New Laws for Short Term Accommodation

On 10 April 2020, new strata laws concerning short term rental accommodation arrangements commenced.

These laws give an owners corporation power to make a by-law prohibiting short term accommodation in certain circumstances.

But there are two major problems with the new laws that limit their effectiveness.

In this article we take a look at the new laws and those problems addressing:

  • New Strata Laws Concerning Short Term Accommodation
  • Background to the New Short Term Rental Strata Laws
  • Problem One – Principal Place of Residence Exemption
  • Problem Two – Unlawful STRA Arrangement Exemption

So, what are the problems the New Strata Laws for Short Term Accommodation have created?

 For NSW strata legal, building defect or levy collection advice please contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.


Need a Short Term Rental Accommodation By-law?




Misinformation About COVID-19 Strata Laws

Recent articles published in the press about misinformation of COVID-19 strata laws have stated that short term accommodation arrangements through Airbnb have been banned.

There has also been conflicting information published about whether COVID-19 lockdown laws require an owners corporation to close its recreational facilities such as a swimming pool and gym.

In this short article we answer your questions about those issues and clarify the uncertainty surrounding the Misinformation about COVID19 Strata Laws – Clarified.

For NSW strata legal, building defect or levy collection advice please contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.

 




COVID-19 By-law: Your Power to Help Prevent the Spread

 

COVID-19 Risk in Apartment Buildings

 
 Read on for more details or to purchase your by-law click the button below. 

There has been recent talk in the media about the risk of apartment buildings becoming hot spots for Coronavirus infection.

This media attention has focussed on the fact that the recent public health orders and other laws that have been introduced to help stop the spread of Coronavirus do not apply to densely populated apartment buildings.

Apartment Buildings – Are they Cruise Ships on Land?

 

Indeed, there has been mention of apartment buildings turning into “cruise ships on land” unless stringent rules are put in place to regulate them to help stop the spread of Coronavirus inside them.

For that reason, there is a need for some residential strata buildings to introduce rules to help stop the spread of Coronavirus.  We have drafted a by-law that sets out those rules.  The by-law addresses:

  • reporting COVID-19 infections;
  • self-isolation;
  • social distancing;
  • parties and social gatherings;
  • guests and visitors;
  • changes in occupancy such as short term stay guests via Airbnb;
  • use of recreational facilities;
  • restrictions on access to and use of areas of common property;
  • landlords’ responsibility for tenants;
  • responsibility for invitees.

COVID-19 By-law – Power to Help Avoid the Spread

 

The by-law will prove useful for many residential strata buildings to set out basic rules that owners and tenants must follow to help avoid the spread of Coronavirus and to give owners corporations power to take steps to prevent the transmission of COVID-19 in their buildings.

In the expectation that the COVID-19 pandemic will pass, our by-law provides for the owners corporation to conduct a mandatory review of the by-law and its terms within six months to enable the by-law to be amended or be repealed at the appropriate time and for the by-law to expire at the conclusion of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A One-off COVID-19 By-law for all Your Buildings

 

We are offering the by-law to strata managers working in the strata management industry for a discounted price of $300.00 plus GST.  For that fee, you obtain a licence to use the by-law and introduce the by-law into as many residential buildings as you like. If you have residential buildings that may benefit from the by-law, please do not hesitate to contact us.


CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE YOUR COVID-19 BY-LAW

For NSW strata legal, building defect or levy collection advice please contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.




Coronavirus and Strata: What Can You Do to Help?

The Coronavirus has presented new and fundamentally different challenges to strata managers and owners corporations.

The most dramatic and short-term impact of Coronavirus on the strata industry is the affect it has had on the ability of strata managers to engage in face to face meetings with strata committees and lot owners and work from their office.

But there are other impacts the Coronavirus has had and will be likely to have on the strata industry. 

In this article we take a look at some of those impacts:

  • General Meetings
  • Strata Committee Meetings
  • By-laws
  • Health and Safety
  • Service Contracts
  • Public Relations
  • And more…

What can you do? Strata Managers and the Coronavirus: Here’s What You Can Do

For NSW strata legal, building defect and levy collection advice contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.




Electronic Registration of Consolidated Strata By-Laws

The marvels of modern technology: Consolidated Strata By-Laws will soon be ready for electronic registration.

The Office of the Registrar-General has updated its guidelines on the dealings that will be able to be lodged for registration electronically.

The updated guidelines reveal that by the end of April 2020 it is anticipated that Consolidation/Change of By-Laws and Change of Address of Owners Corporation forms will be able to be lodged for registration electronically.

These dealings will only be able to be lodged electronically through an Electronic Lodgement Network Operator (ELNO).

Our firm has arrangements with an ELNO which will enable us to lodge Consolidated Sets of Strata By-Laws and Change of Address of Owners Corporation forms electronically with NSW Land Registry Services from the end of April onwards.

