Times Colonist

Depreciati­on report rules differ depending on location

- TONY GIOVENTU tony@choa.bc.ca Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n.

Dear Tony: As a follow up to last week’s column on depreciati­on reports, our management team attended an informatio­n session and we were informed strata corporatio­ns can continue to exempt from depreciati­on reports until July 1 2026, but at that time we are required within 18 months to have a report completed, so this extends our time period to the end of 2028 to comply with the Act. Is this correct?

RVS, Richmond

That is not correct. There are two zones with two separate dates for the completion of deprecatio­n reports. If you are in Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and Capital Reigonal District of Victoria, you must have a report complete by July 1, 2026.

For the rest of the province, and on islands accessible only by boat or air, the deadline is July 1 , 2027. If a strata corporatio­n had a report completed since December 31, 2020, then the five-year cycle applies to that report.

Example: If you had a report recently renewed or complete in the fall of 2023, then your next renewal will be the five-year period to the fall of 2028.

Of note, bare land and townhouse strata corporatio­ns of five units or more are not exempt from this requiremen­t. While the cost may seem excessive for a small community, the significan­t rise in complaints from deferred infrastruc­ture repairs warrants the need for inspection­s and reporting.

Buyers, lenders and insurers are entitled to the knowledge of maintenanc­e history to evaluate potential risks associated with the common areas and strata lots.

Inground systems such as sanitary, electrical lines and water within a bare land strata and townhouse community are a common asset and common property, and pose a significan­t cost to each community.

An inground failure that requires excavation, repair and restoratio­n is currently averaging $16,000 a linear metre and often higher depending on the nature of the failures, ground conditions and access. When a sanitary or water line fails, the zones can be 5-15 metres to complete the repairs and restoratio­n.

It’s a shock to most small communitie­s when they are faced with an emergency bill for $80,000-$200,000 dollars. There are a few strata corporatio­ns with in ground services managed by their district or municipali­ty as they pass through to other communitie­s. Review your registered strata plan to determine if these services are part of your common expenses.

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