Florida condo owners look at higher costs as new regulations take effect
in the new year
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[December 27, 2024] By
STEPHANY MATAT and DAVID FISCHER
MIAMI (AP) — Florida condominium owners are looking at higher costs from
condo associations in the new year, a consequence of a safety law passed
by state lawmakers in 2022.
It requires associations to have sufficient reserves to cover major
repairs and to conduct a survey of reserves every decade. Because of the
law, older condos — found largely in South Florida, according to state
records — are facing hefty increases to association payments to fund the
reserves and repair costs.
Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the law in response to the partial collapse of
Champlain Towers South, which killed 98 people in Surfside in June 2021.
New regulations require condo associations for buildings with three or
more stories to file an inspection report focused on structure,
maintenance and expected costs for repairs or renovations by Dec. 31.
The report is just a small sector of the large-scale issue in Florida’s
condo and property insurance crisis. A May report from the Florida
Office of Insurance Regulation noted that the average homeowner’s
insurance premium is approximately $3,600, about $1,000 more than the
national average, according to the National Association of Realtors.
In Hallandale Beach, condo owner Kelli Roiter sympathizes with people
having trouble paying the higher fees, but she said she supports rules
requiring associations to maintain reserves for repairs if it means her
oceanfront building — built in 1971 — gets the repairs it needs.
She said her building, a few miles from Champlain Towers South, is
showing some of the same problems that were visible before that building
collapsed.
“I’m concerned that this building will collapse,” Roiter said. “There
are nights I wake up hearing a creak, and I jump. And then I remind
myself that, no, no, no, we’re safe. But am I safe?”
Rick Madan, president of the Biscayne Neighborhoods Association, which
represents 22 condo associations, said the law is bringing condo owners
strife by forcing buildings to take full coverage and bringing forth a
blanket solution that doesn’t holistically address the crisis.
Madan said the law puts newer condos in the same category of needing
reserve funds, inspection reports and recertifications as much older
buildings at the expense of the condo owners.
That’s especially tough for people who retired in South Florida on fixed
incomes, Madan added.
“You’re making us do all these reserve studies. You’re making us fund
our reserves more, so we have to come up with more money,” Madan said of
the Florida Legislature. “On top of that, you’re not giving us any
flexibility on the insurance side where the insurance companies are
basically making so much profit because they write a policy for $100
million, which they know they’ll never have to pay a claim on.”
Democratic State Sen. Jason Pizzo, who represented Surfside at the time
of the collapse, said he agrees with Madan’s point about property
insurance.
Pizzo and state Sen. Jennifer Bradley, a Republican, held a condo summit
in early December where he warned of transparency among associations
about the required projects for repair costs to prevent structural
damage.
Pizzo told The Associated Press it is important for associations to have
that transparency with condo owners to ensure that the rising payments
are truly related to repairs and not to amenity costs, and that it is
done within a reasonable timeframe for residents’ safety.
He said it's understandable to worry about anticipatory costs but that
is why objective inspections of older buildings are necessary.
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Kelli Roiter, a condo owner in one of the few residential buildings
designed in 1971 by architect Morris Lapidus, looks out her balcony
at other waterfront high-rise buildings, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024, in
Hallandale Beach, Fla. Roiter supports new rules that require condo
associations to maintain reserves and make necessary structural
repairs. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)
Nearly 90% of the 1.6 million condos
in Florida are more than 30 years old, and Pizzo said it is
concerning that they haven’t had critical inspections.
“They’re going to get a milestone inspection, and they may find some
immediate repair or replacement requirements as a result of it,"
Pizzo said. “That’s not really by operation of law. That’s by
operation of common sense.”
Luis Konski, a Miami attorney who deals with construction and
commercial liability cases, said previous condo regulations kept
fees low by failing to save money for future repairs, and then
owners were hit with special assessments when repairs finally needed
to be done. Konski said this encouraged many associations to ignore
necessary but expensive maintenance, which is what likely led to the
Surfside building collapse.
He said he’s not sure whether the state has committed enough staff
to actually make sure associations are following the new rules.
Pizzo echoed similar concerns, saying the state's Department of
Business and Professional Regulation might require legislative
changes so it can start reviewing structural integrity and
inspection reports while continuing to regulate all parts of
business in Florida, including licensing and enforcing rules.
Konski said that if associations can continue to delay maintenance
with inaccurate surveys and minimal oversight, it’s only a matter of
time before another disaster.
“It’s a question of do you save money or do you save lives?” Konski
said. “You can’t do both.”
Real estate agent Rebeca Castellon, who owns a condo in Coral
Gables, said she agrees with the idea of requiring condo
associations to maintain reserves for future repairs but
acknowledges that the timing is bad when the increased fees are
combined with higher insurance costs and recent inflation.
“I think part of the challenge is that right now there is tsunami of
things that are really making it very challenging for condo owners,”
Castellon said.
The condo market has cooled with the uncertainty created by
additional fees and regulations, but Castellon said condos are still
the most affordable form of home ownership and the new regulations
will just give buyers more information going forward.
“I would not be surprised if in the future buyers are going to
demand to see the structural inspection that the towers are going
through right now and take that into consideration, as far as
whether or not that’s the right property for them to move forward
and put an offer,” Castellon said.
Real estate agent Gatien Salaun, who owns a waterfront condo in
Miami Beach, said what appears to be a recent reduction in average
sale prices is largely just buyers negotiating with sellers to eat
some of the costs.
“They are simply asking for price reductions that are commensurate
with that exact amount that they will have to pay over the next 20
years, 30 years in assessments,” Salaun said. “And the sellers are
somewhat stuck in terms of negotiating with the buyer or just paying
for the cost themselves.”
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