ReportWire

Tag: conflicts of interest

  • Weekly Dirt: Conflict Between HOA Lawyers, Property Managers

    Weekly Dirt: Conflict Between HOA Lawyers, Property Managers

    [ad_1]

    An “inherent conflict” exists for attorneys and property managers representing residential associations. 

    The boards at homeowners and condo associations across the state hire professional services firms to represent entire communities. But some owners and residents feel that the lawyers and property management firms cross the line and instead serve individual board members’ interests, Lidia Dinkova reports in The Real Deal’s latest issue. 

    Because many of those contracts provide for a flat fee with extra charges depending on the services, attorneys and property managers benefit from being asked to send threatening letters or by filing lawsuits against unit and homeowners. “The more services rendered, the more fees involved,” attorney William Sklar said. 

    I think anyone living in South Florida has heard of situations or lived in communities where this happens — whether it is based on warranted behavior (breaking association rules) or not. Think about that HOA board member who’s obsessed with tracking visitor parking, illegally towing cars or issuing fines for allegedly leaving your trash can out too long, failing to mow the lawn on time, etc. Beyond those smaller issues, though, are situations like one where an association’s attorney filed a lawsuit on behalf of a former board member against a resident who raised the alarm about potential board misspending. 

    Lawsuits over the massive fraud at the Hammocks, one of the largest associations in the state, also took aim at ex-HOA attorneys.  

    “The management company and the attorneys are afraid that they are going to get fired should they not completely have the backs of the board members, even if they are engaging in wrongdoing,” said attorney Eric Glazer. 

    A lack of state oversight has contributed to the problem. 

    “The statute itself creates a lot of incentives for attorneys and associations to work together against residents,” attorney James Bishop said. 

    What we’re thinking about: Will Malaysian firm Pacific & Orient sell its partially completed condo tower in North Bay Village to another developer active in the area, like Andy Ansin, Harry Macklowe or Jorge Pérez? Send me a note at kk@therealdeal.com

    CLOSING TIME 

    Residential: Alex Pirez’s Mocca Acquisitions LLC sold the 13,000-square-foot, seven-bedroom mansion at 4940 Hammock Lake Drive in Coral Gables for a non-waterfront area record of $21 million. The buyer is a land trust. 

    Commercial: New York University paid $33 million for a medical office development site in downtown West Palm Beach, where it plans to move its Langone Health to the property at 324 Datura Street. Morning Calm Management sold the 0.6-acre site. 

    — Research by Adam Farence

    NEW TO THE MARKET 

    1040 South Ocean Boulevard (Studio 910)

    An ocean-to-Intracoastal compound in Manalapan hit the market for $79 million, about four years after it was asking less than half that amount ($35 million). The 2-acre estate, at 1040 South Ocean Boulevard, includes 200 feet of oceanfront, and a dock and boat lift on the Intracoastal Waterway. Maura Ann Christu with Island Realty PB has the listing. 

    A thing we’ve learned 

    Billionaire hedge fund manager Ken Griffin opposes casinos. In a letter to the editor published in the Miami Herald last week, Griffin wrote that “measurable research proves” that casinos lead to gambling addiction, higher crime rates and drops in property values. Developer Jeffrey Soffer has long pursued legislation that would allow him to run a casino at the Fontainebleau resort in Miami Beach, including a push this legislative session. 

    Elsewhere in Florida 

    • The Florida House passed a bill that will allow 16- and 17-year-olds to work longer and later hours (more than 30 hours a week when they are in school, and more than eight-hour shifts). Opponents say it would open the door for the exploitation of child labor and make it more difficult for those teenagers to do well in school, AP reports
    • Orlando Sentinel journalists, designers and production workers staged a walkout, joining union members across seven newsrooms in a strike against the paper’s owner, Alden Global Capital, Orlando Weekly reports. Former TRD Miami reporter Amanda Rabines, now a breaking news reporter for the Sentinel, was part of the strike and said having a robust newsroom is “an essential part of democracy.” The employees protested Alden’s refusal to pay fair wages, threat to rescind its 401(k) match, and failure to confront pay disparities. 
    • A judge on a federal appeals court in Atlanta said Florida’s law restricting Chinese investment in real estate “blatantly violates” protections against discrimination. The panel of judges granted an injunction for two of the plaintiffs suing over the law, according to Politico

    [ad_2]

    Katherine Kallergis

    Source link

  • Transport union honcho formally demands prosecutors probe MTA boss amid contract fight

    Transport union honcho formally demands prosecutors probe MTA boss amid contract fight

    [ad_1]

    The head of a powerful transportation workers union is formally calling on prosecutors and two inspectors general to probe MTA honcho Janno Lieber for alleged conflicts of interests involving his real estate investments.

