AVOID DRAMA AT YOUR CONDOMINIUM ELECTION

By Eric Glazer, Esq.

Published November 14, 2016 

Each and every year, without fail, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation is deluged with arbitration petitions filed against condominium associations, alleging that the association failed to properly conduct its elections. Knowing some basic law can go a long way toward finding your association’s election under a legal attack. Here are some of the more commonly litigated issues:

  • Placing the wrong number of people on the Board of Directors: (Condominium Associations Only) Often times the governing documents do not provide for an exact number of Directors for your Board. Instead, the bylaws allow for a range of directors like no less than three and no more than nine. Florida arbitration cases have held that where the documents provide for a range of directors, the statute automatically sets the number at five.

  • Staggered Terms: (Condominiums Only) There has been lots of confusion over the years regarding staggered terms. To make a long story short, staggered terms are now allowed, if they are provided for in your governing documents and the term is not in excess of two years.

  • Candidate Information Sheets: (Condominiums Only) In a condo election, each candidate is allowed to provide the association with: a copy of an information sheet which may describe the candidate's background, education, and qualifications. This year the DBPR removed the language “as well as other factors deemed relevant by the candidate.” The information contained therein shall not exceed one side of the sheet which shall be no larger than 8 1/2 inches by 11 inches. Any candidate desiring the association to mail or personally deliver copies of an information sheet to the eligible voters must furnish the information sheet to the association not less than 35 days before the election. If two or more candidates consent in writing, the association may consolidate into a single side of a page the candidate information sheets submitted by those candidates. The failure of an association to mail, transmit or personally deliver a copy of a timely delivered information sheet of each eligible candidate to the eligible voters shall require the association to mail, transmit, or deliver an amended second notice, which shall explain the need for the amended notice and include the information within the time required by this rule. If an amended second notice cannot be timely mailed, transmitted or delivered, the association must re-notice and reschedule the election. If the election has already been conducted, the association shall conduct a new election. No association shall edit, alter, or otherwise modify the content of the information sheet. The original copy provided by the candidate shall become part of the official records of the association.

  • Quorum: In a condominium, it is irrelevant if there is a quorum at the annual meeting. As long as 20% of the eligible voters participate in the election, the election counts.

  • When Can the Last Vote Be Cast? In a condominium, an owner can cast a vote up until the first envelope is opened. The association must also have ballots and envelopes on hand.

  May your condo election be painless and quick this year.


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About HOA & Condo Blog

Eric Glazer Eric Glazer graduated from the University of Miami School of Law in 1992 after receiving a B.A. from NYU. He has practiced community association law for more than 2

decades and is the owner of Glazer and Associates, P.A. a seven attorney law firm with offices in Fort Lauderdale and Orlando and satellite offices in Naples, Fort Myers and Tampa.

 

Since 2009, Eric has been the host of Condo Craze and HOAs, a weekly one hour radio show that airs at noon each Sunday on 850 WFTL.

   

See: www.condocrazeandhoas.com.

   

He is the first attorney in the State of Florida that designed a course that certifies condominium residents as eligible to serve on a condominium Board of Directors and has now certified more than 10,000 Floridians all across the state. He is certified as a Circuit Court Mediator by The Florida Supreme Court and has mediated dozens of disputes between associations and unit owners. Eric also devotes significant time to advancing legislation in the best interest of Florida community association members.


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