| Community
Communication Corner
by Bob Gourley, MyEZCondo Founder, Member
of CAI CT Board of Directors
Capital Reserves and the Future of Your Community
I went to see a fortune teller recently. She took me into her reading
room and asked me to gaze into her crystal ball. She then predicted my
future. “I see wear and tear on your buildings. I see a new roof
will be needed. I see aging windows that need replacing. I see…
a depleted reserve fund!”
Silliness aside, it really doesn’t take a fortune teller to predict
that common elements in any community are going to age and need replacing.
It also doesn’t take any magic to predict that communities with
more amenities are likely to incur greater expense when maintaining and
preserving their community’s assets. So, why is it that so many
communities are so far behind in their goals for achieving a sound reserve
fund for tomorrow’s expenses?
There are many reasons that reserve funds are not at their proper levels.
First and foremost, in my opinion, is the fact that the “here and
now” expenses are far easier to comprehend than tomorrow’s
expenses. Has your community undergone an assessment recently? Was it
for an emergency or one-time expense or was it for a routine expense that
could have been easily predicted 5, 10, or even 15 years ago? The term
“deferred maintenance” has become all too familiar in the
language of community associations. Simply put, when a community doesn’t
have the funds available to handle a routine maintenance item, they defer
the maintenance until such time as the funds are available. Provided a
plan to raise those funds is executed, that may or may not be a problem.
More times than not, the path of deferred maintenance leads to the slippery
slope of unfunded capital reserves.
How do you steer your community away from the path of depleted reserves
and heavy assessments for routine items? The first step is to develop
or review your association’s reserve study. Ideally, this job will
be handled by a professional reserve study analyst. If your association
does not have or cannot afford a reserve study, the Board of Directors
should appoint a committee to take inventory of those items which the
community holds in common. These items include common elements like grounds,
paved roads, amenities (pools, tennis courts, club houses, etc.) and items
routinely handled by the association (i.e. – roofs, building exteriors,
windows). These items will vary by community so there is not a “one
size fits all” approach to this. Once all of the items are inventories,
the committee should evaluate each of those items to determine the element’s
useful life. A roof that lasts fifteen years that has been in place for
five years, still has ten years left. Roads that were paved 25 years ago
may need replacement sooner rather than later. This list will ultimately
yield the items that a reserve should be able to fund. For communities
that have never done this exercise, the results can be a real eye opener.
The next step is to begin to estimate replacement costs for the common
items. Inflation will have taken a toll over original costs so be prepared
to factor that in. At the conclusion of this process, a realistic budget
for a reserve will begin to emerge. At first glance, many of these numbers
may seem too large or unmanageable. My advice is to use a technique called
“reduce to the ridiculous” to help make the accounting a little
easier to swallow. A reserve study that calls for $20,000 per unit to
be raised over the next five years may sound better at $4,000 per unit
per year or better yet at $333 per unit per month or $77 per unit per
week.
The final step is to sell the concept to your fellow homeowners. None
of them want to live in a rundown, outdated community. Poorly funded capital
reserves will not only affect the quality of their lives but it will very
likely damage their ability to attract buyers should they decide to sell
their home. Community members need to be “told and sold” the
value of a healthy capital reserve and a long range plan of how those
reserves will be used. Tell them about the plans for how the money will
be used and sell them on the idea of how it is in their best interests
to keep the reserve fund healthy. You will be rewarded with a fiscally
vibrant community that is never caught off guard without the funds it
will need to flourish.
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