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Board Service: Gerry Fifer

Gerry Fifer, 318 West 100 Condominium Association. One in an occasional series of real-life stories by board members about serving on co-op and condo boards. in Featured Articles from Our Print Magazine

I moved into my condominium in 1990, during the last major market downturn. I had been living for years in a rent-controlled studio apartment right around the corner. The softening market allowed me to purchase what had previously been beyond my reach: a charming two-bedroom apartment in a 100-year-old, 32-unit building on a quiet street between West End Avenue and Riverside Drive.

Not long afterward, the president of the board approached me about filling a vacancy. I demurred, thinking myself unqualified. I'm a lawyer specializing in intellectual property and had never been on a board like this. Neither had the other board members, she assured me. So I agreed. It seems to have worked out: I've been on my condo board for over 15 years and have been president for the past six.

I found that there was a vast amount to learn and keep up with in many areas: finance, law, construction, management and public relations. I have a passion for research, and I'm a stickler for detail. These traits have served me well in educating myself and, when I can, those around me. If you're on the board, you have an obligation to absorb as much information as you can.

Boards have to abide by rules, as well as enforce them. While it's hard to separate your self-interest from what will benefit the condo as a whole, board members have a fiduciary duty to do just that. Boards also need specific authority (from the law and the governing documents of the co-op or condo) to act. Yet a surprising number of boards get into trouble by disregarding these principles.

High-Handing It to the Board

Often, boards are seen as high-handed by those who elected them. But my board members sometimes have the mistaken notion that their role is to please everybody. It's not. A hotel staff tries to please guests. A condo board is there to maintain an asset. It's a different business model. Our job is to improve the building as a whole. Yet to do that, you have to be willing to be unpopular.

For their part, some owners (without realizing it) are inconsistent about procedure. When content, they let the board do its job. When dissatisfied, they accuse the board of being "undemocratic." They suddenly want to make decisions that are the province of the board. As someone else once said, "Democracy means having your say, not always getting your way." They forget that buying their units meant accepting the bylaws, which mandate how the condo is governed. Their recourse is to replace board members at the next election, not to demand an arbitrary suspension of lawful procedure.

Conversely, boards sometimes try to evade difficult decisions by basing them on a poll of owners. While occasionally appropriate, this approach is misguided. What individual owners demand, especially in the short term, is not always in the best interest of the condo as a whole. What's more, a board can never legally shift its responsibility elsewhere: You cannot avoid liability for a bad decision by relying on a poll. Knowing owners' views is certainly useful, but the buck really does stop with us.

Finally, being on the board teaches you how to improve your interpersonal skills. I never considered myself a political person before, but once you're on the board, you have to learn how to deal with divergent opinions and conflict, and how to resolve both in a non-violent, civil and constructive way.

All this can take much time and effort, but in the end it can leave you with a great sense of accomplishment. That's why, despite the difficulties, I still serve.

 

Adapted from Habitat December 2008. For the complete article and more, join our Archive >>

 

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