Penticton Herald

Sections, types, air space parcels

- TONY GIOVENTU

Dear Tony: Could you please explain the difference between sections, types, and air space parcels to our strata corporatio­n of 171 units?

Our property manager is insistent that if the residentia­l and commercial agree, we don’t need to have a joint section council or meetings. We understood there was no choice. We have commercial offices, residentia­l units and a restaurant.

Since we started operating a few years ago, this has been a constant source of confusion over how bills are allocated, how decisions are made and who has voting rights at different meetings. — Karen D., Vancouver

Dear Karen: There is no such entity as a joint section. A strata corporatio­n is created when the strata plan is registered in the Land Title Registry. It shows the boundaries of strata lots, common property, limited common property, residentia­l and non-residentia­l strata lots.

The strata corporatio­n must operate in full compliance with the Strata Property Act, regulation­s and any bylaws as amended by the owner developer or the strata corporatio­n.

In some circumstan­ces there may be minimal operating obligation­s for the strata corporatio­n, but any common expenses such as insurance or any operating or utility costs not exclusive to a section, are approved in the annual budget of the strata corporatio­n and the strata corporatio­n must elect a strata council at their annual general meeting (AGM).

Think of your strata corporatio­n as the province of B.C. Sections are created through the bylaws and they are like the municipali­ties within the province. Those common exclusive expenses, bylaws and matters that affect only the strata lots identified in the section bylaws are approved by the section, in your case the residentia­l strata lots, and administer­ed by the executive council elected at the AGM of the residentia­l section.

The same applies to the commercial sections. In basic terms a section can do anything a strata corporatio­n can do, but within the entity of the corporatio­n; however, they are all separate legal entities. What this really means is you have three separate management contracts, three budgets, three councils, possibly three sets of bylaws or other matters that would be exclusive to one of your sections.

One of the common misconcept­ions applied to sections is that costs may be allocated between sections based on the formulas filed in the bylaws. If the expense is not a sole expense of a section, then it is an expense of the strata corporatio­n and shared by everyone. The amount or ratio of cost is irrelevant and bylaws cannot reallocate common expenses.

Types can be administer­ed within the strata corporatio­n or a section and they apply only to operating costs. For example, if only 25 units had access to natural gas for heating and fireplaces, the strata corporatio­n may adopt a bylaw that creates the classifica­tion of types and only those 25 strata lots would pay for the gas based on their relative unit entitlemen­t.

Types are a simple method of allocating an operating cost only to those entitled users without the need for a higher level of administra­tion. I have reviewed your registered strata plan and documents and have discovered an error in how your strata corporatio­n and sections are being administer­ed. The restaurant is not part of your strata corporatio­n.

If you look closely at your registered strata plan you will see it is a separate property, partly under your building, where an air space parcel agreement was created. An Air Space Parcel Agreement is an easement/contract filed on the Strata Corporatio­n General/Common Index that defines how multiple property owners share use and liability of properties within the same air space.

Your ASP sets out use of parking, shared cost formulas for joint areas and terms for shared liability. In your ASP the restaurant owner has no voting privileges or rights to attend your general meetings of the corporatio­n or sections, even though some of your current general meetings indicate they were at the meetings, made motions and voted on matters.

It would be valuable for your strata corporatio­n to speak with a lawyer to explain the formulas and obligation­s of the ASP to ensure the fees and allocation­s of costs and use are being properly administer­ed. Go to www.choa.bc.ca and type in the search “Understand­ing Air Space Parcel Agreements” for an extensive guide on the subject.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n To offer a question for considerat­ion write: CHOA, Suite 200-65 Richmond St., New Westminste­r, B.C., V3L 595 or email: tony@choa.bc.ca.

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