A condominium association is a legal entity -- usually a non-profit corporation, that operates the business of a private democracy. The association's authority to conduct business is based on the condominium's Articles of Incorporation and its By-Laws, a few of the association's governing documents.
Depending on what you want to report, best practices indicate that you read your governing documents to remind yourself of your obligations, and to discover the basis for the issue you want to report.
Please feel free to ask a more detailed question about liens, as necessary.
Sorry to tell you this, but you may not be able to do that. Some condo associations have rules against dogs and that may prevent you from getting one.
The answer depends on the state where the condominium is located.You can follow the link, below, and find the state you want.
Depending on the context, it may be an umbrella association that oversees or is related to a group of individual condominium or other land-use associations.
Thomas J. Madden has written: 'King of the condo' -- subject(s): Fiction, Condominiums, Condominium associations
There is no standard. There are best practices, which may preclude your use if you are not paying, but associations' boards have the responsibility to collect from owners and to monitor use.
It depends. If you added or customized the flooring from the original floor plan than you have additions and alterations. These types of changes are covered on your Coverage A on your condo policy. If it is the original flooring than it would depend on what your condo associations master policy covers.
There is no standard. Snow falls in common areas and the association is liable for any accident caused by snow in common areas. Best practices dictate that associations either plow and remove snow, or work with residents to establish a program for snow removal.
File a police report and include an inventory of items taken during the robbery. If you rent your condominium to a tenant, ask the tenant to file the police report with an inventory.
In the virtual world of OurWorld, you cannot directly boot people out of your condo. However, you can control who has access to your condo by setting the privacy settings to "Invite Only" or by removing specific individuals from your friends list. Additionally, you can report any inappropriate behavior to the OurWorld support team for further action.
The leak may be coming from the neighboring condo's bathroom. Pipes run all over - they can leak and come up through the floor or through the walls or ANYTHING. Better get a professional. Should be the associations responsibility.
If you are speaking of insurance for the association and the common areas owner by the association, no; it would be a commercial property policy that is implicated. The condo dwellers themselves are in the private market. That being said, the policy form used for condo dwellers is sometimes different from that used by a single family home.
Not if the condo was built to code.