Toronto Star

New rules on the way for Ontario condo boards

Training for directors, licensing for managers, dispute resolution tribunal to be launched

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

Ontario’s 1.6 million condo dwellers will be able to take disputes to a tribunal under new provincial rules that include mandatory training for condo directors and licensing for building managers.

Until now, condo owners and corporatio­ns had to hire a private mediator or go through the courts to pursue issues ranging from noisy neighbours to corporate record access.

It’s an expensive process that hasn’t always been successful, said Government and Consumer Services Minister Tracy MacCharles on Tuesday.

“The reality is, many conflicts aren’t resolved and continue to fester,” she said.

The new rules that take effect in the fall are designed “to provide greater confidence and security for condo owners in their investment and greater stability in their day-to-day lives,” MacCharles said at Maple Leaf Square, one of the towers in a “forest of condos” near the Air Canada Centre.

The changes stem from a 2015 update to the Ontario Condo Act that now affects the lives of a growing number of condo residents.

There are 750,000 condo units in the province and 10,000 condominiu­m corporatio­ns, MacCharles said.

Under the new system, residents will get mandatory meeting notices, new voting rules, including secret ballots, and new disclosure rules requiring directors to declare potential conflicts in the award of condo contracts.

“We want to ensure condo directors are equipped with the knowledge and the confidence to fulfil their roles,” MacCharles said.

Anyone elected to a condo board after Nov. 1 will be required to take a three-hour online starter course.

That doesn’t apply to Kyle Rostad, who has been president of his condo board since January. But he says the training is a good idea, even though it would add to the volunteer workload of board members.

Rostad says he gets complaints and queries every day from his neighbours. His position takes up about five hours a week and includes a monthly meeting that typically lasts about four hours.

“I have a lot of money invested and my family is also in that building. I want it to maintain its value, but also keep it as a significan­t and well-respected place for my daughter to grow up,” he said.

“The more I know, the more I can do.”

Rostad is one of five board members for his 437-unit Canary District building. He also supports the launch of a condo tribunal.

“I’ve heard horror stories of people having to go through court. A tribunal might be the answer if a decision can be made expedientl­y and costeffect­ively,” he said.

The new dispute resolution tribunal will be administer­ed by an agency called the Condominiu­m Authority of Ontario (CAO).

It will encourage condo owners and corporatio­ns to negotiate a resolution between themselves before moving to an online mediator or, as a last resort, a tribunal adjudicato­r.

When it starts up in November, the tribunal will handle matters related to records of condo corporatio­ns. But it will expand to other types of disputes, said CAO chair Tom Wright.

Under the current system, he said, “People spend thousands and thousands of dollars over things like their dog (or) what is on their balcony.”

The new three-stage dispute process will cost $25 for a preliminar­y negotiatio­n; $50 if it moves to mediation and $125 if the case goes to adjudicati­on.

It will be paid by the person bringing the dispute to the tribunal.

The government doesn’t know how many disputes will come before the tribunal. The goal, said Wright, is “to resolve as many as possible at the early stage of the tribunal process.”

An average fee of $12 a year per condo unit will be remitted by condo corporatio­ns to the CAO to pay for the informatio­n, training and regulatory services.

Starting Sept. 1, the CAO will begin providing phone and email informatio­n on the rights and responsibi­lities of condo owners and directors.

The province is also setting up a Condominiu­m Management Regulatory Authority of Ontario (CMRAO) that, effective Nov. 1, becomes the licensing regulator for condo managers.

Their training will include instructio­n in legal, financial, constructi­on and administra­tion matters. But profession­al experience will also be taken into account in licensing, said Aubrey LeBlanc, CMRAO chair.

 ?? COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? At first, the tribunal will handle matters related to records, but will expand its purview.
COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO At first, the tribunal will handle matters related to records, but will expand its purview.

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