Penticton Herald

Militant council president

- TONY GIOVENTU

Dear Tony: Our recent AGM lasted only 20 minutes before the owners engaged in a massive confrontat­ion with the president of our council.

He started the meeting by stating the room was only booked for hour at the community centre and as a result he limited debate on any agenda items to five minutes. He then proceeded to decide that proxies could not be used for the election of council and would not accept any amendments to the annual budget.

The owners accused him of bullying and demanded he remove himself from the meeting at which time he declared the meeting over and left with no business conducted.

He is refusing to respond to any owners or current council members. This is the second condo I have in where a council president has acted like a bully.

What is a reasonable method of dealing with these people? — CW Walters, Esquimalt

Dear CW: There is nothing in the act or bylaws that gives a chairperso­n absolute authority. Anything the chairperso­n declares is subject to the owners challengin­g the decision. This is done by challengin­g the chair.

Section 50 of the Strata Property Act deems that at annual or special general meetings, matters are decided by a majority vote of the eligible voters present in person or by proxy unless a higher voting threshold is required.

For example, a chairperso­n has decided to limit debate on an agenda item and the owners wish to continue discussing the item and asking more questions. Any eligible voter may challenge the decision of a chairperso­n by simply rising and saying, I challenge the chair and move that debate be continued.

The chairperso­n calls for a seconder to the motion, and if there a seconder the chair calls for the vote and the majority decision prevails. If they vote yes to continue discussion the discussion continues, if they vote no the discussion ends and the vote on the resolution is called.

There is no debate on a motion to challenge the chair. The chairperso­n is not in the position to debate, they facilitate the procedures and the motions of the meeting.

A limit of time to debate resolution­s is a good idea if it is managed well. If the debate requires continued discussion, the chair decides whether it is reasonable to continue; however, any eligible voter may also make a motion to call the vote if the debate on the issue has been exhausted.

Procedures that promote good decision making, comply with the act and the bylaws of the strata corporatio­n, and respect the voting rights of the owners is what is essential.

Only an owner issuing a proxy has the authority to limit the use of the proxy. Instructio­ns on a proxy direct the proxy holder to vote in a prescribed manner. That is entirely between the strata lot owner and the proxy holder. There is no way to monitor how a proxy holder has voted if a secret ballot has been called as a ballot must be issued for each voting card issued, and that includes proxies.

If an owner has restricted their proxy it will specifical­ly be itemized on the proxy. For example, to prevent one person from gathering a controllin­g group of proxies and influencin­g the outcome of council elections, you will occasional­ly see owners who restrict proxies so they cannot be used for the election of council.

Because you did not elect a new council at your meeting, your council members are required to convene a council meeting and issue a notice of special general meeting to be held within 30 days so the owners can vote on your annual budget and elect a new council.

Bullies are only enabled if we give them our power. Aggressive behaviour, abusive language, manipulati­ve tactics, withholdin­g of informatio­n and character attacks on challenger­s are all signs of bullying. The best solution, don’t engage and elect alternate candidates to your strata council.

If meetings are respectful, address resolution­s and motions in a business-like manner and enable the participat­ion of all owners, they will run smoothly and contribute significan­tly to the harmony of your community.

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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