Condominium owners in
St. Petersburg face towering uncertainty as over 200
buildings must complete Milestone Inspection Reports by Dec.
31.
A new state law requires mandatory structural studies on
older condo buildings with three or more stories. Senate
Bill 4-D also requires association boards to increase repair
funding reserves, and many owners now face six-figure
special assessment fees.
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Condominium buildings with three or more stories and built before July 1, 1997, must submit new structural inspection reports by Dec. 31. |
SB 4-D established a 25 or 30-year
program for cooperative and condo buildings. Those within
three miles of a coastline and built before July 1, 1997,
must abide by the earlier timeframe.
“That’s, basically, what we’re going to be following – a
25-year inspection program with a 10-year reinspection
portion,” Tyre said. “December of this year is the big date.
It’s been postponed once; I don’t anticipate it being
postponed again.”
He noted that 68 of the 225 buildings have submitted
milestone reports. The legislation also applies to
commercial structures of any height with an occupancy limit
exceeding 500 people.
Local governments must submit a 180-day notice to affected
owners and associations. St. Petersburg issued those forms
June 28.
Tyre explained Phase I is a visual inspection from an
architect or engineer to discern “any possible substantial
structural deterioration.” Those could require further
evaluations, and stakeholders must submit a Phase II
Inspection report within 180 days.
“The responsibility falls to the condo ownership group and
architectural or engineering firm they hire to provide that
documentation,” Tyre added. “If they deem it necessary to go
into a Phase II inspection, that’s a more forensic
investigation.”
He said that could include building material sample testing,
movement measurements, soil studies and “a number of
different building imaging options.” The owners have one
year to pull permits and start repairs if the architectural
or engineering firm finds significant deterioration.
“If there’s a life safety issue, that’s when we (the city)
would step in as a regulatory authority,” Tyre said. “And
potentially, either evacuate the building or a portion of
the building – it could be limited to just a small area,
like a couple of balconies or something like that.
“There’s going to be some condo associations or buildings
that will require a deeper review.”
Tyre said the inspections focus on structural integrity
rather than code violations and fall outside the city’s
scope. However, building officials will provide oversight.
Councilmember Brandi Gabbard requested the update and noted
that received reports would constitute municipal public
records. She said that would help inform prospective buyers.
“Anybody who has ever bought or sold a condo knows that
sometimes it is challenging to get all of the documentation
regarding the condo association the way it is now,” Gabbard
said. “But then when you add this on top of it, and the type
of reserves that we could potentially see being increased,
there is some concern over transparency …”
Tyre said building officials must redact some information,
and residents must submit a formal public records request to
receive documentation. Elizabeth Abernethy, director of
planning and development services, said they could explore
creating an online portal to streamline the process.
The legislation allows local governments to implement a fee
for reviewing submitted inspection reports. Abernethy
believes the city has adequate staff to “get through this
initial push and wouldn’t be necessary to charge an
additional fee for review those reports.”
However, buildings needing repairs must pay associated
permitting costs. Gabbard said she has “no desire” to
require additional payments.
“Some of these reserve needs are going to be pretty hefty,”
she added. “I don’t think we need to pile on.”