The Registrar-General’s updated guidelines indicate that it is expected that all strata dealings will be able to be lodged for registration electronically by the end of 2020.

The ability to register these documents electronically will streamline and speed up the registration process and is a welcome development.

If you want to know more about our by-law registration services, please do not hesitate to get in touch with us.

For NSW strata legal, building defect and levy collection advice contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.




Special Arrangements for Consolidated By-laws

Special Arrangements made with NSW Land Registry Services to register consolidated by-laws.

 The Strata Schemes Management Act 2015 requires every owners corporation to keep a consolidated up to date copy of the by-laws for its strata scheme.  However, there is nothing in the Act which requires an owners corporation to register the consolidated set of its by-laws.

The only time an owners corporation needs to register a consolidated set of by-laws is when it resolves to make a change to its by-laws.  In those circumstances, the consolidated set of by-laws incorporating any changes to the by-laws must be lodged for registration within six months of the meeting at which the changes are approved.

The requirement for every owners corporation to keep a consolidated up to date copy of its by-laws was introduced on 30 November 2016 on the commencement of the Strata Schemes Management Act 2015.  Since then, most owners corporations have not made any changes to their by-laws as a result of which they have not registered their consolidated by-laws.  This means there is no public record of a consolidated set of by-laws for most owners corporations.

Up until recently, NSW Land Registry Services was reluctant to register a consolidated set of by-laws where it did not record any changes to the by-laws.  In other words, NSW Land Registry Services often would not permit an owners corporations to register a consolidated set of by-laws unless it had made changes to those by-laws within the last six months.  This has made it more difficult for owners corporations to register consolidated by-laws to ensure there is a public record of those by-laws in a consolidated form.

We have recently made arrangements with NSW Land Registry Services to allow an owners corporation which wants to register a consolidated set of its by-laws (even though it has not made any changes to its by-laws) to do so.  This will enable many owners corporations to register their consolidated by-laws to ensure there is a public record of them even though they have not made any recent changes to their by-laws.  If you would like to know more about these special arrangements, please do not hesitate to contact us.

For NSW strata legal, building defect or levy collection advice please contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.




Thank You Strata for Your Support in 2019!

 

Thank You Strata for Your Support in 2019


Thank you Strata for your support during 2019.
To contact us during this period please leave a message and we’ll get back to you on our return.




Who is Preparing Your By-law Consolidations?

There are many strata managers who are preparing and registering consolidated sets of by-laws for the strata schemes they manage.

We have recently come across several by-law consolidations prepared by strata managers that contain critical and costly errors.

In many cases, the professional indemnity insurance policies held by strata managers may not cover the negligent preparation of consolidated by-laws.

Here are some examples of mistakes we have seen… By-law Consolidations – When they go Wrong?


CLICK HERE FOR HELP WITH YOUR BY-LAW CONSOLIDATIONS!

Contact Us

For all strata law advice including by-laws, building defects and levy collections contact our specialist NSW and Sydney strata lawyers here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.




How do You Make Landlords Accountable for Tenants?

Getting Your By-Laws Right: Making Landlords Accountable

In 2018, NCAT decided that a landlord is not responsible for ensuring that his or her tenants comply with the by-laws that apply to a strata building.  That decision was confirmed by the Appeal Panel of NCAT in Feletti -v- Eales [2019] NSWCATAP 100.

Therefore, if a tenant is breaching a by-law, the owners corporation of the building is not normally entitled to take action against the landlord to require the landlord to ensure that his or her tenant complies with the by-law.

This means that the owners corporation needs to take action against the tenant instead of the landlord which it may not want to do because tenants come and go and it can be difficult to enforce NCAT orders against them.

So, what is the solution to this problem for owners corporations?

There is, however, a solution to the problem.  An owners corporation can make a by-law that requires landlords to ensure that their tenants comply with the by-laws.  That by-law will give the owners corporation the right to take action against a landlord when his or her tenants breach the by-laws.

We have drafted that by-law and a number of strata managers have introduced the by-law into the strata schemes they manage.

We expect that the by-law will prove very useful for owners corporations who introduce it because it will allow those owners corporations to take action against landlords whose tenants are breaching the by-laws.

The by-law goes one step further and will also allow an owners corporation to take action against both landlords and tenants whose guests and invitees breach the by-laws.

Order Your By-law Here!

If you would like to find out more about the by-law, or you are interested in purchasing the by-law from us, please email us here or call 9562 1266 now.




Is it Goodbye to “No Pets” Buildings?

In at least two recent cases, NCAT has decided that “no pets” by-laws are invalid.

Are strata pet by-laws banning the keeping of pets no longer worth the paper they are written on?

What about the basic habitation rights of owners who want to live in a “pet free” building?

Where does this leave “no pets” buildings?  Pet By-laws – Is it the End of No Pets By-laws?

Need a pet by-law or some advice contact us now!

For NSW strata legal or levy collection advice please contact us here or call 02 9562 1266, we’re happy to assist.