This article discusses tenants rights in a strata building. Can tenants attend NSW strata meetings, vote and hold positions on the committee?
Table of Contents:
- QUESTION: Can a tenant attending the meeting as his unit owner proxy become a member of the committee if the majority voted No to having tenants involved?
- QUESTION: An owners corporation is considering funding much needed repairs using an unsecured loan from a number of tenants. Are those same tenants able to vote on approving the loan at a committee meeting?
- QUESTION: Should tenants be advised of any changes that are made at committee meetings, especially if it is something like changes to the strata parking rules?
- QUESTION: We live in a small strata complex where half the residents are tenants. Can tenants attend strata meetings and hold positions on the committee?
Question: Can a tenant attending the meeting as his unit owner proxy become a member of the committee if the majority voted No to having tenants involved?
Answer: A non-owner (eg a tenant) may be nominated for election to the strata committee by an owner who is not a committee member and is not seeking election as a member of the strata committee.
A non-owner (eg a tenant) may be nominated for election to the strata committee by an owner who is not a committee member and is not seeking election as a member of the strata committee.
Further, the tenant may vote at a general meeting as the holder of the landlord’s proxy, and, as the proxy holder may be present for all matters to be considered at a general meeting even though the proxy holder is a tenant.
Leanne Habib
Premium Strata
E: [email protected]
P: 02 9281 6440
This post appears in Strata News #624.
Question: An owners corporation is considering funding much needed repairs using an unsecured loan from a number of tenants. Are those same tenants able to vote on approving the loan at a committee meeting?
If an owners corporation is considering funding much needed repairs using unsecured loans ($300k) from a number of tenants at 5% interest over 7 years, are those same tenants able to vote on approving the loans at a committee meeting (they are all on the committee)? Or, due to a conflict of interest, should they be prohibited from voting?
Answer: Only one tenant representative is allowed on the strata committee and that tenant does not have voting rights.
This is not a lawful arrangement because there is only ever one tenant representative on the strata committee and that tenant does not have voting rights. Please see below. Further, any loan must be approved by resolution at a duly convened general meeting of the owners corporation not at a strata committee meeting. See Section 33 of the Act.
33 Tenant representatives
- This section applies to a strata scheme if there are tenants (being tenants notified in a tenancy notice given in accordance with this Act) for at least half of the number of lots in the scheme.
- The tenants of lots in a strata scheme (being tenants notified in a tenancy notice given in accordance with this Act) may nominate one tenant representative for the strata committee.
- The tenant representative on a strata committee, in that capacity:
- is not entitled to vote on decisions of the committee or to put a motion or nominate a person for office, and
- is not entitled to act as an officer of the owners corporation for committee purposes, and
- cannot be counted in determining whether there is a quorum of the committee
Leanne Habib
Premium Strata
E: [email protected]
P: 02 9281 6440
This post appears in the April 2021 edition of The NSW Strata Magazine.
Question: Should tenants be advised of any changes that are made at committee meetings, especially if it is something like changes to the strata parking rules?
Should tenants be advised of any changes that are made at committee meetings attended and voted by strata residents?
I live in NSW and the reason I asked the question is apparently parking rules have changed but the tenants weren’t informed. Surely we can expect to be informed of changes?
Answer: Tenants should be advised of any changes to by-laws at a building, particularly when it concerns the behaviour of residents.
Tenants should be advised of any changes to by-laws at a building, particularly when it concerns the behaviour of residents. These changes must be made a general meeting.
The Act allows for tenant participation in a meeting if a building is over 50% tenanted and for a tenant to attend a meeting if they are on the strata roll.
The tenant should ask their managing agent to contact the strata manager about any changes. It would be normal for any such changes to be advertised in a distribution to residents.
Andrew Terrell
Bright & Duggan
E: [email protected]
P: 02 9902 7100
This post appears in Strata News #253.
Question: We live in a small strata complex where half the residents are tenants. Can tenants attend strata meetings and hold positions on the committee?
I am the secretary of a small self managed strata of 4 units in Sydney NSW. Some units are bigger than others and therefore pay higher strata fees, in case this is significant.
One owner has suggested that because 2 out of 4 units are being rented and it looks as though they will be for years to come, a tenant has the right to be put forward and be elected to a position on the Committee.
Is this correct? Can tenants attend strata meetings and be part of the committee?
If so, does it make any difference that renters form less than 50% of unit entitlements, ie the 2 smaller apartments are rented and the 2 bigger are owner occupied?
Does the Committee need to notify anyone other than all owners of meeting agendas and minutes?
Do tenants have the right to attend AGMs perhaps even speak at AGMs but not the right to vote on any issue?
Answer: They can elect a tenant representative if they wish.
Is this correct? Yes, they can elect a tenant representative if they wish.
No, it doesn’t make any difference that renters form less than 50% of unit entitlements.
If the tenants wish to appoint a tenant representative than the Committee does need to notify this representative of meeting agendas and minutes.
Tenants can attend meetings but they might be asked to leave for discussion on any matters of a financial nature.
This page from NSW Fair Trading also has some really helpful information about tenants attending strata meetings: Tenant participation.
Andrew Terrell
Bright & Duggan
E: [email protected]
P: 02 9902 7100
This post appears in Strata News #241.
Have a question about tenants in strata or something to add to the article? Leave a comment below.
Read More:
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- NSW: Changes to Laws Regulating Short Term Accommodation
- NSW: Taming Keyboard Warriors – How to Deal With Unreasonable Strata Communications
Visit our Strata Committee Concerns, Renting / Selling / Buying Strata Property OR Strata Information Pages by State.
Are you not sure about some of the strata terms used in this article? Take a look at our NSW Strata Glossary to help with your understanding.
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Mr Wong says
Should tenants be sent the Agenda and invited to Strata Committee Meetings and General Meetings?
It goes without saying they may only speak with permission and cannot vote.
Nikki Jovicic says
Hi Mr Wong
This exceprt from NSW Fair Trading should assist:Tenants at meetings:
If you’re a tenant, you can attend meetings of the owners corporation. If you’re not receiving notice about meetings, contact your landlord or leasing agent.
stephen says
A strata meeting is a private meeting. This is because members of the public are not entitled to attend a strata meeting. And normally the discussions which take place at a strata meeting are private conversations.
Mueller
https://www.lookupstrata.com.au/nsw-recording-strata-meetings/
In that case a tenant other than one covered by the Act (a tenant representative for example) would not be entitled to attend meetings.
35. It is clear that the nature of the communications which take place at the meetings are of a confidential nature and are private in the sense that they are “not public”.
ALLIANCE CRATON EXPLORER PTY LTD v QUASAR RESOURCES LTD [2010] SASC 266 (27 August 2010)
Phillip Langworthy says
The other option is that an owner in the Strata can choose to appoint another person (including a tenant) to be their bona fide nominee. That nominee of an owner (including a tenant) is then eligible to stand for a committee position and exercise exactly the same rights and responsibilities as the owner, IAW their unit entitlement or share within the body corporate. Hence a tenant could be the chair, secretary, treasurer or ordinary member and have full access and authority within the defined role of their position. That would include full access to financial records, transactions and decisions.
Nikki Jovicic says
Hi Phillip
We have received the following reply from Andrew Terrell:
Thanks.
Yes, that is true and has forever been the case.