Should Management be involved in moderating meetings and distributing election information throughout the complex? Using the corporation's websites, services such as "Building Link," Or should it be an appointed Election Chairperson, the corporate attorney, or even an Election Services such as Honest Ballot? In a Mitchell Lama Cooperative.
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The eboard of my 16 unit, self-managed co-op has recently posted a vote via email. It has given 4 days for shareholders to vote on a wholly discretionary spending motion (landscaping) which would require a one time assessment. The motion will be considered passed if a majority within quorum are aye's.
This is the first time our co-op has voted on an significant matter via email. There are no rules on how a motion by email is to be conducted. We did have an email vote in the past, but a majority of outstanding shares was required for the vote to pass, rather than a majority of quorum (the eboard didn't want that one to pass, but they do want this one to pass).
The eboard has transmitted the vote via blind carbon copy. I cannot see who recieved emails, I am not able to engage in discussion with my fellow shareholders, I am not aware of any issues they may have raised and they are not aware of my objections,. I cannot see who voted or how they voted.
Little information has been given to the shareholders. No information on what will be planted, replacement costs, et cetera, nor has an alternative been given. This is very different than what we have done in the past wherein information and alternatives have always been provided.
I have raised my objections with the eboard and they have been ignored. What recourse do I have here?
Thank you for any help you can give on this.
I'm a reporter researching the changing landscape of therapy offices in NYC over the last 4 years. Have you had an office sit empty in your building, or change from a therapy office to another kind of use? Would love to hear your stories. I'm at adriane.quinlan@voxmedia.com or 678.292.8034
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We sold a condo property recently in NY. The property management company forced us to pay a portion (apportioned to our unit's size) of a very large general bill of overdue building utility bill without the board itself passing a resolution or notifying the condo owners. The management company told us that they would not sign off on our sale unless we paid. They sent us a copy of the overall bill for building (amounting to over 40,000 dollars for over 6 months neglect).
We had no choice but to pay as the closing was imminent, and we did not have the time to fight it. They did show us a copy of the overdue bill sent by the utility. It was large and it was delinquent. Previous extraordinary expenses were always sent in the form of an official notice.
My question is whether a property company can charge us for such an expense, amounting to several thousand dollars, without the board passing a resolution or even officially notifying the owners. As we have already closed and, are no longer owners, what recourse do we have to complain and/or try to have the money returned to us? Is it legal for such an expense to be demanded without a board resolution?
This property company has also to date, not returned our initial deposit of two months fees for the standard management fee.
I’ve been informed that a board member is getting paid by the co-op for some work he’s doing.
I’m assuming this isn’t allowed and if that is the case I thought it needs to be communicated to all the shareholders and at the annual meeting or part of the financial report so basically full transparency??
Please advise.
Can Condominium boards create a rule requiring owners to have email addresses? One of our condo owners does not have a working email and it seems can only be contacted through snail mail. It's hard to imagine functioning these days without an email address. I'm sure someone could help this owner out in creating a working email.
Given everything going on with banking and interest rates, curious where other coops are holding their cash? And what are the interest rates you are getting? Has anyone ever done a portfolio of different duration CDs or other fairly liquid investments?
Is it a conflict of interest for a Porter in our co-op to own a unit?
> Join the conversation Comments (1)We are a mid-sized Bronx cooperative building looking for suggestions for a company to hire to do our annual audit / finanicial report which is the official document required for shareholders, government authorities, etc. We are not satisfied with the company we have hired for many years. Any suggestions with names of firms that you might recommend? Thank you.
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As a fairly new owner of a condo, after settling into my apartment I realized I'd never received or seen minutes from board meetings. I asked about this, and one member said they just chat informally, by email or phone, when issues come up. Is this allowable? Can I request that they meet regularly, take notes, and keep the building informed of what they have been discussing? thx.
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Its really up to the board. But I would give it to the manager to handle. It is what they are there for. I heard good things about honest ballot.
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