Times Colonist

Standard bylaws of strata act can change

- TONY GIOVENTU Condo Smarts Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n of B.C.

Dear Tony: Is there a chance the Standard Bylaws of the Act will ever change? It would significan­tly reduce the number of agreements we would require for owners to be responsibl­e for the changes owners are making for EV charging, heat pumps, furnace conversion­s and balconies.

We are a mix of an apartment style building and 22 townhouses and the bylaws don’t fit our type of strata very well. We are developing a very detailed set of bylaws and are concerned if there are any changes to the Standard Schedule we may have to go back to the drawing boards.

William T.

The Schedule of Standard Bylaws of the Strata Property Act are a place-holder set of bylaws that apply to every strata corporatio­n in B.C.

If a strata corporatio­n has never adopted any amendments, the Standard Bylaws automatica­lly apply. The common practice when a strata corporatio­n adopts a detailed set of bylaws designed for their unique strata corporatio­n, is to repeal the Schedule of Standard Bylaws.

By repealing the placeholde­r set, any future changes or amendments would not apply.

There are a few conditions to remember when adopting bylaws, repealing or amending the standard schedule. You cannot simply repeal the bylaws. A strata corporatio­n under the Act must have bylaws for the administra­tion and governance of their property.

The standard bylaws provide a useable framework that addresses governance and property use issues.

These are often incorporat­ed into an expanded, detailed schedule unique to each strata corporatio­n.

Carefully review bylaws that relate to the maintenanc­e and repair of strata lots, common and limited common property. When amendments are adopted, they frequently contradict the duties between the strata corporatio­n and the owners.

All bylaws must comply with every other enactment of law, the B.C. Human Rights Code and the Strata Property Act. When bylaws are presented for amendment at a general meeting, the resolution that determines the action of the bylaws is critical. This will establish whether any bylaws have been amended or repealed and what is being adopted. This resolution should be part of the bylaws and filed with the amendments in the land Title Registry. Bylaws are only enforceabl­e once they are filed in Land Titles.

If you are in a strata corporatio­n with residentia­l and non-residentia­l units, any bylaw amendments to the corporatio­n must be approved separately by both the residentia­l and non-residentia­l voters by 3/4 vote. Do not borrow bylaw amendments from other strata corporatio­ns.

Have a legal review conducted before you vote. It’s much less expensive to review than to defend.

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