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Condo Smarts: Strata corporations shouldn鈥檛 have split costs equally

Dear Tony: Our strata consists of four different strata corporations in Richmond that share a clubhouse, recreational facilities, parking and landscaping areas.
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Tony Gioventu is the executive director of the Condominium Home Owners Association of sa国际传媒

Dear Tony: Our strata consists of four different strata corporations in Richmond that share a clubhouse, recreational facilities, parking and landscaping areas. Since our community was constructed, all four strata corporations have equally shared the costs.

However, we require major upgrades to retaining walls, landscaping, the pool and parking lot, which is going to cost almost $5聽million in total. Our community association has been managing the joint facilities and has given each strata 90 days to pass a special levy of $1.25 million due in March of 2018, but some of our strata corporations are half the size of the others and owners are questioning how we came to this number.

What happens if one of our strata corporations does not pass the special levy, or we cannot agree on the formula that is used for the shared costs? Everyone wants what is fair, but we cannot agree on how to fairly divide the cost.

MJR

There are many strata corporations and property owners across sa国际传媒 who have shared use of facilities, either jointly owned or where some interest has been created through an easement, covenant or by contractual agreement.

The Strata Property Act permits a strata corporation to enter into an easement or covenant or the creation of easements at the time the corporation is created.

These easements, which may also be referred to as covenants, air-space-parcel agreements, land-use agreements or community agreements, are registered as easements on each of the strata corporations and property owners who share use of property, access rights or obligations to each other.

The easements are filed in the land title registry and each strata corporation will have the easements registered on its common property index or occasionally shown on the general index.

Since writing about easements a few weeks ago, I have received more than 250 emails for all types and variations of strata corporations and adjoining property owners, where no single answer is possible without first reviewing the agreements.

I was also surprised to find out how many strata corporations are relying on 鈥渉and-me-down鈥 documents and not registered agreements.

In MJR鈥檚 strata corporation, there is a land-use agreement registered as an easement and it defines the shared properties, the obligations of each strata corporation, how funds are paid and managed, and the share paid by each of the four strata corporations.

They are not four equal payments.

Costs are allocated based on the number of units in each strata corporation, so two strata corporations each pay 15 per cent of the cost and the balance is split: 40聽per cent for the third strata and 30 per cent for the fourth.

That鈥檚 a significant difference from what has been applied to the annual operations costs. Because the community has operated with a different formula from the easement for more than 15 years, I would recommend that each strata corporation retain an independent lawyer to review the easements, the history of payment allocations, and how the facilities are being managed.

The most common excuses I have heard for mismanagement are: 鈥淲e鈥檝e always done it this way鈥 or 鈥淲e were told as a community we could set up a different formula鈥 or 鈥淲e can鈥檛 change after all these years.鈥

While you may be sharing facilities or services, remember that you are still independent property owners and entitled to your own rights of representation and negotiation.

Always rely upon the registered agreements to determine your liabilities and rights.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominium Home Owners Association.