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EP 18 · 2021-09-13 · 54:02

Construction Bonds Explained: How Surety Pre-Qualification Works in Atlantic Canada (Intact & FCA Surety)

Surety 101 for Atlantic Canada contractors: two underwriters and a broker demystify bonds, pre-qualification, and prompt-payment legislation so GCs and subs know exactly what a surety company is buying when they back you.

The story, written up — a sharp read with every fact on the record. Or skip straight to the moments that matter, as clips.
Read the article ▸▶ Watch the 15 clips ▸Read the transcriptOpen on YouTube ↗
// CHAPTERS — TAP TO JUMP THE PLAYER
0:03Guest IntroductionsDan introduces Ryan Brady and Jennifer Love from Intact Surety (Halifax) and Andrew Cartwright from FCA Surety (Toronto/VP), setting up the insurer-vs-broker dynamic.3:23Surety 101: Insurance vs. Surety and How Bonds WorkThree-party structure explained; bid bonds vs. performance bonds; how surety pre-qualifies contractors and vouches for them to owners such as HRM and NSTIR.8:50Private Development and the Under-Bonding Risk in HalifaxDiscussion of downtown Halifax private projects that are not bonded; the financial exposure for developers and lenders if a contractor defaults mid-project.11:10The Broker’s Role and Atlantic Canada Market DifferencesHow a surety broker advocates for the contractor across competing markets; why Atlantic Canada still has more direct (broker-light) relationships than Ontario; the ‘car mechanic fixing a boat’ analogy for non-specialist brokers.16:40Underwriting Factors: COVID, Labour, Supply ChainHow macro risks affect surety decisions; premiums are a yes/no credit-worthiness call, not actuarial; surety companies monitor clients quarterly, not annually.20:00Capacity Limits, Greedy Contractors, and Stretch ProjectsHow surety sets bonding facilities like a line of credit; the three C’s (character, capacity, capital); when a surety will back a contractor on a job ten times their normal size if character is strong.24:10Contract Type Risk: Lump Sum vs. Design-Build vs. CMHow different delivery models affect surety risk; design-build adds liability exposure; construction management not-at-risk shifts sub-trade risk to the owner.28:20Digital and Verifiable BondsThe difference between a scanned PDF bond and a true verifiable digital bond; COVID as the catalyst; the fraudulent whiteout example; owners should only accept verifiable bonds.33:20Claims, Investigations, and Dispute ResolutionReal claims are almost always insolvency; most disputes are resolved before a formal default letter; surety acts as neutral investigator, levelling the playing field between owner and contractor vs. a letter of credit.38:10Industry Careers, Workforce, and Closing RemarksParallel between construction and surety/insurance in attracting young talent; how to get started with a broker; guests reflect on what makes surety rewarding.
// THE INTRO

Host Daniel Arsenault sits down with Ryan Brady and Jennifer Love (Intact Surety, Halifax) and Andrew Cartwright (FCA Surety, Toronto) for a thorough education on construction bonding. The episode covers the insurance-vs-surety distinction, the three-party bond structure, bid vs. performance bonds, the broker’s role as contractor advocate, how surety companies underwrite the “three C’s” (character, capacity, capital), external risk factors (COVID, labour, supply-chain), design-build vs. lump-sum risk differences, the shift toward digital/verifiable bonds, and why Atlantic Canada’s private-development sector is dangerously under-bonded. Guests are candid about overextended contractors, insolvency as the real claims trigger, and the personal relationship dynamics that get stretch projects approved. Closes with a workforce-recruitment parallel between construction and the surety industry.

