This episode is about the collective woes that buying a condo makes into your personal problem. Condominiums /strata corporations exist Canada wide. They are complicated in all aspects and especially on the financial planning side. It is essential to examine the reserve fund study/reserve fund plan (different provinces have different wording) to ensure that a qualified professional has done the math costing out what financial contributions are required to replace building components (windows, siding, shingles). Then look to see if the condominium corporation actually has the money in the bank!
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Our investor was doing well: a professional in Fort McMurray, rising up the corporate ladder and there for the long haul. With his busy job, he thought that condominiums would be the way to go for investing, way less management time for him and easy to rent in Fort Murray.
Before purchasing any condo units, he got his checklists in order. Down the checklist he went—tick, tick, making sure all items were obtained, including reserve fund studies. Soon, he owned condo units in a number of different condominium projects.
Condominiums are required to produce a Reserve Fund Study (RFS) prepared by a qualified person, and update or redo that study every five years. The RFS is supposed to look at all aspects of the common property, determine their remaining useful life, and predict how much it will cost to replace each component . The study then concludes with an overall financial analysis that discusses how much money is currently in the reserve fund and what the monthly fees and or special assessments should be in order to ensure the study can be implemented. In other words, how much money are we going to need to keep this building in good shape?
Once the qualified person produces the RFS, the condominium through their Board of Directors is supposed to prepare a reserve fund plan. The plan is how the condominium implements the analysis contained in the study. But, the Board is not obligated to slavishly implement the plan…
To further protect his investment, he got himself appointed to various condo boards. It wasn’t long before he was dismayed to hear the professional property manager at each condominium complex report to the Board that various deferred maintenance items could no longer be deferred. Examples were windows, shingles, and siding.
At first, our investor wasn’t worried. He knew that reserve funds are established and required to ensure that when a building component needs replacing, there are adequate funds available to do the job. In one condo complex, the property manager said it was time to replace shingles, fences, siding, doors, and windows. The next thing he said was that their fund did not have enough money and he was suggesting a special assessment of approximately $36,000 per unit. Our investor owns two units. You do the math. How could this be?
Our investor went back to the RFS that he got (but didn’t read!) when he bought the property. He found minutes of a board meeting that said, “We vote to adopt the RFS as our reserve fund plan”. So, the study and the plan are the same document. Note, in many cases the plan does not follow the study if the Board thinks the study is too conservative. Better late than never to dig into the details and find out.
Here’s what our investor found when he dug into the RFS, did some of his own research, and read the board minutes.
Before buying a condo in Alberta, get in touch with Barry to have an experienced lawyer on your side.
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“Condo Apartment Building Architecture City Urban” image by StockSnap used under a Pixabay License.