From CBC:
“Unhappy customer asked to sign
legal agreement not to write a bad review”
After a major kitchen renovation,
an Ottawa couple say the contractor has refused to reimburse money they're owed
unless they sign a legal agreement preventing them from publishing a negative
review. Wary of online reviews that can hurt or even sink a small business,
companies are taking steps to protect themselves. But customers sometimes balk
at what are called non-disparagement clauses. Norma Domenech and her husband
Bart Hos have lived in their home in the city's Glebe neighbourhood for 15
years, and decided last year to overhaul their outdated kitchen. They hired Ottawa General Contractors (OGC)
based on glowing reviews online, but their own experience was less positive. The pair said they had complaints about the
length of time the renovation took, in part because some work was redone. To
appease the couple, the company offered them $1,000 as a "goodwill
gesture" and agreed to compensate them for some of the financial headaches
they encountered. For example, workers made a cabinet too small for the kitchen
sink, and the couple had to buy a more expensive sink to fit it. In total, the homeowners
said the contractor agreed to reimburse them $1,833. But before OGC would write
the cheque, the company insisted the pair sign a legally enforceable document. "There
was a clause that included a non-disparaging agreement, essentially blocking us
from writing any negative reviews," Domenech said. "I thought, 'This is unacceptable. I will
not sign something like that.'" In April, the kitchen still needed work,
but the company said it wouldn't take it on until the form was signed and the
project was closed. The company did return to finish the work in May, but has
not released the promised cash.
Protection from false reviews
The document demands the couple
refrain from all conduct that could "disparage or damage the reputation,
goodwill or standing in the community of OGC," including "writing
negative reviews." A spokesperson
for OGC declined CBC's request for an interview, and said it would not discuss
any specific project due to privacy concerns. In an emailed statement, the
spokesperson said the company is trying to protect itself from false reviews. "It
only takes one false review to go viral to scare clients away and do permanent
damage to a small business," the statement reads. He wrote that the
company did its best to satisfy its clients, but also noted it's not uncommon
for things to come up during construction that impact the schedule and cost of
the project. The intent of getting clients to sign an agreement not to
disparage the company is to address the concerns of clients directly, rather
than online, the spokesperson continued. OGC's only policy is to satisfy its
clients while protecting its well-deserved good reputation. - Ottawa General
Contractors spokesperson "Just like an individual's reputation is
important, the reputation of a small business is equally important and warrants
protection," the statement reads. "OGC's
only policy is to satisfy its clients while protecting its well-deserved good
reputation." When the couple refused to sign in April, a company
representative emailed them to explain that the company's lawyers "have
made it mandatory to sign." Another
email mentioned the company was looping its lawyers in on the dispute. CBC has
spoken to another OGC client who agreed to sign a similar agreement to get
money the client said was owing from the company. CBC has seen that document,
and has agreed to protect the client's identity because of the worry sharing the document may be in breach of the
agreement.
A+ rating
Domenech and Hos feel the
practice is unethical and may have skewed the company's online rating. The
company has an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau. It also boasts 4.4
stars out of five on Google reviews, and an 86 per cent positive rating on the
popular contractor review website HomeStars. The founder and CEO of HomeStars, Nancy
Peterson, said there should be no strings attached when it comes to getting a
refund from a contractor. "I think they're being held hostage in this
situation," she said after hearing the claims of Hos and Domenech. It's
unusual for contractors to require legally binding agreements like this,
Peterson said, but clients do sometimes remove reviews from her site — usually
because the business asked them to. The
review site has taken measures to prevent contractors from skewing reviews by
lowering their score if many clients remove their reviews. The score is also
lowered if the site learns of unscrupulous activity. Meanwhile, the couple said
they have tried to reach OGC about the money they're owed, but haven't heard
back in weeks.
^ This is just plain wrong. I
have used contractors myself and have had issues (with construction and even sending
one to prison) so I know what it is like to be held “hostage” by them. This is
what is being done across Canada and the United States every day. If the “no bad
review clause” is not in the initial contract signed by all parties before the
work starts then it should be illegal to create and enforce after the fact. The
fact that a company would require a “no bad review clause” before the
construction began is a clear indication that that company does not believe in
its work or its employees, but when a company requires a “no bad review clause”
after construction started shows that the company knows it is messing up and
has bad employees. There need to be protections in Canada and the US at the
Federal, Provincial, Territorial and State levels that state a company can not try
and force or include a “no bad review clause” once the initial contract is
signed and the work as begun. If you sign it before the construction begins
then you should be bound to it, but a company or contractor should not be
legally allowed to try and hold you “hostage” by refusing to finish the work or
give you a refund until you sign one after the construction begins. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/renovation-nda-ottawa-general-contractors-1.5238713
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