// THE LESSONS
See all 15 lessons ▸
Surety is a credit product, not insurance: the surety lends its balance sheet to vouch for the contractor to the project owner.
surety company is doing is they’re lending their balance sheet to the contractor
▶ Clip4:11
The bid bond is the most critical underwriting moment: once the surety backs you for a bid, it is on the hook if you win and walk away.
the bid bond for us is probably the most important time because that’s when you’re doing all your vetting
▶ Clip6:11
Atlantic Canada’s private-development boom is largely un-bonded, exposing developers and their lenders to contractor default risk with no financial backstop.
look around downtown Halifax most of it is all private and I don’t even know if much of it is bonded at all
▶ Clip8:51
Getting bonded as a subcontractor reduces your competitive pool: you bid only against other vetted, bonded contractors.
you’re gonna be bidding against a smaller pool of bonded contractors to pick up that work
▶ Clip11:01
A specialist surety broker is essential in Atlantic Canada because the market lacks the depth of full-time surety experts that Ontario has.
it’s almost like having your car mechanic fix your boat right you can probably struggle his way through it
▶ Clip18:52
Surety pricing is a binary yes/no credit call first; premium rates follow creditworthiness, not actuarial loss tables.
first step is yes or no like we’re not going to accept every risk
15:00
During volatile periods (COVID, labour shortage, supply-chain) surety companies rely on direct one-on-one contractor relationships to gather intel not available from financials alone.
we get to have a lot of these one-on-one we’re talking about covid we’re talking to our contractors and their brokers
15:58
A bonding facility works like a line of credit: surety sets an approved capacity ceiling and tracks available headroom as active jobs consume it.
think almost like you’re applying for a line of credit with the bank the bank will determine what your maximum limit should be
29:25
Character can compensate for thin financials: a contractor with a strong track record and clear narrative can get a stretch job approved even when capital is borderline.
if you have the character character is huge it’ll get you a long way
▶ Clip32:01
Design-build bonds carry greater surety risk than lump-sum because insurance gaps in design liability can route claims back to the bond.
a design in relation to a bonded project if the insurance isn’t adequate the owner may try to go after a bond
33:49
Construction management not-at-risk contracts shift sub-trade default risk from the GC to the owner — a fundamentally different surety exposure than a lump-sum.
if there’s a sub-trade issue that’s a gc’s problem whereas in a not-at-risk contract it becomes the owner’s problem
▶ Clip37:27
A scanned PDF bond is not a legally verifiable bond; only bonds issued through a certified digital verification service provider are valid.
a pdf scan version is not technically a valid verifiable bond because you know you can scan that off
▶ Clip39:23
Prompt-payment legislation (Ontario, New Brunswick’s Construction Remedies Act) is making bonding mandatory on publicly-funded projects over $500k and pushing GCs to bond sub-trades.
in ontario for example any publicly funded project over half a million dollars must have a bond
▶ Clip7:32
Nine out of ten potential bond claims are resolved before a formal default letter; the surety’s involvement often breaks the impasse without payout.
nine times out of ten any potential bond issue claim issues are resolved before we even receive a letter
▶ Clip26:49
A bond beats a letter of credit for the owner: letters of credit are immediately cashable with no investigation; bonds trigger a formal dispute process that protects the contractor’s interests too.
a letter of credit won’t do that … they can just cash that at any point if they think they’re gonna be an issue
▶ Clip23:15
// CLIPS FROM THIS EPISODE
Framework · 3:50
in the simplest terms insurance is an insurance company taking a look at the chance
Framework · 4:55
there's a few different types of bonds performance bond bid bonds
Hot take · 7:07
as many contractors know the sort of trend of prompt payment is really sweeping across canada
Framework · 7:56
from the standpoint of a gc if you're on a job and you've posted a bond to hrm
Hot take · 8:53
if you look around just look around downtown halifax most of it is all private
Framework · 10:00
it does two things number one protects the owner
Hot take · 12:12
having sort of been in atlantic canada and done surety there it's very different than ontario
Hot take · 18:52
when you don't have that specialist surety broker it's almost like having your car mechanic fix your boat
Hot take · 22:26
to me that almost creates an imbalanced relationship when the owner is holding that hard security
Framework · 24:30
it's different than insurance it's not a frequency scenario when surety companies pay out
Hot take · 30:55
prudence isn't always a virtue there's a lot of greedy contractors out there
Framework · 31:59
it's based on the three c's of underwriting character capacity and capital
Framework · 36:39
in the surety world the majority of contracts bid for government are stipulated price lump sum
Exchange · 40:24
would you accept a photocopy of a 20 that's how i explain it to them
Story · 42:06
i had an owner contact me 15 years ago to ask me if a particular bond was real
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// FEATURED BUSINESSES
Intact Surety (Surety Division of Intact Insurance, a member company of Intact Financial Corporation)

Intact Surety is the surety-bond underwriting division of Intact Insurance, the property-and-casualty …

Full dossier ▸
Western Surety Company

Canadian monoline surety insurer that exclusively writes surety bonds — contract surety for the constr…

Full dossier ▸
// FACT-CHECKED ✓ web-verified, with sources
✓ VERIFIED
In Ontario, any publicly funded project over half a million dollars must have a bond (performance bond and labour & material payment bond).
SOURCE ▸
✓ VERIFIED
A scanned PDF bond is not a legally verifiable bond; only bonds issued through a certified digital verification service provider are valid.
SOURCE ▸
// COMPANIES & ORGS ✓ verified
Intact Insurance (Surety Division) / Intact Financial CorporationFCA Insurance Brokers (Surety Division) / Firstbrook Cassie & Anderson Ltd.Western Surety CompanyRyan BradyJennifer LoveAndrew Cartwright, MBA
SOURCE: podscope · public episode data · WJGsoJ7fL1E