Media

Smoke Gets In Your Eyes

While the Ontario government continues to push legislation banning the vaping of medical marijuana in public places, including a condominium corporation’s common elements, there has been a large victory for medicinal pot users who wish to grow their own marijuana supply in their residential condominium units.

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So You've Found A Dead Body

It’s Wednesday bridge night at the condo. The party room is bursting. No surprise there – the residents love bridge night. All the regulars are in attendance, or almost all of them. Mrs. Singh, normally a bridge night regular, isn’t there. Strange, she wasn’t there last week either and no one seems to have heard from her. Something doesn’t seem right; Mrs. Singh is elderly, lives alone, and is not known to travel anywhere for longer than a couple of days.

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Court Appointed Administrators: Friend or Foe?

Over the years I have been appointed Administrator for four condominium corporations (for one I am still there after 9 years). With corporations getting older (some in excess of 40 years old), the number of corporations increasing dramatically (now almost 9,400), and governance problems arising in certain corporations (e.g. short-term vision, misuse of reserve funds, or warring factions in the building) I have noticed an increase in the number of Administrations. This raises the question whether Administrators are friend or foe to the owners of the buildings they administer.

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Burn After Reading

Condominium boards routinely handle sensitive information. Whether arising from an owner’s request to access the records of the corporation or a desire to promote board transparency, board members face the predicament of discharging their statutory obligations while also protecting confidentiality. We set about answering the not-so-simple question: what can the board disclose?

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Court of Appeal Decisions

Boards sometimes consider fixed-term contracts to be an effective way to hire a worker on an interim basis without exposing the corporation to liability for notice, or pay in lieu. Fixed term contracts are employment agreements which terminate at a future date when a specific term expires – for example, on a predetermined date or upon the completion of a particular project or task.

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Legislative Committee Update

The last few months have been a whirl- wind of activity for the Legislative Committee. The government’s actions culminated in the very important public announcements by the Minister of Government and Consumer Services (Hon. Tracy MacCharles) on July 25, 2017. Draft regulations relating to a portion of the reforms to the Condominium Act, 1998 (parts of the Protecting Condominium Owners Act, 2015 - Bill 106) were circulated in the early spring for public comment. These regulations focused only on governance matters and were broken down into four themes or topics. Previous articles in CondoVoice have reviewed these in-depth.

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