    John Samuelsen, president of the Transport Workers Union, made the demand Thursday in a letter to New York State Attorney General Letitia James, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Damian Williams and the inspectors general for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the U.S. Department of Transportation.

    Samuelsen’s union is now locked in a bitter contract dispute with the MTA. On Thursday — the same day Samuelsen sent his letter — the TWU took out a full page ad in The News accusing Lieber of being an “ethically challenged fraudster.”

    In his letter, Samuelsen attempts to elaborate and cites two Daily News stories that revealed Lieber holds financial stakes in properties that could potentially be impacted by MTA decision making, as well as investments in his stock portfolio — all of which Lieber has disclosed as required under state rules.

    The properties — which Lieber has a financial stake with his former employer Silverstein Properties — include a plot of land on the West Side that Silverstein is eyeing as a site to develop a full-fledged casino and two high-rise buildings in the mass transit-rich World Trade Center complex.

    “I urge you – if you have not already done so – to begin investigating the disturbing pattern of self-dealing and conflict-of-interest that has emerged within the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), the country’s single largest transportation agency under the administration of MTA President John ‘Janno’ Lieber,” Samuelsen writes in the letter.

    “Lieber, a former President of Silverstein Properties’ World Trade Center division, potentially violated anti-corruption statutes, public disclosure requirements, and agency policies governing the previously undisclosed overlap between his governmental position and his extensive personal investments,” Samuelsen continues.

    Transport Workers Union Local 100 President John Samuelsen speaks during the third annual New York Daily News Hometown Heroes in Transit Awards at the Edison Ballroom on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2015 in New York City. (James Keivom / New York Daily News)

    The MTA did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The two inspectors general also did not immediately respond, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment.

    The attorney general’s office confirmed receiving the letter, and an official there said it’s “reviewing” it.

    In the letter, Samuelsen ticks off a laundry list of potential conflicts.

    The first is Lieber’s 3% financial interest stake in a parcel in Manhattan’s West Side Silverstein is planning to develop for a casino. As The News reported, the MTA and Amtrak both have easements on the property, meaning those agencies would have to sign off on aspects of development at the site. Records show Lieber also met with lobbyists representing the Related Companies, which is proposing its own, competing casino plan atop a rail yard owned by the MTA.

    “Given that Related Companies requires the rail yard decking to build its casino, it is impossible for Lieber to separate the issue of the infrastructure itself with the developer’s motivation for building the infrastructure,” Samuelsen contends in his letter.

    The union leader also points to Lieber’s 3% financial stakes in 3 World Trade Center and 4 World Trade Center, both steps away from the WTC Cortlandt subway station that was destroyed during 9/11. For years, during Lieber’s tenure at Silverstein, reconstruction of the station hit snags and was delayed. In 2017, after Lieber had begun working for the MTA, he said he made the work “a priority,” following up on the agency’s long-standing plan to prioritize upgrades to the station.

    MTA

    MTA Chair Janno Lieber speaks at the MTA headquarters in Lower Manhattan last year.

    Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News

    MTA Chair Janno Lieber speaks at the MTA headquarters in Lower Manhattan in 2022. (Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News)

    Samuelsen claims in his letter that Lieber’s involvement in the project flies in the face of his assertion that he’s recused himself from work that might benefit Silverstein. The MTA would need release Lieber’s recusal documents to The News.

    The letter goes on to reference “other unreported conflicts.” According to Samuelsen, they include four companies “that have either recently received or attempted to secure MTA contracts [and] have performed work on the parcels co-owned by Lieber.” Those companies are Langan Engineering, Gensler Architecture, the Syska Hennessy engineering firm and the WSP engineering firm.

    “Given the [MTA’s] reputation for cost overruns, it is not difficult to imagine a contractor submitting a low bid for work on one private sector job in the hopes of influencing the selection process for more lucrative MTA work,” Samuelsen notes.

    He also asks that prosecutors probe Lieber’s stock holdings and other financial investments, citing the possibility of “insider trading based on knowledge of procurement and budget.”

    Samuelsen specifically points to financial disclosure forms that show Lieber holds “five- and six-figure investments in publicly traded companies with MTA business, including Express Scripts, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.”

    [ad_2]

    Michael Gartland

    Source link