⚠️ The Event That Proved Why We Need New Leadership
The last townhall was supposed to be a chance for open discussion. Instead, it was an embarrassing display of arrogance and ignorance.
Owners asked legitimate questions – about finances, lawsuits, and the state of our reserve fund – and were met with deflection, hostility, and microphone control tactics.
At one point, the board refused to take questions they didn’t like. The property manager cut off speakers mid-sentence. When an owner cited the Condominium Act, they were told to “sit down, that’s not up for discussion.”
That was not a townhall. It was a performance – one that insulted everyone’s intelligence.
📉 What We Saw
- No agenda, no transparency, no accountability.
- $400K in legal fees, and not a single financial document on screen.
- Community questions mocked, while board allies clapped for bad behaviour.
- Property management acting as a political shield instead of an impartial administrator.
This is how dysfunction looks when left unchecked.
đź§ What We Learned
If people who cause the problems are allowed to keep running the meetings, nothing will change.
Every shouting match, every avoided question, every vague answer is a symptom of the same disease: entitlement without competence.
The board is not supposed to be a clique. It is a fiduciary body, responsible for decisions that affect property values, safety, and trust.
🕊️ Why You Need to Run
Because decent, intelligent, and fair owners sat quietly in that room – shaking their heads but saying nothing.
Because people who know how to read a balance sheet, manage a project, or treat neighbours with respect could have turned that chaos into order.
If you walked out of that townhall thinking, “Someone should do something,” that someone is you.
⚖️ Bottom Line
Bad boards don’t happen overnight – they happen when good people stay home.
Run for the board.
Bring integrity back to Bluevale.
Because the next “townhall” should sound like a conversation – not a courtroom.