Saturday, 7 December 2013

Malaysian Condominium living with pets

Malaysian Condominium living with pets
With pet owners representing a significant portion of the population, furry, four-legged friends are factoring heavily into the decision to buy a condo in Malaysia. With increasing in number of households enjoy the companionship of a pet, there’s a high level of demand for pet-friendly housing, including strata properties.

Unfortunately, many condos, apartments, flatin Malaysia have house rules which stipulated No Pets allowed within the unit and anywhere in the compound.

Some condos house-rules have used strong words, for example:

VISTA KOMANWEL CONDOMINIUM HOUSE RULES & REGULATIONS

1.2.4 Household Pets and Livestock
(a) No rearing of pets, livestock and other animals including poultry, birds etc are allowed both within the Condominium Units or kept in any part on the Building or perimeter of the Common Property.

(b) The Management reserves the right to remove any such pets found within the Building at the pet or livestock Owner's/Resident’s expenses.

There are also some condos house-rules with more vague wordings, which often suggested “calm and good pets are okay”.

11.6 No Owner/Resident may keep any animals which may cause annoyance to other residents. The Management, at its discretion, reserves the right to remove such animals within the Complex at the Owner's expense.

Pets are good for us
Petcare Information and Advisory Service Australia Pty Ltd (PIAS) found that pet owners enjoy better mental health, lower blood pressure, and higher satisfaction with home life. Communities where people walk their dogs have a lower incidence of violent crime and a higher perception of neighbourhood friendliness.

Pet-friendly strata properties attract more people and have lower turnover rates and higher profitability. And communities that work together, talk regularly and create more opportunities to socialise are much healthier communities.

We understand there are some properties that simply do not want pets in the building and this is, of course, fine.



Check that rulebook
Before you bring in your animal friends it’s very important to check the property by-laws or rules. And don’t think that just because Fido is cute and doesn’t bark (much, ever) that everyone will turn a blind eye and allow him to stay.

If the strata scheme by-laws or rules clearly says no pets, then that’s what it means. Breaching this could mean a fine for you and a new home for Fido.

The pet application forms are not meant to change people’s minds or their by-laws or rules. They’re meant as a way of helping those apartments, which may welcome pets or may be considering allowing pets, to assess the situation and of course to encourage owners to seek permission from their building’s governing body in the first instance.

The forms are a way of helping people living in strata to be responsible pet owners, while at the same time encouraging more pet-friendly apartments.

Be a smart owner
The key is for pet owners to be able to demonstrate they’re responsible, and for some strata schemes to re-consider whether their pets policy meets the changing needs of modern lifestyles.
It may be that residents’ wants have actually changed since the building was first built, and this should be considered.

Owners must also be conscious of the history of a building too. New owners should never expect for it to be a matter of submitting an application and having it accepted. Some people have specifically chosen buildings based on no pet policies, and these opinions might not change overnight, no matter how responsible the new pet owners are.

The key is for pet owners to be able to demonstrate they’re responsible.


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