Flat Chat Strata Forum The Professionals Current Page

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  • #11804
    curramore
    Flatchatter

      We reside in a new complex of 12 Town Houses. The Strata management team seems to have been appointed by the developers and not the owners. I am on the committee of 3 and the Strata manager appears to only contact and deal with one Committee member and does not reply to emails or return calls from me. One of the owners called a meeting with the committee to air their greivances about the committees inaction ( which is fair enough) and the committee has decided to dissolve and all problems are to be directed to the Strata Manager. In the meantime we are going to start to look around for a new company to manage us. Can anyone advise what is the best way to go through this process.

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    • #30123

      First step is to ask to see the contract by which the Strata Manager is acting. If they wont answer emails etc the best idea is probably to call up, then to go the office and ask for a copy of the contract. Go over the Manager’s head to his/her manager if needed. Ask if they are a member of the professional association of Strata Managers (maybe they disclose this on their website?). Threaten to invoke the professional association if they are not co-operative.

      I presume you are an owner? (You say “reside”.) Keep in mind that as an owner you are “the boss” of the Strata Manager – these people work for you!

      If there is no contract in place you should be able to sign up another Manager – once agreement is reached between all owners. Talk to your neighbours now and let them know the lie of the land – that they can choose, they can take part in decisions. Bear in mind many people don’t want to take part or make decisions!

      If there is a contract in place, find out the term of it and it may be a case of waiting until it expires. But have your ducks in a row well before then.

      When comparing costs of contracts, be aware of different models – some Management contracts look cheap until they start to charge per page and per lot to send documents. Often better to go for a more expensive all-inclusive contract.

      Good luck.

      #30129
      curramore
      Flatchatter
      Chat-starter

        Thankyou that was very informative

        #30131
        Jimmy-T
        Keymaster

          Just to echo what Tess said, if your scheme has a lot of problems that require a lot of attention, then you want an all-inclusive strata management contract.

          But if you and your neighbours only contact them once a year around AGM time, you can go for a cheaper, small upfront fee contract with the fees loaded on to the Schedule B incidental charges.

          The opinions offered in these Forum posts and replies are not intended to be taken as legal advice. Readers with serious issues should consult experienced strata lawyers.
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