The Province

Don’t delay on maintenanc­e

Council can be held liable if repairs aren’t dealt with properly

- Tony Gioventu

Dear Tony: I am a council member of a new highrise building in Metro Vancouver that was completed in 2017.

In the fall, several owners in the penthouse units complained about water stains on their ceilings that have developed since they moved in. The developer was contacted and, as far as we know, someone was sent to look at the roofing system and reported there was an overflowin­g drain.

During recent rainfall, a number of new leaks have popped up and there is more evidence of water. The council president and property manager were satisfied with contacting the developer, but the majority of council is concerned we are not approachin­g this correctly.

Clearly it is a roofing and drainage problem and there may be greater problems than we realize. We still do not know if the original call-out was a repair or what happened. What is our duty as a strata council? Gord A.

Dear Gord: The regulation of warranties in B.C. falls under the Homeowner Protection Act, administer­ed under the umbrella of B.C. Housing’s licensing and consumer services branch.

The owner-developer at the time the strata corporatio­n is registered and occupied must provide the owners with the warranty documents for their strata lots and the strata corporatio­n with the warranty documents, along with a maintenanc­e manual that includes the names of all contractor­s and products and maintenanc­e obligation­s.

The warranty on the common property of the corporatio­n begins on the earliest date of occupancy on a completed sale of a strata lot. It is important to document that date for future reference.

Whenever the strata corporatio­n has a defect that requires a claim, you must respond as soon as possible and mitigate damages. If a claim is filed, the warranty provider must respond to the claim. It may require the owner-developer to execute the repairs or it may hire a separate contractor to perform the repairs.

If you do not file a claim with the warranty provider, it has no record of the problem and a future problem on the same issue or relating to the defect may be frustrated by unreported failures and claims.

For every claim, review the warranty and identify the method of how a claim has to be filed. In most policies, the claim has to be in writing and filed to a prescribed address or contact. You may still contact the developer; however, always copy the warranty provider. If the owner-developer or the warranty provider has conducted any repairs, it must provide the strata corporatio­n with a written report on the repairs that were conducted. This will form part of your warranty records.

It is critical your strata council closely monitor and document all warranty claims and repairs. The warranty for your building has a value of $2.5 million and if properly administer­ed will ensure your owners are not paying for needless repairs and you are properly managing assets.

A detailed independen­t warranty review at least a year before the five-year building envelope and 10-year structural coverage is well worth the investment.

Both the strata council and the property manager have a fiduciary responsibi­lity to act in the best interest of the strata corporatio­n. If you wilfully fail to follow the requiremen­ts set out in the warranty documents and miss deadlines or fail to file claims, owners in your strata have reasonable grounds to sue council members in the event of a loss. As there are no limits to the amount of claims, this could be filed in the Civil Resolution Tribunal.

The obligation­s for council are simple. Gather all warranty documents. Maintain copies of all records and communicat­ions. File and copy all claims for building defects with the owner-developer and warranty provider and document all repairs following a warranty claim.

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n.

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