We got our new budget pckage yesterday. Our fees are going up 2.1%. We have a new Reserve Fund Study and the board has accepted the engineers' recommended funding for the study. (Some boards ignore the study or go cheap.)
I was at an AGM last week in Mississauga where the engineers recommended spending $5 million and the board decided to patch instead of replace some major items, like leaks in the garage, water penetration problems through the building envelope and pin hole leaks.
The board acted as if they were heroes by saving so much money.
I recommended that the owners who invited me to their building sell in the next two-three years as all the board was doing was pushing these expenses down the road.
We had a RFS in 2012 and ordered up another one because the past board was out to lunch and, like you say, acted like heroes for keeping fees low. (Two members moved out and one died after the 2012 RFS was delivered. The move-outs were a clue.) The new one, which we pored over this week, was very sobering indeed.
There is no getting around a special assessment, not only to repair/replace whatever would have come to the end of its natural life in this 40 year old building but also to make up for cheap a$$ decisions by the past boards. I won't get into details but, suffice to say, on one big job alone, had they bit the bullet and spent another $1500/suite, not only would we have saved big time on subsequent repairs of water damage but also on electricity/heating costs.
I can hear jackhammers below me as I type this post. A big job that need not have been so big had the past board done the right thing when it needed to be done.
What's interesting though is how, now, most of the people coming in are downsizers from older neighbourhoods around us. These people accept that you have to keep doing maintenance, that foundations leak, roofs need replacing, furnaces die. So, while none of us are happy about our maintenance fees increasing, we accept this as a part of living in an older, solid, stolid building with large apartments. Our fees cover heat, hydro, water tax, premium cable with two free digital boxes, and more. I figure we are still way ahead in terms of monthly expenses from having a semi in Riverdale.