Two Decades of Strata Squabbles

or, Jimmy outs the strata worriers, warriors, quiffs and carers …

A Quick Take

In today’s guest-writer article well know strata commentator, journalist, author and podcaster, Jimmy Thomson, discusses what he’s learned from over 20 years of reporting on strata and running the Flat Chat forum for strata citizens.  Jimmy’s never shy to say and write what he thinks, which I love.  But in this article, he makes some very interesting observations about strata personalities.

[9:30 minutes estimated reading time, 1888 words]

The Full Article

INTRODUCTION

From time to time, I publish articles from guest writers who have different perspectives and ideas on strata issues to expand and challenge our knowledge and thinking.

I hope you enjoy today’s article.

July 11, 2024

Francesco ...


TWO DECADES OF STRATA SQUABBLES

Flat Chat writer and editor Jimmy Thomson recalls what he has learned from 20 years of running an online forum for strata residents

It was back in 2007 that I had my first major piece about a strata scandal published in the Sydney Morning Herald.

The Rose Group, principal developer of Breakfast Point in Sydney, had used its proxy votes – which it demanded as a condition of the sale of its apartments – to take control of the committee of its prestigious Hunters Wharf building’s committee to subvert the clear and vehemently expressed wishes of the majority of owners.

By “take control”, I mean it had sacked the entire committee at the block’s AGM and installed a company man as its sole representative.  He then rescinded the residents’ vehement and unanimous objections to having their exclusive-use, very small private marina turned into a massive commercial operation which would have been one of the largest on the harbour. 

Instead, the one-man committee wrote to the local council and state government withdrawing objections and saying the residents fully supported the commercial marina proposal – an egregious and deliberate falsehood, although technically and legally true.

Shortly after, then Planning Minster Frank Sartor announced that it would henceforth be illegal for any developers to demand proxy votes as a condition of the sales of their properties, citing pressure from the community and the media.    

The media?  That would have been me, if only because strata issues weren’t on the popular media radar back then, like it is today.

That change to strata law has since spread to every state and territory in Australia but it started with an email to Flat Chat from a woman who was thinking of buying into Breakfast Point but concerned that the developer was demanding her proxy vote as a condition of sale.

I advised her to refuse, which she did, only to be told that it didn’t matter because they had everyone else’s votes too.  For what it’s worth, the Rose Group argued that they needed the votes to ensure the continued development of the area as a harmonious community.

But that one email, led to further enquiries and eventually blew the lid off the whole proxy vote disenfranchisement of strata owners and the potential for dubious dealings, not just in Breakfast Point but across the state and beyond.

Since then, the Flat Chat Forum, as it is now known, has grown and the website has just over 9000 registered users, about 1000 readers a day, often more,  while our weekly newsletter has a whisker above 3000 subscribers.  The forum has accumulated about 6000 topics and more that 20,000 replies.

These figures aren’t massive, compared to the squillions of “followers” that influencers claim.  But they are real people with verified email addresses (unlike one of our short-lived rivals who claimed to have more users than there were apartments in the whole of Australia).

And those users can be broken down into four main categories – the Worriers, the Warriors, the Quiffs, and the Carers.

The Worriers

Strata can be a strange and hostile place, especially if you don’t know how it works and even more so when you know how it should work, can see where it isn’t working but don’t know how to fix it.

The Worriers are generally residents who want to do the right thing but, more to the point, don’t want to do the wrong thing.  They want to be good neighbours but don’t know how to deal with bad neighbours. Some are on committees, many aren’t.

Mostly they want a quiet life and not to even have to think about by-laws and regulations.  They want to keep their levies as low as reasonably possible and don’t want anything to happen that might affect the value of their homes.

All of which would be fine were it not for the fact that they have neighbours through the walls, the floors and the ceilings who may have a completely different set of priorities.

So the Worriers will come to Flat Chat looking for solutions that involve the minimum disruption or confrontation.  In their search for peace, they don’t want to start a war.

Fortunately for them, there are very few strata problems that haven’t been aired in the Forum and they will get advice that ranges from the passive to the aggressive and they can choose their path accordingly.

The Quiffs (Quick Fix For Free)

The Quiffs – or Quick Fix For Free brigade – are people who have encountered a problem in their strata scheme and want free advice on what to do about it. What’s more, they want it now and when they’ve got it, they move on, often without a word of acknowledgement or thanks.

Did they take the advice our readers offered and did it work?  We may never know.

Often they will ask their questions too late – “I’ve got an AGM tomorrow night … how do I get an item on the agenda” – or with the expectation that we will intervene on their behalf (we won’t, but we will recommend agencies who might).

Now, I don’t blame people for thinking the internet exists to provide free information, advice or entertainment. We have been drawn to its various charms by the provision of precisely that, which has created a culture in which anyone who asks for payment is treated with suspicion.

The growth of adblocker apps only consolidates the sense that a lot of people feel they are entitled to get content entirely free regardless of how much it costs to produce it. I would be as guilty as anyone of that – when the free trial period for a new app runs out, I take a lot of convincing to pony up for the subscription.

By the way, Flat Chat is financed by sponsors who have been with us for years and whom I chose because I like and trust them and would recommend them to strata residents in any case.

So the Quiffs register (as they must before they can post), ask their questions, often get an answer, which they may or may not like, and move on. 

Occasionally Quiffs will pepper the Forum with the same question in different areas under different headlines – they soon get short shrift.  I want all the responses to be in the same place (and so should they).

That said, some stick around when they realise there is a very supportive community that they can tap into and to which they can contribute. And that’s when they become Carers

The Carers (and Sharers)

Probably the most rewarding aspect of running the Forum is the way that other owners pitch in with advice. This, I believe, stems from a recognition that strata living can be hard, but there are ways of making it easier.

So people will come with their own questions and stay to offer advice and support to people who are going through something that may have no connection with their original issues, but which they have been through themselves.

I call this group the Carers because the one thing that shines through is that they care about other people and they can see the potential in strata living if we get it right.

They are the lifeblood of the Forum because they are informed, experienced empathic and fair – all qualities you are looking for when you are assailed by conflicting and unreliable information, often from vested interests, when you are in the middle of a stressful dispute.

The Warriors

This is a militant subgroup of the Carers, who have become frustrated with their strata schemes and seem to live in a permanent state of cynicism, frustration and rage.

No solution will work, in their view, all committee members and strata managers are incompetent and corrupt, any efforts to change anything are doomed to ignominious failure while they are vilified as troublemakers in the community.

Often dismissed as ‘keyboard warriors” and “bush lawyers” they can be guilty of cherry-picking aspects of strata law to create an argument that wouldn’t stand up in a high school debate, let alone a strata Tribunal.

Our job at Flat Chat is to let them have a voice but point out the flaws in their arguments before anyone gets too carried away.

In the Venn diagrams of strata living, there are many overlapping groups and the Quiffs and Warriors share a lot of territory.  Occasionally people will write to us in the mistaken belief that by naming a neighbour or a strata professional they can exact some revenge or influence their behaviour.

But we have always operated on the basis of anonymity because it means people can talk about their problems without damaging their standing in their community or even the value of their homes.

The woman who baulked at the Breakfast Point proxy grab and eventually bought elsewhere insisted on anonymity.  But she opened the door and others who were prepared to be named poured through. 

And, that’s when we allow ourselves to think that this thing actually works.

And just one more thing …

In recent years, the NSW government has taken to tweaking the wording of strata laws so that elements that you have sworn by in the past suddenly have different meanings.

For that reason if no other we always hold up our hands when we’ve got it wrong. 

The NSW Strata Schemes Management Act is a strange and confusing document – for instance, the word “secretary” could mean someone on your strata committee or a senior civil servant – so we take care to warn readers that ours is not legal advice and that for serious issues they should consult an experienced strata lawyer.

As screenwriter William Goldman once said of movie-making, the real problem with strata is that nobody knows anything.  At Flat Chat we try our best to spread the information without exacerbating the misinformation.



Jimmy Thomson


ABOUT JIMMY

Jimmy Thomson is an author and journalist as well as one of the best-known figures on the strata scene in NSW.  For 20 years he has been writing the Flat Chat column, currently in the Australian Financial Review, and editing the related website (flatchat.com.au).  He has frequently also been heard talking about apartment living on ABC radio with James Valentine (and others). In his other life, Jimmy is a successful crime writer (under the name James Dunbar) and lectures at the Sydney campus of Boston University on Australian Literature and Travel Writing. He is married to author and journalist Sue Williams and they live in an apartment in Sydney with their cat.

Jimmy Thomson edits the Flat Chat website and hosts the Flat Chat Wrap podcast.


Previous
Previous

Strata Managers in the Property Olympic Games

Next
Next

NSW Strata Managers need More Supervisio