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Strata Life - Repairs, Depreciation and Contigency Reserves
Strata corporations are now required to commit 10% of their annual budget to contingency reserves.
With so many homes under strata title now, and many of us original 'forumers' getting into our 40s, I think it would be good to have a Strata-related thread going -- especially as more freehold properties transform into multi-unit strata. https://www.timescolonist.com/homes/...bution-7669472 Condo Smarts: New regulations change contingency-fund contribution October 13, 2023 "As of Nov. 1, 2023, strata corporations and sections will be required to contribute a minimum of 10% of the annual operating fund to the contingency reserve fund when approving the budget at the AGM...." Author: Tony Gioventu Do you live in an older building? Or one from the late 90's that is starting to see those 25-year projects come due? Are you experiencing any nightmare projects right now due to skyrocketing rates with plumbers / electricians / insurance? Are you on a strata council? Are you in a bareland strata? I can speak from experience being on council in a 1964-build apartment-style condo building in Port Moody, and a bareland strata in View Royal, Vancouver Island. |
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I remember a year or two this was raised in the media and the Provincial government was going to "look into it", but it has been crickets since then. |
Did the rates stabilize after that initial spike?
Jan 2022 Behind the hard-hit condo insurance market in B.C. and Alberta https://www.canadianunderwriter.ca/i...ta-1004216539/ Jan 2023 B.C. beefs up strata CRF contributions in effort to address insurance costs Quote:
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Over the years our insurance premium has gone from about 9.5% of total budget to 21%. Plus higher deductibles so we're getting less coverage for the dollars. |
At some point this is all going to come crashing down. People keep saying "but condos are cheaper to maintain than a house" but I can tell ya that ain't true when you look at some maintenance fees these days.
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not to mention all the other benefits of a SFH. |
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https://www.rew.ca/properties/542433...ag&sort=latest If you bought a small house for $200k more (which you can finance) there is no way you'd be consistently paying $12,000/year on maintenance. |
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And you need to compare property taxes. No doubt strata fees are expensive, but they come with more benefits (and less work). You can't simply look at a number and make a random judgement. |
With more natural disasters (floods and fires), insurance companies are paying off big time to affected properties, especially on woodframe structures in the boonies: many of them SFHs. These high-risk properties are close to rivers, edge of woods, etc. Hence in order to recoup, these insurance companies, many from the US, are targetting condo stratas. Shameful I must say.
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Concrete stratas are racking up huge water damage claims. I have a friend who lives in a building where an offshore owner left the bathroom fan running when they went back to wherever they lived. Fan caught fire, sprinklers activated and ruined the elevators and caused damage for several floors below as the water rushed down the stairwells onto each floor. Hate to think of what the total damage was in dollars. |
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old people. what can you do |
Only the TIP of the iceberg given that many condos are now hitting ages where envelopes, windows, mechanical, electrical systems are needing replacement, let alone balconies or structure.
We were able to get our water loss deductible back down to 50k, but it used to be 10k, then 25k, 50k and was 100k for the last few years. Water loss is absolutely killing condo reserves and this is only going to get worse, not better. I am going to call it now that many and I mean many condo corporations will be underwater in the next decade. Government, industry and management firms are going to have to be significantly involved in policy, bylaw and surety changes to avoid dismantling of stratas. |
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Corps are paying cash for their common water events, eroding reserves at an alarming rate. The other issue is with a 50k max limit for individual exposure from an event (at least in AB) and so corps now have to go to court for the remainder. |
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If an insurance claim for a strata corporation originates in an owner’s unit, then the strata corporation can sue the strata lot owner for the deductible if the owner is deemed responsible for the loss." |
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How can you seriously compare the compensations on some concrete getting wet versus wood frames getting destroyed by floods, fires or winds? :haha: Quote:
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It's not the concrete structure that gets damaged (or the wood frame, really). Those dry out, but you need to tear out and replace flooring, drywall, insulation, etc. People need to move out and those expenses are often covered by insurance. |
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