Yes. This is was in that disclosure package I mentioned above. The street address is also different. They want to run all four towers as a single corporation with a single management company. I don’t worry about the number – who cares? More importantly, they brought in Eddy Home Inc for leak detection monitoring which adds about $25 monthly per unit or more than 400K to the annual budget (to get started). And they “not believe that any of the revisions to the disclosure statement, whether individually or in combination, amount to material changes”.
Some thoughts here. First, according to the Urbantoronto database entry for this project, there are to be a total of 1582 units in the building. At $25 per unit per month, plus HST that would amount to approximately $535,000 per year - a bit less if the $25 per month includes HST.
Secondly. the main causes of preventable leaks is oveflows from blocked drains in condensation drip pans for the heating and air conditioning units. Overflow detection sensors are available for a one time cost of less than $100 installed when a bulk purchase is done on a building wide basis. That is a one time charge, not monthly. The sensors work by preventing the air conditioning from coming on when the drip pan is full or almost full. All the resident has to do is call property management to say 'My air conditioning is not working'. Elemental to get it figured out and resolved.
Other problems, such as burst pipes, residents falling asleep in a bath tub when water is running, and so on, would not be addressed by this solution - but such problems are quickly self-evident anyway, and do not need a $25 per unit per month monitoring solution.
Thirdly - the Board has the option, during the first year (and only during the first year) after turnover, to abrogate (cancel) contracts entered into by the developer on behalf of the condominium corporation. Some contracts cannot be cancelled quite as easily - telecoms contracts in particular - details are in the Condominium Act. It is of utmost importance that the newly elected Owners' Board, as soon as possible after the turnover, retain an independent condominium lawyer, and review all the ongoing contracts that had been entered into by the declarant (developer) on the condominium's behalf, and send proper notice of cancellation to those suppliers whose services you do not wish to retain. If this is not done within the first twelve months after turnover, you are stuck with the contracts for the full duration of their contract term.