Times Colonist

Differenti­ating between ‘inform’ and ‘notice’ for strata meetings

- TONY GIOVENTU Condo Smarts

Dear Tony: Our strata council is being harassed by an owner who insists that we have to give notice of council meetings to owners, and it requires the notice period of seven days plus the notice period required by the Act. If we did this every month for council meetings, the cost of the notice to owners and the time period requiremen­ts would not make it feasible for council to hold meetings as required.

Is there a solution we could consider that could make this easier? Could we simply post a monthly schedule and then add meetings if necessary? Would a bylaw amendment make this simpler?

Jenny W., Saanich Dear Jenny: There are two different types of notificati­on of meetings required under the Strata Property Act, “Notice and Inform.”

For annual and special general meetings, notice is a formal requiremen­t that requires the agenda and contents of resolution­s be included and a specific time period and method of notice. Except for resolution­s that require an 80 per cent vote for a wind up, the notice period for a general meeting is 14 days, plus four days notice allowance required by the Act, and the addition of the day of delivery and receipt under the Interpreta­tion Act. This requires notice of general meetings to be 20 days.

Under the Standard Bylaws of the Act, council members may call for a council meeting by giving notice to the other council members, specifying the purpose of the meeting.

Notice to council members in this form is seven days plus four days notice and two days delivery, for 13 days notice requiremen­t for council meetings. Council members can agree to an earlier period if they all agree, or an emergency arises.

Notificati­on of the owners to attend a council meetings as observers standard bylaws is as follows: “The council must inform owners about a council meeting as soon as feasible after the meeting has been called.” The term “notice” is specifical­ly not used in this context and there is no requiremen­t for a notice period or delivery period to be added.

This provides strata council with flexibilit­y and eliminates the costly need for formal notice to be issued at the cost of the corporatio­n.

Many strata councils will post the next meeting date in their minutes posted to a website, or in the mail room or club house areas. There is no time requiremen­t, other than “as soon as feasible.”

With more than 32,000 strata corporatio­ns across the province, there is also the potential of 32,000 variations in bylaws. Look closely at your bylaws to determine if the term for notificati­on of council meetings is “notice” or “inform” as one requires a notice period, the other does not.

Wishing everyone a safe and happy holiday season. Strata corporatio­ns are advised to monitor the B.C. government for COVID-19 alerts: gov.bc.ca/gov/ content/covid-19/info/response. Check your local government and health region for changes on capacity limits and vaccine requiremen­ts.

Tuesday Lunch & Learn Live with CHOA:

CHOA is hosting a series of webinars. Join us on the following Tuesdays as we bring together industry experts to discuss the many issues affecting BC’s strata community. Jan. 25: Communicat­ions and Fibre Optic Installati­ons; Feb. 15: Pets, Pet Bylaws and the B.C. Human Rights Code; Feb. 22: Winding up a strata corporatio­n. Registrati­on will open on Jan. 15 at choa.bc.ca/seminars/

Holiday closure: The CHOA offices will be closed from today and will reopen on Jan. 4.

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