Just to confirm Peter’s last point, there is a difference between what can be done and what should be done.
It’s proper procedure for the EC to approve removal of the tree and pay for it.
However, if a motion goes to them to allow removal at your expense, who is losing if they agree?
I would put a motion to the next meeting along those lines (subject to council approval) and have a quiet word in the secretary’s ear that your other option is to seek orders at NCAT under section 140 and/or 140A (below), meaning they would have to remove the tree at their expense.
If nothing else, putting a motion to the meeting starts the clock ticking under section 140, meaning they have two months to do something or face an NCAT action.
140 Order relating to alterations and repairs to common property and other property
(1) An Adjudicator may order an owners corporation to consent to work proposed to be carried out by an owner if the Adjudicator considers that the owners corporation has unreasonably refused its consent and the work relates to any of the following:
(a) alterations to common property directly affecting the owner’s lot,
(b) carrying out repairs to common property or any other property of the owners corporation directly affecting the owner’s lot.
(2) An Adjudicator may make an order approving of alterations or repairs already made by an owner to common property or any other property of an owners corporation directly affecting the owner’s lot if the Adjudicator considers that the owners corporation unreasonably refused its consent to the alteration or repairs.
(3) An order under subsection (2) is taken to be the consent of the owners corporation to the alterations or repairs concerned and may be expressed as having effect from a day specified in the order that occurred before the order was made.
(4) An Adjudicator may specify in an order under this section whether the owners corporation or the owner of the lot concerned has the ongoing responsibility for the repair and maintenance of any additional property arising out of an alteration or repair to common property approved under the order.
(5) If an order makes provision for the owner of a lot to have the ongoing responsibility for the repair and maintenance of any such additional property, the order also has effect in relation to any subsequent owner of the lot.
(6) In deciding whether to grant an order under subsection (2) or to provide for the order to have effect from a day that occurred before the date of the order, an Adjudicator may take into account the conduct of the parties in the proceedings, for example, if an owner did not first seek the consent of the owners corporation before carrying out the alterations or repairs.
(7) An application for an order under this section may be made only by a lessor of a leasehold strata scheme or an owner.
140A Order requiring owners corporation to install window safety devices
(1) An Adjudicator may order an owners corporation to exercise a function under section 64A if the Adjudicator considers that the owners corporation has failed to do so.
(2) For the purposes of this section, an owners corporation is taken to have failed to exercise a function if application is made to it to exercise the function and it fails for 2 months after the making of the application to exercise the function.
(3) An application for an order under this section may be made by an interested person (other than an owners corporation).
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.