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Cost-Effective & Solution-Oriented Body Corporate Services

BBCL Body Corporates Ltd is a New Zealand-owned private company operating nationwide. Our role is to provide peace of mind for both owners and investors through the delivery of cost-effective, independent and transparent Body Corporate secretarial services.

As members of a Body Corporate, owners have rights and responsibilities, both for their own unit and for common areas within the complex.The Body Corporate has responsibility for the common area, the structure, and ensuring compliance with the Body Corporate rules and Unit Titles Act. Boutique’s role is to oversee the management of the Body Corporate in a professional manner and to retain and enhance value in the complex for owners.

BBCL provides a full range of Body Corporate secretarial services, the most important of which is prompt and regular communication with owners. This includes calling, running and recording general and committee meetings, maintaining a register of proprietors, full accounting and budgeting, funds management and tax support, arranging insurance valuations and insurance cover and co-ordination of tradespersons. Compliance with legislation matters of the new Act and the Building Act is also a key part of the secretarial role.

BBCL provides personalised support to developers in preparing tailored rules and budgets for marketing purposes, and establishing systems for the long-term administration of a complex.

Author: Antony Created: 10/28/2011 1:10 PM
There was an article I read at the week-end by Rod Thomas Senior Law Lecturer AUT Auckland, about the confusion around the Transitional rules in the Latest Property Council newsletter He finished up: “This confusion provides a strong incentive for a body corporate to agree to implement the provisions of the new Act, by adopting the adoption measures set out in S220. If this does not occur, and in the interim period the wrong administrative procedures are adopted, this may result in committee members becoming personally liable for acts such as authorising payments, raising levies, or entering into commercial obligations which are ultimately shown to have been invalid.” This supports our view that the BC should adopt the new Act and run the meeting in terms of the governance provisions if for no other reason than risk minimisation and certainty

This confusion provides a strong incentive for a body corporate to agree to implement the provisions of the new Act, by adopting the adoption measures set out in S220.  If this does not occur, and in the interim period the wrong administrative procedures are adopted...

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