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The idea is this... the area that I'm in is on the higher end of the market within our neighborhood. Thus, would most people shopping in my market expect to be live-in ready or they'd look for something that's a tad cheaper, but they can do the works? My appliances aren't old, but except the dishwasher, which I replaced after I moved in, they aren't that new but doesn't show too bad either (still all SS). |
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God forbid your tenant does some stupid ass shit. |
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Since there's a few people on the strata council here, what's considered a 'healthy' contingency fund? My friend saw a 8yr old building with $880K CRF, she's wondering where that ranks. |
The legal requirement is an annual contribution of a minimum of 10% of the annual operating fund to the CRF. In the past, my strata has aimed to build a 15% contribution, but I didn't actually pay attention to how big the total sum was. So in your friend's case, a strict number on its own is probably not useful enough. You'd want to compare that against the annual operating expenses to get an idea of how far that CRF would actually go. |
Too many variables, it comes down to building age X number of units X amount per condo With that said, our 60 unit condo, 1990 build, has 350k and is considered healthy. Only thing that is "overdue" for the past 7 years is the roof, but there has only been a few leaks. Old shitty building + small reserve = out of pocket special assessments are going to happen |
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fortunate to never have to deal with stratas, but as a buyer do you get access to look at their capital renewal plan? going off what Donk says, you look at the life cycle of the major building elements when they're EOL or history of prematurely crap out and needing repair/replacement. You'll have to have an idea of costs vs contingency and then you see how at risk the building is. if they don't show you that info, then you have to find out key questions on when (if at all) major building elements/infrastructure have been replaced, and have to sort of know when said building elements are due for renewal due to the standard useful life. Common one is the roof but you can go down the list of all the other major ones, elevator, building envelope, piping, etc. if nothing's been done, you compare it back to the date the building was originally built, and the materials used (if applicable, eg piping) and guestimate how much life is left and when it's due, assuming it doesn't crap out early. |
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An 8 year building still has 2-5-10 warranty left on it, so keep that in mind too. Without reading minutes and seeing a depreciation report, on the surface i'd say an $800k CRF is better than most, especially since the requirement to contibute 10% per year only started in 2024. |
We have a practical student/intern for a few weeks at our work and we always make them do this exercise where they write down what their perfect life would look like, how much money they want to make, where they want to live, vacations, etc. He's 22 years old, just graduated. His perfect life is: $300k household income Five bedroom house with backyard Two to Three children Two cars, mini-van + sedan (toyota's he wants reliability) Four weeks vacation per year, holidays off. Five hours a week of hobby's Three days a week to work out |
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So often someone gets a big promotion, or a job, or a dream car or hut some kind of milestone, only to not feel as fulfilled or as happy as they thought they would be and feel even more depressed as a result. It's because they never really thought about what happiness meant to them or what would be a fulfilling life. In so many things I've read , true happiness and fulfillment is more about gratitude and contentment of what you do have and not conditional of getting that next "thing". |
I was going to add, while we were listening to his "Perfect Life", I was looking at a colleague knowing that we're sitting there listening to this kid that is literally describing our lives. I knew we were blessed, but when this kid was talking about his perfect life and I was looking at my own life, It really put things into perspective for me. |
22 yo forgot a hot trophy wife ... you need a wife to have 2-3 children. At least it used to be that way. |
Maybe 22 yo is a fudgepacker, can still have 2-3 kids....... |
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His mother doesn't like his current gf because her status and her families status is low. The gf works in admin, her dad is a cook and her mom is also an admin. The mother has not even met the girl before. But, being from the mainland, his mom only cares about status. He said he doesn't care about that stuff. He's torn because he really loves and respects his mother, but really wants to be with this viet girl. So that's his biggest dilemma right now. |
Again ... I just have to chuckle ... how the hell do you know SO much about this intern ??!! :lol Do you just shoot the breeze with every one in the office and they just naturally tell you all their secrets? Pretty soon, you're going to be counselling this kid about marriage. |
^^ so is his family rich? He can technically duck off to butt fuck no where in northern bc, buy a place for $300-500k live the lifestyle he wants and not need $300k household income. His girl can either open a pho shop, nail hair salon, not sure if the bud is still a lucrative business anymore, and make dat cash money's |
300K is very "traditional middle class" in Vancouver, which is a sad and stark reality. But yes, everything else that he mentions - some of us in this thread have what this 22 Y/O wants and more and it's a good reminder that at least a few of us are blessed. The only thing I wish we had was more money and time for vacations... |
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I feel like I can build rapport quickly because I'm naturally curious, so I try to figure out what you're into and then I focus on that and try to learn more about whatever you're into (as long as I'm actually interested in it), which means I can ask you engaging intelligent questions. And because I'm genuinely curious about things, I feel like I create a pretty natural social environment for people. This might be the reason why people feel comfortable around me. I'm also a pretty nice guy =D With interns it's even easier because I'm in the position they want to be in, so when i go out of my way to talk to them they get real buddy buddy quickly because the other people in the office just give them that surface level, "Hey, how's it going, are you enjoying yourself, where you from, that's cool, yeah, etc." That conversation lasts about one minute and it's just a formality and everyone knows it. It's very rare I'll ever ask someone how's it going, I think that's the most useless question to ask anyone. The answer is always going to be some variation of, "I'm good" and people know it's just a formality and you don't really care how they're doing. Quote:
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Poor mainlanders ? Easy. Find the ones that came in the early 90s or 80s. We dirt poor. This kid is lame. When I was 22 all I wanted was my head up a blonde bitch’s ass (im 40 now and that hasn’t really changed) His “dream life” isn’t all that much of a dream. Dream bigger you dumb ass. |
PeanutButter ... that's wild! You're the kind of person I stayed the hell away from in the office because I don't trust people like you with my personal info ... eg. I might come onto a forum and read about my life ... :lol. |
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