New York's Cooperative and Condominium Community
Whether you go by the management office system or the horoscope system, your treasurer and your board should have a copy of the charts of accounts. The treasurer may define each chart of accounts for types of invoice entries he/she wishes to see. (Note: try not to use miscellaneous categories - you end with the kitchen sink if you have such a line item!).
There is nothing that prevents a board member, specially a treasurer to ask for re-classificaiton of an invoice for budget tracking purposes. On a six month basis, i.e., in July, you should ask for expenses year-to-date broken by GL's, and ask for reclassification of those invoices that are out of line with the GL's. It happens often, but not really something to lose sleep over it.
In our case, we ask management to pay anything that the coop is committed to pay under contract or recurrent, i.e., mortgage, taxes, con-ed, water, elevator service, telephones, salaries, etc. However, any other repairs, i.e., plumbing, supplies, electrical, engineering, legal, other professionals, the treasurer goes over them.
My recommendation to any treasurer is to sit with the super and clear the invoices initiated by him/her to ensure that the services were received and that the work was up to standards. Similarly, check supplies carefully with the super as there may be backorders, credits and returns that all should match. Good organizations ask that shipping slips are matched with the invoices. The super should check the received items on the shipping slip, then attached to the invoice for payment.
As PGretch and AR state, the super should be briefed (depending on his status within the co-op) about the financial position of the co-op at any given point in time. Making him aware of the present financial circumstances makes the super a team player. A super who deals with a large department of poters and other service men to supervise and whose skills are more demanding by way of supervision and budget, may be told more detail about the operational items that he/she oversees, i.e., utilities, repairs and salaries, i.e., OT, vacations, etc. than a superintendent of a small builidng where he/she may be a solo performer.
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