
Flickr photo credit: turbojoe_(away)
If you’re watching your condo association insurance costs these days, you’ve seen the trend. Insurers are passing on higher and higher deductibles to associations – sometimes to the tune of $10,000. And associations are having difficulty adjusting to the higher costs. In fact, associations facing mounting deductibles are often looking for places to transfer that cost. That means some unit owners are now coughing up extra for the additional deductible amounts in the form of higher association fees.
It stands to reason that associations would choose to pass the additional cost on to the owners. Most associations now include insurance costs in association fees. Because much of the liability stems from owner activity, associations feel justified in including the deductible charges in association fees. But some associations are considering passing that cost on only to those owners who receive the insurance benefits paid for by the premiums. While that’s a more just way of handling the situation, it’s unlikely that a smaller group of owners would be able to take on the deductible. Also, the association may have to go through the expensive legal process of assigning negligence to the owners, which may not be successful. Read more…

Flickr photo credit: aprilzosia
Even if your condominium or apartment complex is located outside California, you’re still facing an earthquake risk. That’s because all 50 states to date have been hit with earthquakes, and 39 states have suffered losses, according to the California Earthquake Authority. More than 5,000 earthquakes hit every year, and losses can be devastating. The San Francisco earthquake in 1906 caused $235 million in damages (an amount equal to $5.1 billion today).
So who insures the risk in the condo association world? Are condo associations responsible, or do unit owners bear the burden of insuring against earthquake damage? Read more…
How much do you trust the staff you’ve hired to manage the front desk?
I mean we’ve all heard stories about the waiters and waitresses at our favorite restaurant swiping our credit card numbers on a little theft gizmo before running the charge through for the meal. I’ve actually been a victim of something similar. Although I love the restaurant dearly (it serves the best Mexican food) I only pay with cash. period.
Every month large sums of money moves through your books. Rents come in as income, and then there are expenses – utilities, maintenance, staff, supplies, insurance, taxes, advertising, legal fees, tenant damage, etc. Do you have safeguards in place to deter sticky fingers?
Do you have one person write checks and another person sign them? Who reconciles the bank statement each month? Direct theft is one form of employee dishonesty.
Another form would be when an employee uses tenant information – credit card numbers, social security numbers, birthdates, etc. to make fraudulent purchases for personal gain. This form of theft is more difficult to identify. And yet, you could be named as a party in the lawsuit. Read more…
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