Page 15 - CooperatorNews New York June 2022
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COOPERATORNEWS.COM  COOPERATORNEWS —  JUNE 2022   15   attorneys lawgapc.com  @  www.lawgapc.com  NORTHERN  NEW JERSEY  973-366-1188  CENTRAL   NEW JERSEY  732-514-6601  SOUTHERN  SO  NEW JERSEY  856-533-2379  NEW YORK  212-374-9790  PENNSYLVANIA  973-366-1188  ATTORNEYS AT LAW  ▶   Wills, Trusts and Estate Law  ▶   Municipal Law  ▶   General Litigation  ▶   Commercial Law  ▶   Business Startups  ▶   Community Association Law  ▶   Landlord Tenant Law  ▶   Land Use and Zoning Law  ▶   Disability Law  ▶   Real Estate Law and Closings  Experienced attorneys providing the right   moves towards achieving your endgame  STRONG ADVOCATES  LISTEN ATTENTIVELY  WORK RELENTLESSLY  RESOLVE CONFLICT  Providing Practical Legal Advice and Representation to Cooperative   and Condominium Associations for More Than Forty Years  • General Counsel   • Residential and Commercial Real Estate and Leasing  • Real Estate and Commercial Litigation   • Mortgage Financing  • Commercial, Corporate and Business Law   • Comme  • Mitchell-Lama Housing   • Transfer Agent Services   • Construction Law and Gas Conversions  Jack Lepper: jlepper@kll-law.com  Ronald Gold: rgold@kll-law.com  Adam Finkelstein: afinkelstein@kll-law.com  Fran Lawless: flawless@kll-law.com  Fran L  willing to participate and agree to bind-  ing arbitration. A limitation of ADR is   that the matter cannot be guided by legal   precedents or discovery rules, which are   available in litigation, Ciarlo adds. “Also,   many times, a party will use ADR as a   stall tactic and will eventually decide to   stop negotiating, which will lead to litiga-  tion anyway.”  Hoever says that dealing with any con-  flict needs to be direct and to the point,   and the quicker you handle things, the   better.   “Keep in mind that the truth is proba-  bly somewhere in the middle of what the   two sides are telling you,” he says. “And   above all, stay impartial and try to build   consensus between the two sides.”           n  Keith Loria is a freelance writer and a con-  tributor to CooperatorNews.  Rita Sprudzs, a senior property manager   also with Westward360, outlines another   common  problem:  “Many times, co-op   shareholders don’t understand that they   don’t actually own the space they occupy.   They are shareholders in a corporation that   owns the property. They have a proprietary   lease for their unit that is assigned to them   by the corporation that owns the building.”   This misapprehension can lead to a great   deal of frustration and acrimony when a   shareholder’s plans to alter or upgrade their   unit  butts  up  against  the  board’s  author-  ity—and duty—to review and approve (or   reject) those plans based on how they may   impact other units, or the building’s shared   elements, including  wiring,  plumbing,  or   infrastructure.   “Another common issue is that many   condo  owners  think  their  board  has  as   much power as a co-op board to intervene   in quality-of-life disputes, such as noisy   neighbors,” says Stuart Halper, principal   of Impact Management, a New York-based   management firm, “but they don’t. A con-  do board cannot remove an owner due to   ‘bad behavior.’ If you have an inconsiderate   neighbor, the board can’t do a thing.”   Wollman agrees. “The board’s role is to   set policy and procedure,” he says. “A man-  ager carries it out. New owners usually go   to the super  or managing agents  in New   York buildings. They know there’s a board,   but generally don’t understand what the   board’s role is. In the city, though, it’s typi-  cal for people to go directly to the super or   agent if they lived in an apartment before.”   That may differ from communities where   the residents are less familiar with multi-  family living.  Staszczak says that another major is-  sue that’s especially common in condo-  minium associations is owners not really   understanding percentage ownership and   common areas. “Percentage of ownership   seems to be a major source of confusion   for new owners,” he says. The idea that the   more space you have, the more percentage   share you have—and hence the higher your   monthly assessment—escapes many. “They   want to know why different residents pay   different monthly assessments, because   they don’t understand percentage owner-  ship and how that affects them.”   When it comes to common areas or   elements, most new owners just think of   a community room, an in-house gym, or   garden-style courtyard—but the building’s   infrastructure,  including  façade  and  roof,   boiler and HVAC equipment, plumbing   and  electrical  systems,  as well as  lobbies,   hallways, and storage areas are also com-  mon elements, and as such are maintained   and repaired using funds from residents’   monthly fees to the condo association or   co-op.    Commensurate with this problem is a   lack of understanding of budgets. “Resi-  dents may not understand how budgets   are built,” says Sprudzs, “and so they don’t   understand where their monthly mainte-  nance goes, or the difference between types   of line items, like fixed vs. variable costs.   First-time owners also often don’t under-  stand what type of insurance they them-  selves need. Renter’s insurance is not good   enough \\\[for a condo or co-op\\\]. They need   \\\[homeowners or\\\] co-op insurance. Renter’s   doesn’t cover individual unit owner re-  sponsibility for common areas in an insur-  ance claim.”  Relatedly, “New owners also often think   the co-op or condo is responsible for  re-  pairs inside their units,” says Halper. “They   don’t understand they own the interiors   and what’s in them, and are responsible for   them.” A good example is a refrigerator. If   your refrigerator stops working in a rental,   you call the landlord. In a co-op or condo,   because everything on your side of the   walls is your property, you have to replace   it yourself.   A more complicated example is a   clogged sink. If the clog is in a portion of   pipe inside the wall, the co-op or condo   owns it, and therefore has to repair it, and   pay for the repair. If the clogged section of   pipe is inside an individual unit, the unit   owner or shareholder has to fix it—and foot   the bill. Not understanding the distinction   between private and common elements,   and how that distinction determines who’s   responsible for what is at the root of a great   many disputes between residents, boards,   and property managers.   How Common is the Problem?  In a word, pervasive. The problem of   owner and shareholder ignorance spans   co-ops and condos, HOAs, and over-55   communities. Younger buyers upgrading   from rentals and older buyers downsizing   from private homes are often ignorant of   not only rules and lifestyle conventions in   their new communities, but of the docu-  ments governing those communities.  ORIENTING...  continued from page 1  continued on page 16 


































































































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