The Daily Courier

Special levy comes with an extra fee

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

QUESTION: Our strata corporatio­n recently approved a special levy at our annual meeting to pay for a deficit of $37,000 from 2019 overruns.

The resolution required three equal payments March, April and May 1.

At the meeting, several owners objected to the resolution as the payments were due in a short period of time and the fee of $10 to collect the levy was added on to each payment.

When questioned, the property manager admitted to writing the resolution and advising council the Act required the deficit had to be repaid in the next fiscal year and this was the only option.

The owners at the meeting agreed to amend the resolution and spread the payments out over six months. We have now received notice of a new schedule of payments with a $10 addition to each of the six payments.

Are there other options to paying for a deficit that does not impose additional collection fees on the owners?

ANSWER: When a strata corporatio­n is left with a deficit at the end of their fiscal year, the Strata Property Act permits three options to repay that amount.

A special levy is not the only option, but it is the option that permits the management company to charge an additional fee.

The first option is to add a line item to the agenda of the next year’s budget to repay the deficit. This does not incur any fees for special levies, it is paid over 12 months, and only requires a majority vote for approval.

While this does increase the strata fees for the next year, it is the best payment method because of the least cost and approval requiremen­ts. The other two options require a three-quarters vote resolution approval.

The strata corporatio­n may approve a special levy, and depending on your service agreement with your management company, there may be charges for the collection of the special levies.

This is charge paid by the strata corporatio­n, not by each individual owner and is a common expense based on unit entitlemen­t the same as the deficit amount being levied.

The management company does not have the authority to charge owners directly for their fees or services for collection­s of special levies.

This additional amount is included in the special levy to pay the deficit. The special levy schedule must be re-issued and is only based on the total amount approved by the owners at the meeting.

A third option is for the strata corporatio­n to approve a one-time payment from the contingenc­y reserve account to cover the deficit. While there is no immediate impact, it will result in the depletion of valuable savings for future renewals or emergencie­s.

While deficits occur for strata corporatio­ns due to insurance deductible­s or emergencie­s, the cause of the expense is also important to identify.

In Lesley’s strata corporatio­n, over $40,000 of emergency expenses for a deck leak and repair was allocated to their operating fund, while they have over $250,000 in their contingenc­y fund.

Emergency expenses may be allocated from either the operating fund or the contingenc­y reserve fund.

How the funds are allocated is a decision of the strata council. If you are an active strata council member, take a direct interest in your monthly operations and expenses.

While it is not mandatory, an emergency expense can be replenishe­d to the contingenc­y fund simply by approving by majority vote a higher contributi­on in the following year’s budget, eliminatin­g the need for special levies.

People who are not licensed legal profession­als, such as strata managers and consultant­s, and who are compensate­d for their services, are not permitted to write resolution­s or bylaws for strata corporatio­ns as this is defined as a practice of law under the Legal Profession­s Act in BC.

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