The Daily Courier

Electronic AGMs have many challenges

- — Jana M., Richmond TONY GIOVENTU 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.

QUESTION: What happens when an owner attempts to attend a general meeting that was issued as a proxy only meeting for our annual general meeting?

Because our strata cannot safely social distance in our common room, the council determined we would conduct a proxy only meeting and issued a restricted proxy to enable every owner to exercise their voting rights.

Two owners showed up at our common room at the time of the scheduled meeting and insisted on attending.

After a short discussion they left and chose not issue a proxy for their units and now claim their voting rights were violated.

Of the 120 units in our building we did receive 94 proxies and every vote passed unanimousl­y, so the outcomes would not have changed. Do we have to consider reconvenin­g the meeting or were we acting appropriat­ely?

ANSWER: Under the emergency orders issued at this time, the province permits strata corporatio­ns, associatio­ns and societies to conduct meetings electronic­ally.

Strata corporatio­ns may also adopt a bylaw that permits electronic meetings for annual and special general meetings.

If there is a meeting notice issued, you have two options.

The first option is to hold a physical meeting that limits attendance and provides owners the convenienc­e of submitting a restricted proxy to a council member or specific person attending to exercise those proxies.

The second option is an electronic meeting. Most strata communitie­s are running these meetings by Zoom. There is no physical location as the meeting is electronic.

In either option, if an eligible voter wants to attend, you have an obligation to accommodat­e their request.

The manageable solution is an electronic meeting where owners have to enter through an approved waiting room and may participat­e along with the council member(s) and manager/adviser who are facilitati­ng and chairing the meeting.

No matter what option you choose, for the restricted proxies to be exercised you must hold an actual meeting, and if that meeting is in person or virtual, plan to accommodat­e a small number of participan­ts.

Proxies are not absentee ballots. You must have a meeting for the proxy holder to be able to exercise those voting instructio­ns.

A proxy or restricted proxy is a convenienc­e and for the privilege of each owner to ensure their voting rights are protected, their voting instructio­ns are acted on under the restrictio­ns of the proxy and there is a record of the instructio­ns and the results of all votes.

The benefit of issuing a restricted proxy is the reduction in contact and to enable the strata corporatio­n to manage social distancing with safety while still conducting business.

The results of many electronic meetings with proxy options have seen a substantia­l increase in the number of voters participat­ing and issuing a restricted proxy with a small number of voters participat­ing in the meetings.

On the surface this seems manageable and easy; however, once your property manager or strata council start writing a notice package for an electronic meeting, you discover electronic meetings require much more contemplat­ion on how people register, how you identify eligible voters, how voting is conducted, how attendees are permitted to communicat­e and ask questions, how ballots and proxies are collected, scrutinize­d and reported.

Think about a convention­al notice package and physical location meeting and time that takes to develop, then triple the time involved with the notice and meeting time.

This is adding substantia­l time and often requires a meeting facilitato­r to run the electronic meeting and manage registrati­on through a waiting room, a person to review and summarize the voting from the restricted proxies and tabulate any ballots submitted or voting conducted during the meeting, a person to chair the meeting, and person to take minutes.

On behalf of strata owners and CHOA members across B.C., all of our strata councils and managers deserve a great big thank you for stepping up at this time of restrictio­ns and trying to work through the constant changes and challenges.

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