Last year, we tipped our hats to the brave souls who serve as condo directors. This year, we’re spotlighting the unsung heroes holding it all together with duct tape, diplomacy, and saintly patience: Property Managers.
What Owners Don’t See
Ask a condo resident what a property manager does, and you’ll likely hear “fixes stuff” or “answers my emails.” In reality, they’re first responders to burst pipes, noise complaints, and everything in between all while juggling hundreds of emails, coordinating contractors, enforcing compliance, and keeping the building running on tight timelines and tighter budgets.
Here’s what they really do:
- Financial Oversight: Budgets, reserve funds, invoices and explaining why common expenses still apply even if the A/C isn’t on yet.
- Contractor Cat Herding: Managing everyone from landscapers to elevator techs (yes, that elevator).
- Governance Admin: Prepping board packages, attending meetings, and taking the heat for the board’s decision not to install the rooftop hot tub.
- Rule Enforcer (a.k.a the Fun Police): Making sure rules are followed (and often being the one’s to blame when a compliance letter comes down the pipeline).
- Crisis Management: Handling emergencies, insurance claims, and communicating with residents under stress, even those who believe that changing the recycling bin colour constitutes an emergency.
- Resident Relations: Answering questions like “Can I store my electric bike in the hallway?” (Spoiler: no) and clarifying that “no pets” includes emotional support iguanas.
The Real Flood: Management Inboxes
Property managers are professional multitaskers. While fielding 200+ emails, they’re also on emergency calls, approving invoices, and explaining why a small reserve surplus won’t roll back fees to 2019 levels.
Many resident emails are thoughtful, polite, and express legitimate concerns or questions. Others begin with “I pay your salary” and end with “I demand answers by noon.” It’s a daily balancing act between diplomacy and not tossing the office phone into Lake Ontario.
This isn’t to discourage owner/resident engagement but a gentle reminder to channel concerns constructively and in a respectful manner. Even well-meaning emails or phone calls can overwhelm managers and distract from broader community needs.
Managers Don’t Override the Board
A public service announcement: property managers don’t run the show. They implement board decisions. So if your pet chicken was denied, that’s on the board. And no, they can’t magically fix the elevator or your neighbor’s karaoke habit overnight. So, before you rush off to send that hostile email, remember, a little patience and understanding goes a long way.
A Round of Applause
Let’s give a round of applause to the managers who keep our communities safe, functional, and compliant. Their work may seem invisible, but it is indispensable.
To all the managers out there: thank you. Your work matters. Your patience is legendary. And your inbox? It deserves its own administrative staff.