Times Colonist

Only one owner per strata lot can be elected to council at any one time

- Tony@bc.choa.ca

Dear Tony: We have two people on our strata council who have controlled everything for the past 10 years. The husband has always been the president and his wife the treasurer. They are dedicated to our building, and have done an amazing amount of work, but recently, the president has been making significan­t decisions, including bylaw enforcemen­t, without calling a meeting. There are five of us, so in each situation he would have been outvoted. Our bylaws have been amended to permit more than one person in a strata lot to be elected to council, but this isn’t fair leaving 2 people in control of our strata corporatio­n and no decision making at council meetings. How do you recommend we put a stop to this?

Sandra V., Kelowna A fundamenta­l principle of bylaws adopted by a strata corporatio­n is that they must comply with the strata property act, the regulation­s, the B.C. human rights code and any other enactment of law. Your bylaw that permits more than one person in a strata lot to be elected to council does not comply with the act. “If a strata lot is owned by more than one person, only one owner of the strata lot may be a council member at any one time with respect to that strata lot.” The exception to this provision is small strata corporatio­ns of two to three units, where all owners are on council.

The best solution for strata councils feeling they are being bullied into decisions is to convene meetings. Any council member can call a council meeting. Create an agenda of items requiring decisions and formalize the process. Vote, and record the results of the votes. A majority vote at council meetings is different than an annual or special general meeting. It is a majority of those present at a council meeting. If four or five council members attend, it is three votes to pass a majority. The positions of president, vice-president, treasurer and secretary are also determined by majority vote.

This is important, as the president or vice-president has an additional vote if there is a tie. Who you elect as president has the additional ballot. No council member has any special authority, unless by majority vote the strata corporatio­n has delegated that authority. A council member cannot be delegated the authority to enforce bylaws. If an owner or tenant requests a hearing, you must convene a meeting, conduct the hearing, and the council then determines the outcome and notifies the owner or tenant within seven days. Read the bylaws before making decisions.

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