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  • #49604
    Fromthenorth
    Flatchatter

      Is there any legal requirements in Victoria regarding a chairperson resigning ?

      Some unitowners have suggested a special general meeting is required. Is this correct ? Or can the chairperson send an email to the strata manager that they have resigned ?

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    • #49609
      Sir Humphrey
      Strataguru

        I am not in Victoria but is the chair also resigning from the committee? I would expect that if the chair resigns, then the committee would elect a new chair from among its (remaining) members.

        There might also be a casual vacancy on the committee. In the ACT, perhaps similar in Victoria, the committee can appoint someone it chooses to fill the casual vacancy. If the chair resigned from the committee as well, not just from the role of chair, then the committee could fill the vacancy first and then elect a chair, who could be the new committee member. That chair would be in the role until a new committee is elected at the next AGM.

        If the chair resigns by putting it in writing, then that is correspondence that you might send to the managing agent for the OC records. Otherwise, I don’t see that the manager has anything to do with it other than being a hopefully well-informed source of advice about relevant processes in Victoria.

        If the chair has just spat the dummy and wants nothing further to do with the committee, then the remaining committee would have to record something polite to that effect in its minutes and then get on with electing a new chair.

        But it might be different in Victoria.

        #49612
        Jimmy-T
        Keymaster

          There is nothing in the Act that says the chaior’s resignation has to be endorsed a general meeting.

          Given that the committee chooses the chair by a simple majority (of the committee) and the committee can sack the chair, again by a simple majority vote,  and you can’t force someone to stay if they want to go, I would have thought that a letter of resignation would be enough.

          If the chair resigns from the committee as well as from the chair, the committee can elect a new member.

          The committee can also sack a member if they have missed 25 per cent of meetings in a  year.

          Put all that together and you can see that the control of the committee is entirely in the hands of committee members.  The idea that you might need a general meeting to deal with the resignation of the chair is a complete furphy.

          The opinions offered in these Forum posts and replies are not intended to be taken as legal advice. Readers with serious issues should consult experienced strata lawyers.
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