THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
1046 |
THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 |
S.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The purpose of this Act is to require that certain managing agents report to condominium unit owners and the real estate commission when a condominium association that the agent manages fails to comply with budget and replacement reserves requirements.
SECTION 2. Section 514B-148, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§514B-148 Association fiscal matters; budgets and replacement
reserves. (a) The budget required under
section 514B-144(a) shall include a summary with at least the following
details:
(1) The estimated revenues and operating expenses of
the association;
(2) Disclosure as to whether the budget has been
prepared on a cash or accrual basis;
(3) The estimated costs of fire safety
equipment or installations that meet the requirements of a life safety
evaluation required by the applicable county for any building located in a
county with a population greater than five hundred thousand; provided that the
reserve study may forecast a loan or special assessment to fund life safety
components or installation;
(4) The balance of the total replacement reserves
fund of the association as of the date of the budget;
(5) The estimated replacement reserves assessments that the association will require to maintain the property based on a reserve study performed by or on behalf of the association; provided that the reserve study, if not prepared by an independent reserve study preparer, shall be reviewed by an independent reserve study preparer not less than every three years; provided further that a managing agent with industry reserve study designations shall not be considered as having a conflict of interest for purposes of this paragraph;
(6) A general explanation of how the estimated
replacement reserves assessments are computed and detailing:
(A) The
identity, qualifications, and potential conflicts of interest of the person or
entity performing the reserve study, update, or any review thereof;
(B) Disclosure
of any component of association property omitted from the reserve study and the
basis for the omission;
(C) Planned
increases in the estimated replacement reserve assessments over the thirty-year
plan; and
(D) Whether
the actual estimated replacement reserves assessments for the prior year as
defined in the study was less than the assessments provided for in the reserve
study, and, if so, by how much, and explaining the impact of the lesser
assessments on future estimated replacement reserves assessments;
(7) The amount the association must collect for the
fiscal year to fund the estimated replacement reserves assessments; and
(8) Information as to whether the amount
the association must collect for the fiscal year to fund the estimated
replacement reserves assessments was
calculated using a per cent funded or cash flow plan. The method or plan shall not circumvent the
estimated replacement reserves assessments
amount determined by the reserve study pursuant to paragraph (5).
(b) The association shall assess the unit owners
to either fund a minimum of fifty per cent of the estimated replacement
reserves assessments or fund one
hundred per cent of the estimated replacement reserves assessments when using a cash flow plan; provided that a new
association need not collect estimated replacement reserves assessments until the fiscal year that begins after the
association's first annual meeting. For
each fiscal year, the association shall collect the amount assessed to fund the
estimated replacement reserves assessments for that fiscal year, as determined by the association's plan.
(c) The association shall compute the estimated
replacement reserves assessments by
a formula that is based on the estimated life and the estimated capital
expenditure or major maintenance required for each part of the property. The estimated replacement reserves
assessments shall include:
(1) Adjustments for revenues that will be received
and expenditures that will be made before the beginning of the fiscal year to
which the budget relates; and
(2) Separate, designated reserves for each part of
the property for which capital expenditures or major maintenance will exceed
$10,000. Parts of the property for which
capital expenditures or major maintenance will not exceed $10,000 may be
aggregated in a single designated reserve.
(d) No association or unit owner, director,
officer, managing agent, or employee of an association who makes a good faith
effort to calculate the estimated replacement reserves assessments for an association shall be liable if the
estimate subsequently proves incorrect.
(e) Except in emergency situations or with the
approval of a majority of the unit owners, a board may not exceed its total
adopted annual operating budget by more than twenty per cent during the fiscal
year to which the budget relates. Before
imposing or collecting an assessment under this subsection that has not been
approved by a majority of the unit owners, the board shall adopt a resolution
containing written findings as to the necessity of the extraordinary expense
involved and why the expense was not or could not have been reasonably foreseen
in the budgeting process, and the resolution shall be distributed to the
members with the notice of assessment.
(f) The requirements of this section shall
override any requirements in an association's declaration, bylaws, or any other
association documents relating to preparation of budgets, calculation of
replacement reserve requirements, assessment and funding of replacement
reserves, and expenditures from replacement reserves with the exception of:
(1) Any requirements in an association's declaration,
bylaws, or any other association documents that require the association to
collect more than fifty per cent of replacement reserve requirements; or
(2) Any provisions relating to upgrading the common
elements, [such as] including additions, improvements, and
alterations to the common elements.
(g) Subject to the procedures of section 514B‑157
and any rules adopted by the commission, any unit owner whose association board
fails to comply with this section may enforce compliance by the board. In any proceeding to enforce compliance, a
board that has not prepared an annual operating budget and reserve study shall
have the burden of proving it has complied with this section.
(h) Subject to any rules adopted
by the commission, any managing agent whose client is an association subject to
this chapter shall notify in writing:
(1) Each
unit owner of the association; and
(2) The
real estate commission,
if the association being managed by the managing
agent fails to comply with this section; provided that this subsection shall only
apply to a managing agent whose contract involves budgetary and replacement
reserve responsibilities and provides authority for the managing agent to
correspond with the unit owners.
[(h) As
used in] (i) For the purposes of this section:
"Capital
expenditure" means an expense that results from the purchase or
replacement of an asset whose life is greater than one year, or the addition of
an asset that extends the life of an existing asset for a period greater than
one year.
"Cash
flow plan" means a minimum thirty-year projection of an association's
future income and expense requirements to fund fully its replacement reserves
requirements each year during that thirty-year period, except in an emergency;
provided that it does not include a projection of special assessments or loans
during that thirty-year period, except in an emergency.
"Emergency
situation" means any extraordinary expenses:
(1) Required by an order of a court;
(2) Necessary to repair or maintain any part of the
property for which the association is responsible where a threat to personal
safety on the property is discovered;
(3) Necessary to repair any part of the property for
which the association is responsible that could not have been reasonably
foreseen by the board in preparing and distributing the annual operating
budget;
(4) Necessary to respond to any legal or
administrative proceeding brought against the association that could not have
been reasonably foreseen by the board in preparing and distributing the annual
operating budget; or
(5) Necessary for the association to obtain adequate
insurance for the property that the association must insure.
"Independent
reserve study preparer" means any organization, company, or individual
with a reserve study certification from an industry organization.
"Major
maintenance" means an expenditure for maintenance or repair that will
result in extending the life of an asset for a period greater than one year.
"Replacement reserves" means funds for the upkeep, repair, or replacement of those parts of the property, including but not limited to roofs, walls, decks, paving, and equipment, that the association is obligated to maintain."
SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
Report Title:
Real Estate Commission; Condominium Associations; Condominiums; Managing Agents; Unit Owners; Reporting
Description:
Requires certain managing agents to notify each unit owner and the Real Estate Commission when a condominium association that the agent manages fails to meet budget and replacement reserves reporting requirements. Effective 7/1/2050. (SD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.