Did you know that CCTV trucks are vital tools for inspecting the condition of underground pipes?

Find Blog Articles for Florida’s Condo, HOA and the Management Industry.

We provide extensive consulting to every accounting client. Detailed management notes are provided in addition to a comprehensive Financial Statement package.
Our bookkeeping help goes far beyond just balancing the books. Our Bookkeeping outsourcing, saves you time and money, while reducing stress levels.

The Importance of Pool Bonding and How an Engineer Can Help Your Community
Swimming pools are a great source of relaxation and fun, but they come with specific safety requirements to ensure the well-being of users. One of the critical aspects of pool safety is pool bonding. Proper pool bonding not only protects against electrical shock but also ensures that all metal parts are at the same electrical potential. This article will explore why pool bonding is essential and how an engineer can play a crucial role in helping your community maintain a safe and compliant swimming pool.
What is Pool Bonding?
Pool bonding involves connecting all metallic components of a pool, such as ladders, lights, and the pool pump, to a common bonding grid or wire. The purpose is to equalize the electrical potential, minimizing the risk of electrical shock to swimmers and anyone around the pool area.
Why is Pool Bonding Important?
Prevention of Electrical Shock:
Compliance with Safety Standards:
How Can an Engineer Help with Pool Bonding?
Electrical engineers and pool safety experts are essential in ensuring that pool bonding is done correctly and efficiently. Here’s how they can assist your community:
Inspection and Compliance Checks:
Installation and Upgrades:
Education and Awareness:
Ongoing Maintenance Support:
Contact our experts today at Falcon to help you create a safe and enjoyable pool environment for everyone in your community
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Property damage claims encompass more than just the obvious cases. From water damage to fire damage and beyond, we handle a wide range of property damage claims. If your property has been damaged, contact Maus Law Firm to discuss your options and seek the compensation you deserve.
When you hire us, you speak one on one with our skilled Fort Lauderdale personal injury attorneys or property damage lawyers. We have decades of combined experience between us, and we make sure our clients understand their claim and the legal process.
No two clients are the same. Maus Law Firm wants to assist all of the clients who need our services, so we offer 24/7 phone service, free estimates, Spanish-speaking staff members, house calls, after hours appointments and more.
Our Fort Lauderdale injury lawyers handled thousands of accident and property damage claims and received settlements over $1 million. Our happy clients have left us wonderful reviews, and we strive for the best legal outcome for each case we represent.

Pompano Beach, Florida – Structural Workshop is pleased to announce their recent expansion into the South Florida market. The new office is located in Pompano Beach, Florida and will be Structural Workshop’s third office.
The Mountain Lakes, New Jersey based firm will bring their extensive experience in conducting building inspections and reports, specifically for commercial, multifamily residential and parking structures to the South Florida market – specifically Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties.
“There is a lot of opportunity in the condo world and beyond for engineering services in Florida,” says President Joe DiPompeo, PE, F.SEI, F.ASCE. “There is an immediate need to help condo associations and commercial buildings keep up with compliance and maintain a safe place for their tenants. We also have some multifamily ground up projects in Florida that we can better serve from a Florida office.”
About Structural Workshop (SFPMA Members)
Structural Workshop is a Structural Engineering and Building Consulting firm founded in 2004.
We provide a full range of Structural Engineering and Building Consulting Services for all types and sizes of projects from a single-family home to mid-rise buildings and everything in between.
For more information, please visit: www.structuralworkshop.com or contact us at info@structuralworkshop.com
Jessica Vail
Vail Marketing Solutions
(908) 528.4087
www.vailmarketingsolutions.com
Tags: Engineering Articles, Florida Building Inspections, Management NewsClaremont Property Co. recently opened its new office in Bonita Springs, Florida, and it is helping rebuild our beautiful West Coast after Hurricane Ian. They joined SFPMA to offer their services to Boards and Managers all over Florida. View their website, learn more about the services they offer!
They started in 1995 and are headquartered in Houston, Texas. They have additional offices in Dallas, Texas, Wilmington, North Carolina, Charleston and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Fort Lauderdale, Destin, and Panama City, Florida, and Mobile and Orange Beach, Alabama.
They can service your property needs just about anywhere your property is located.
Whether your property has been impacted by a loss from fire, water, hail, wind or you simply need improvements to your property, their many years of experience allows them to provide you with the complete spectrum of remediation, roofing, and general contracting services.
Their list of services include:
· Claims Advocacy
· Emergency Services
· Remediation Services
· Restoration Services
· Roofing Services
· Pre-Loss Services
Their management team has decades of collective practice managing large scale commercial, multi-family, and hospitality projects from the design stages through completion. They have helped their clients settle millions of dollars in insurance claims and completed tens of thousands of square feet of demolition, mitigation, restoration, and roofing projects along the way.
For more information, please visit their website at www.cpc-tx.com or contact Diana Kato, Business Developer, Email: Diana@cpc-tx.com Cell: 954-832-4573.

