Quote:
Originally Posted by Cecil Terwilliger
Overflowing bathtubs and water leaks in individual units should never cause a special assessment in the first place. It should be covered by insurance.
Special assessments are for common areas and part of the structure that have aged or have issues. And even then, they’re less common than people make it sound. It’s just the complaints are always louder and get more attention.
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You're half right. Yes - special assessments are for routine, expected repairs. But it's also for any reason the Board requires money beyond what's in the budget and being covered by condo fees.
As for your thought that insurance covers overflowing tubs - as you know from your own car insurance - there's the deductible and that can be as high as $500,000 at some condos. As mentioned above - it's capped in AB at $50,000 - where else is the Board going to get $450,000? Someone's got to pay...
The next problem of course is with a claim on your record, your premium and deductible triples next year....
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cecil Terwilliger
Things like the leaky condos in Vancouver are a real issue but also represent negligent condo owners and condo boards, as well as sketchy builders.
Most buildings now should have a very tightly controlled reserve fund and healthy contributions.
Homeowners also tend to massively understate the costs of owning a home. Comparatively, even with condo fees, most condos are a bargain and make sense in urban areas.
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So in *theory* you're right. Condos should function as you describe - a pooling of residential ownership, with common expenses shared, and the building efficiently managed maximizing the use of land in desirable places. Utopian Urban Planning paradise right?
Here's the reality. Condo Boards are reflective of the challenges that face any government. Boards struggle to get honest and quality people to join as ultimately it's a thankless volunteer job that makes you the "bad guy" in the building.
What you're missing is that in a condo you are completely at the mercy of the strugglers in your building. The person who overflows the tub, causing your insurance premiums to quadruple. The person who doesn't wait for the parkade door to close and thieves smash and grab 15 cars. The guy who lets his dog whiz in the elevator.... and it goes on and on. I've always said - condo living requires advanced citizenship - but there is no test to live in one.
Faced with a relentless flow of this - good people leave the Board and move on - upgrading to detached homes so they don't have to deal with this. Which then leaves people of lesser quality to fill the void - like the aforementioned genius who invests the reserve fund in Bitcoin.....
What's the solution? Tightening up the Alberta Condo Act would be a good start, especially around reserve funds, and giving Boards more tools at their disposal for effective and timely governance. Increasing personal accountability for damage would also be big. I'd like to see it mandatory that unit owners carry personal insurance to cover the Condo's insurance deductible regardless of how high it is. Bake that into the condo fees or something to make it easy.
I'd also like to see some sort of option to turn over the Board to become "a ward of the State" when it's truly dysfunctional and incompetent. Maybe something like a Bankruptcy Monitor who takes over the role - for a fee. I've seen some Boards so dysfunctional that CPS was required to be in attendance at the AGM. Ontario requires Board members to take training which in theory is good - but that also acts as a barrier to get good people who are otherwise busy to join.
Do good condos exist? For sure - not all of them are like I've described. But like any form of government, it can turn on a dime as leaders come and go.
I think you mentioned you live in some sort of condo strata - sounds like it's going well for you which is great and certainly does happen. Come back to this thread in 5 years and let's talk about what your experience has been.