Have separate board 
WE refer to the letter “Leave it to professionals”, (see article below) on the issue of strata management.
Building  management is not a profession: it is a multi-disciplinary management  function encompassing a wide range of skills such as engineering,  architecture, accounting, law, vocational skills, etc.
It cannot and should not be the exclusive domain of any particular profession like registered valuers.
No  country has laws that specify that only registered valuers admitted as  property managers pursuant to Section 21(1)(a) of the Valuers,  Appraisers and Estate Agents Act, 1981 (VAEA Act) can undertake property  management.
To put things in perspective, the Building  Management Association of Malaysia (BMAM) is not objecting to registered  valuers managing stratified properties.
What we are strongly  opposed to is the creation of a monopoly favouring registered valuers if  the Bill is signed into law in its present form.
The Board of  Valuers, Appraisers and Estate Agents is offering to open a sub-register  for non-valuer managing agents to be admitted as property managers.
We  are not accepting the board’s proposal as it would only further  entrench its monopoly over property management, given that the  admission, suspension and even eventual deregistration of non-valuer  property managers will be at the sole discretion of the board.
We  are calling for the establishment of a separate multi-disciplinary  Board of Building Managers under the jurisdiction of the Housing and  Local Government Ministry with regulatory support from the Commissioner  of Buildings (COB).
There are more than 4,000 stratified projects  (80% of them residential) in Malaysia at the moment, and about five  million Malaysians belonging to the low and middle income groups live in  them.
Since the common properties and facilities in the flat and  apartment premises cannot be sold or subdivided and are meant for the  exclusive use of the residents, all that the owners need is a building  manager to maintain the common areas and facilities, and not a property  manager whose portfolio includes leasing, collection of rent, promotion  of sales, etc.
A building manager appointed by the joint  management body (JMB) or management corporation (MC) upon mutually  agreed terms and conditions of scope of work and remuneration would be  significantly cheaper than a property manager whose fees are subject to a  schedule under the VAEA Act.
The building manager is only  expected to carry out his duties and responsibilities according to the  terms and conditions of his appointment as well as the instructions of  the JMB or MC Management Committee.
All fiduciary  responsibilities, particularly the management of the Building Fund  Account, are undertaken by the JMB or MC pursuant to the Building and  Common Property (Maintenance and Management) Act, 2007 and the Strata  Titles Act, 1985.
These records are submitted to the COB every year after the annual general meeting.
PROF S. VENKATESWARAN
Secretary General
Building Management Association of Malaysia
Leave it to professionals
THE public deserves an unbiased understanding beyond the shadow play  leading up to the third reading of the Strata Management Bill 2012 in  parliament.
The proposed Act stipulates that a managing agent for  stratified property must first be free from any potential conflict of  interest (i.e. independent) and secondly, a registered property manager.
The  Act replaces the Building and Common Property Act, which did not  emphasise that such functions are to be performed by a registered  property manager.
The key problem is that property management at  present is also practised by an unregulated group and such parties are  not accountable to a regulatory body unlike registered persons i.e.  property professionals or chartered surveyors.
The new Act aims to rectify this disparity by uniformly regulating all property managers of stratified properties.
Under the Valuers, Appraisers and Estate Agents Act (VAEA), a Registered Property Manager must possess:
1) An academic qualification from an approved institution of higher learning or recognised professional examinations; and
2) Pass the Test of Professional Competence set by the regulating body.
These  robust standards and established processes are aimed towards  registering professionals of sound qualifications and adequate  competency levels.
A registered property manager is continuously  subjected to a code of conduct, professional standards and various  stipulations under VAEA to ensure they discharge their duties in a  manner that serves the public adequately and to the highest possible  industry standards.
The registration of property managers and  firms is undertaken by the Board of Valuers, Appraisers and Estate  Agents Malaysia (board).
The board, a governmental regulatory  body under the purview of the Finance Ministry, was set up in 1981 to  regulate Estate Agents, Valuers, Appraisers and Property Managers in  Malaysia.
It is legislatively empowered to deal with complaints  from the public and take disciplinary action against any errant  registered persons or firms, including stripping them of their licence  and barring them from further practice, amongst other possible  disciplinary measures.
Given the established competency  requirements and standards imposed on registered property managers, I  cannot see beyond reasonable logic for such professionals to utterly  fail in their professional duties to a joint management corporation,  management corporation or individual owner.
The board, in the spirit of laissez-faire, has opened the registration of property managers to include these non-regulated practitioners.
Property  management was always the domain of property professionals but only in  recent history, primarily property developers and others have set up  property management businesses to rival property professionals for the  property management trade but in an unregulated fashion, taking  advantage of the limitations of statutes. This is where the battle lies and the public should take notice.
If  a non-regulated practitioner wishes to practise as a property manager  in efforts to legally comply with the greater standards as demanded by  the new Act, I cannot see why they should shy away and not readily  subject themselves through the established process and competency test  in order to become a registered property manager.
The process is  not designed to penalise individuals but to assess if a candidate has  the required level of competency, in order to be accountable to the  public as a practising professional.
The merit of regulating the  property management profession far outweighs any self-serving agenda,  and the public must insist for high standards in lieu of the nation’s  Vision 2020 agenda.
To the lawmakers and members of Parliament,  my plea is to make the right decisions in cognisance of standards,  accountability and professionalism.
The last thing we want is a mushrooming of “urban slums” in our beautiful country.
A. PADMAN  Kuala Lumpur - The Star, Nov 5 2012
Related posts:
Managing strata properties in Malaysia
Poor services from JMBs, Unlicensed Property Managers and Lucrative Trade!

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment