             Turkey strikes Kurdish militant targets in Syria and Iraq for a second daySamuel L. Jackson lauded at MoMA film benefit by close family and friendsJa Morant  excited to be back  after successful season debut, injury return in Grizzlies  win