SFPMA.com
SFPMA works throughout the State of Florida, we are a multi-member organization for the Condo, HOA and Property Management industry. Through knowledge based Articles, Events and our Members Directory, Clients find the right information to make an informed decisions for their Florida properties.
Tags: Board of Directors, Damage Restoration, Management News, SFPMA Members News
Broward County task force agreed, informally, to recommend a change in state law that would make it harder for condos to waive the proper funding of reserves and to require more frequent inspections for coastal condos. The changes, if adopted by the state, could make condo living more expensive, but safer.
“It’s going to hurt in the beginning, but that’s where we have to get,” insurance expert Paul Handerhan, president of the Federal Association for Insurance Reform (FAIR), told the committee Monday, echoing many of their own opinions. “… There’s no way to get out of this without paying.”
Monday’s was the second of three meetings for the Broward County Condominium Structural Issues Committee, set up by Mayor Steve Geller to quickly offer recommendations to the Florida Legislature, whose committee meetings begin next month.
The Florida Bar and the Community Associations Institute trade group also are studying issues arising from the June 24 condo collapse in Surfside, and will offer recommendations to the governor and Legislature.
All are focused on just a few topics, including the issues of reserves and inspections.
Currently, reserves can be waived by majority vote of those present at a condo meeting. And the first major inspection is not required in Broward until a building turns 40.
“We’re here to try to come up with creative ways to make buildings safe. What Surfside has done is made city officials, building officials, condo residents, everybody aware of the widespread lack of maintenance in older condos,” said Hollywood Commissioner Caryl Shuham, who has a degree in civil engineering and is an attorney.
She recommended, and the committee conceptually agreed, that condos should have to present a reserve study to unit owners and secure a super-majority vote to waive full funding of reserves. She also suggested reserves not be waived unless an engineer has inspected the building and issued a report.
The potential cost to condo owners is not lost on state, county and city officials or the civic and industry leaders huddling on the issue. While some million-dollar condo owners might have no trouble forking over extra money, many unit owners are not in that category. Even the inspections are costly, one condo representative said. Unit owners could be forced out and condo sales could be stifled, some said.
“In certain cases, you could be mandating the death of a building,” said Fred Nesbitt, president of the Galt Ocean Mile condo association in Fort Lauderdale, which opposes reserve mandates. “I think we should still give owners choice.”
Geller said condos that don’t properly save for repairs face sticker shock with giant special assessments. By the time a major problem is found, he said, it’s too late to start paying into reserves.
“You can’t insure a burning building, and you can’t start reserving for an emergency that has already arrived,” he said.
The cause of the Champlain collapse remains unknown but is under investigation. Because there was evidence of poor maintenance and crumbling, cracking concrete at the Champlain, there has been a sharp focus on how government can ensure that condos are kept in good repair.
“It’s terrifying to me that we’re in this place,” said state Sen. Lauren Book, one of four state legislators on the county committee. Book complained that there’s no one keeping track of individual condos – where they stand with insurance, reserves and repairs.
The committee also debated whether more frequent inspections are needed. Broward is one of two counties in Florida – the other being Miami-Dade – that requires buildings to be inspected for electrical and structural safety at age 40 and every 10 years subsequently.
Dr. Jennifer Jurado, Broward County’s climate change sustainability director, said the striking increase in sea level here – more than a foot over 20 years – could increase deterioration of concrete in buildings along the coast. She also cited temperate change and flood levels in saying that inspections should begin earlier, at 25 or 30 years.
But Dan Lavrich, a structural engineer and chairman of the Broward County Board of Rules and Appeals, which oversees application of the building code, questioned the need. Any change in the inspection program would have to be approved by Rules and Appeals, and the Florida Building Commission.
“The rest of the state has no program at all,” he said of the 40-year safety program, “and they don’t have any problems.”
The Broward committee will hold what it expects to be its final meeting next week, on Aug. 30, where formal recommendations will be voted on.
Reposted via: https://www.floridarealtors.org/news-media/news-articles/2021/08/condo-law-changes-likely-after-surfside-its-complicated
Tags: Assessments, Board of Directors, Condo and HOA, Condo and HOA Laws, Management News
Last week, our industry experts convened to talk about common pain points stakeholders experience around their lake and pond shorelines. During our first webinar viewers learned about top solutions for chronic erosion and effective preventative maintenance tools that can be customized for every property.
Viewers also got answers to dozens of questions during a dedicated Q&A following the presentation. These recorded videos will be available to you at all times so you can refresh your memory or catch up on the latest information. We are thankful for our loyal clients and followers and are honored to help you empower yourself with the knowledge needed to prioritize your waterbody! Direct link to the webinar page
Tags: Common Area Issues, Lake Management Articles, Maintenance & Service Articles, Management News