Page 8 - CooperatorNews NY February 2022
P. 8

8 COOPERATORNEWS —  FEBRUARY 2022  COOPERATORNEWS.COM  The Bike Stacker  • Staggered, formed bike trays hold     any style bike upright  • Tear drop tire slot (pat. pending)  • Made of 1/8” steel angle and      14 GA steel formed channel  • Heavy-duty 11 GA steel  • Vinyl sleeve protects wheel rim  • Installs easily...with two 1/2”     round holes for wall mounting  • Includes security cable  • Heavy-duty 11 GA steel  • Vinyl sleeve protects wheel rim  The Wall Riderhe Wall Rider  • Heavy-duty 11 GA steel  T  ®  Serving The New York Area For Over 20 Years.  WireCrafters.com | 800-808-1860 | info@WireCrafters.com  Tenant Storage Solutions  • Single or double tier • Industrial grade construction • Installation service available  Tenant Storage Lockers & Package Delivery  tween residents and their board-manage-  ment teams, because it goes hand and hand   with both a building’s finances, and the trust   that residents place in the people running   the building. “It can easily destroy the trust   that the board member has earned,” says   Hakim. “It can raise questions about his or   her ethics and disrupt the daily operations   of the board. Legally, the BCL permits a   building to void or approve a contract which   is the subject of the conflict. Dealing with   the board member themself is not quite so   easy—the bylaws should be reviewed to see   what  rights  the  owners  or  non-interested   board  members  have to  remove  such  a   member. In all events, if the board member   is not removed, and the contract approved   despite the conflict, we would suggest that   the board member recuse him- or herself   from future votes on the contract or issue.   Failure to do so may mean the board has to   take legal action to disqualify that member   from voting. Owners who wish to remove a   board member with an undisclosed conflict   or who has been self-dealing should review   their bylaws. They often allow the removal   of board members with or without cause,   but the threshold vote may be difficult to   obtain.   “It’s a bit more difficult when the conflict   of interest is with the managing agent,”   Hakim  continues. “Managing  agents are   entrusted to assist in the operation of the   building and are expected to do so with   the building’s best interest in mind. It’s not   uncommon  for a  management company   to use preferred vendors or contractors to   help obtain the best prices for the building.   However,  undisclosed  interests  and  kickbacks will certainly not sit well with   the building, and are likely illegal given the   agency/principal relationship that exists. To   avoid any grey areas, all new management   agreements should include a clause   prohibiting conflicts of interest, kickbacks,   and gratuities. Managing  agents should   have the building’s best interest at all times.”  The expectation from shareholders   and  unit  owners  is  that  the  board  and   management of their building or HOA will   always be thinking of the property and its   residents first. Maintaining trust between   boards, owners, and management requires   full  disclosure,  which  can  quiet  concerns   when a board member or management   company offers what might appear like an   inside deal. As always, transparency and   accountability are key.    n  A.J. Sidransky is a staff writer/reporter for   CooperatorNews, and a published novelist. He   can be reached at alan@yrinc.com.   CONFLICTS OF...  continued from page 6  an alleviation and a magnification of the ef-  fects of such isolation.   Jim Stoller, president and CEO of The   Building Group, a property management   firm based in Chicago, sees this phenom-  enon firsthand at the buildings his company   manages, which are mostly luxury highrises   in the city’s Gold Coast and other down-  town neighborhoods.   Of the COVID era,   he says, “There’s a lot more people working   from home—and there’s a lot of people who   just aren’t working—so there are a lot more   eyes around the building.” As the pandemic   evolved, triggering lockdowns, shelter-in-  place orders, and other unprecedented steps   intended to slow the spread, Stoller says,   “there were some people who were act-  ing out, unfortunately; pounding on walls,   walking around the buildings. In some   cases, they were going up to staff members   and getting in their faces—just really acting   inappropriately. And that did create a lot of   additional stress for board members and   for management, and also for the staff. Es-  pecially early on, when there were a lot of   unknowns. It was a difficult period.”  While Stoller praises his staff for their   dedication and hard work—as well as “the   90% of the people in the condos and co-ops   that we manage \\\[who\\\] really were wonder-  ful”—he goes on to say that with so many   people home all day, and ambient stress lev-  els so high, “there are a lot more complaints   about neighbors—the smoke complaints   have gone up; complaints about people   hanging out in the lobby have gone up. And   then, with the amenities \\\[being closed\\\] in   many buildings, you couldn’t go work out or   swim it off, so that increased tension as well.”   In many cases, says Stoller, that tension es-  calated to the point where management was   compelled to involve the building’s or asso-  ciation’s attorneys.  One of those attorneys is Howard S. Da-  koff, partner with Chicago-based law firm   Levenfeld Pearlstein, LLC. He explains that   complaints must meet a “standard of rea-  sonableness” to be considered a violation of   an association’s or corporation’s governing   documents, or the warranty of habitability,   in the case of co-ops. “I’ve had calls from   managers \\\[saying\\\] that a unit owner is com-  plaining that the vacuum in the unit above   them is bothering them, that they’re trying   to work and they can’t work, and they’re de-  manding that something be done.”   This type of complaint, he says, does not   meet the reasonableness standard. People   are entitled to vacuum their floors, and in a   multifamily setting, it’s inevitable that some   noise from such activities will penetrate the   walls of adjoining units. So how should a   board respond?   “What I tell boards is that in this unusual   time, there’s an aspect of this that’s not le-  gal expertise, that’s not pure management   DEALING WITH...  continued from page 1


































































































   6   7   8   9   10