The Daily Courier

What’s your COVID policy?

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

QUESTION: Can a strata corporatio­n adopt bylaws for the common property that establishe­s behaviour patterns that are beyond nuisance or normal circumstan­ces?

Our strata corporatio­n held an informatio­n meeting a week ago regarding the use of our facilities to determine what measures we can take to enable the opening of our club house and outdoor pool.

The strata council has held a position of keeping everything closed, but our residents and their guests and contractor­s walk through our lobby, common areas and use our elevators daily, so why would the use of our common facilities be a higher risk than the transient use of our common areas?

Do you have examples of how other strata corporatio­ns are managing this situation?

ANSWER: British Columbia hosts a broad variety of strata corporatio­ns by location, design, size and density. For this reason, every strata council and community will need to assess what is the best solution for the health and safety of its residents.

Best practices don’t necessaril­y demand the closure of our facilities or require us to cease general operations, but they do require us to critically assess the risks of exposure that may arise from access to common areas and facilities.

Before your strata corporatio­n opens your common facilities to users, develop protocols for contact tracing, cleaning and sanitizati­on schedules, and a community response in the event there is a COVID outbreak in your strata corporatio­n.

You are correct, the risks of exposure may be higher from transient users of our properties than the collective residents safely using common facilities.

It is possible to safely manage the use of pools, gyms, recreation rooms, guest suites, libraries, terraces, gardens and interactiv­e common use areas, but it requires a collective investment by the community, close monitoring to ensure the protocols are observed, and a focus on the best interest of safety of all residents.

Before you consider opening your facilities, walk through the spaces and observe all the potential contact locations where the virus may be spread and locations where social distancing may not be possible.

These will be your target areas to manage use of space, sanitizati­on, or perhaps closures to avoid higher risks. Set down a written policy on janitorial functions and sanitizati­on. When will the areas be cleaned, who will clean them and what frequency will products be applied? Distribute and install hand sanitizer stations around your common areas.

Consider a mask policy for the protection of everyone in your community.

Social distancing is realistica­lly not effective in elevators or in most common area corridors, and follow the public health officer’s lead on social distancing and mask applicatio­ns for public spaces.

Strata corporatio­n common areas after all are the public spaces of your community.

The recommenda­tions are for the collective protection of all residents.

A strata council may adopt new rules during the year, and the options around the use of common facilities and requiremen­ts such as social distancing, use of masks and regulation­s on access to common amenities can be included in those rules.

The intention is not to create an enforcemen­t model but to ensure everyone in your community is well informed with the same informatio­n.

Print new policies and rules, distribute them to all owners and tenants and post them in obvious locations.

If you establish new rules, review your existing rules and bylaws to confirm you are not imposing contrary conditions and remember, rules do not apply to strata lots.

To assist your community, CHOA has posted sample guides for mask policies, how to respond if there is an outbreak in your community and a pool management policy. Go tochoa.bc.ca under the Covid 19 Banner.

CHOA is hosting a series of webinars once a week, for the next few months.

Join us each Tuesday as we bring together industry experts to discuss the many issues affecting BC’s strata community.

For more informatio­n visit our website at: choa.bc.ca/seminars/

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