“It's a hassle to ask
them for information. They take forever. They send you the
wrong information,” said Raiza Meek, another property owner.
They said they’ve reached out to the Department of Business
and Professional Regulation or DBPR’s Division of
Condominiums looking for help.
Johnna Alvarez said she filed a complaint with the agency.
“I filed a 70-page complaint with the DBPR basically, noting everything from financial issues to questionable bidding problems and everything else. And I was told, you have to litigate,” Alvarez said.
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A day after we wrote the agency asking
about the position State Sen. Garcia says has been vacant
for over three years, the department posted the job looking
to hire an attorney for the position but didn’t respond to
our request for comment.
“If we're filing complaints, if we're reaching out to you,
it's because it's gotten that bad. It can't fall on deaf
ears,” Alvarez said.
Neither the Commodore Plaza association's president nor its
attorneys responded when we asked about the owners'
complaints.
Aggravating their issues are the requirements imposed by the
new condo law passed following the tragic collapse in
Surfside. It requires condos to maintain reserve funds for
important structural repairs and maintenance.
“The going to full reserves is going to put a lot of people
on the streets,” Alvarez said.
“We signed off on this for safety reasons and it seems like
we did not think of a financing mechanism and just overall
consumer protections and consistency. So, their debate is,
well we did this to make them safe and I said, but we can't
make them homeless and that's the concern,” State Sen.
Garcia said.
“The major concerns are people on fixed incomes that are
saying that this is becoming onerous on them obviously,”
said State Rep. Alex Rizo (R-Hialeah).
State Sen. Garcia and State Rep. Rizo said they’re looking
at changes that can be made to the condo law.
“Extending the deadline to go ahead and have these reserves
in place, seeing if perhaps there can be an offset for your
age,” Rizo said. “We're even discussing, do we even talk
about the amount of the reserve?”
Those changes won’t be discussed until the next legislative
session in 2025 since a special session was not approved to
deal with this issue.