Page 7 - The NY Cooperator August 2020
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COOPERATOR.COM  THE COOPERATOR —  AUGUST 2020   7  Providing a Full Range of   Architectural & Engineering Services  In-house professional   expertise in:  Exterior Restoration &       Historic Preservation  Construction Inspection  Alteration Review  Architectural Design  Engineering:  n  Mechanica  l   n  Electrical  n  Plumbing  n  Structural  Energy Audits  Forensic Investigation  Façade Safety Inspection       Program Reporting  Green Design –       LEED Professionals  Client satisfaction    assured by the active   daily involvement of    the firm’s principals  www.lawlessmangione.com  info@lawlessmangione.com  914.423.8844  Restoring Your World   for over 75 years  ™  Fire • Smoke • Water • Mold  Restoration • Remediation • Repair  800.3MAXONS • MAXONS.COM  Serving New York, New Jersey, Connecticut  • Complete Building & Contents Restoration  • Emergency Cleaning & Deodorization   • Water Removal & Structural Drying  • Expert Loss Consulting  • Disinfection Services  We also encourage questions, and pause  tor may require the association to submit   in our meetings to explain stuff.  We hope  a copy of the certification of each mem-  to create an onboarding manual, but have  ber of the executive board of that associa-  not had the time for this as of yet.”  As a point of personal experience and  with the Ombudsman pursuant to NRS   advice for those contemplating board ser-  vice, Anne adds, “Honestly, I was out of   my depth for the first year. We were ne-  gotiating the roof replacement, and there  cational seminar of some sort. We offer   was so much to learn. I found it took me a  a new member ‘bootcamp,’ for instance.   year of just listening to understand what  Board members are encouraged to attend   was going on.” Now, as the board presi-  dent, she’s doing her best to shorten the   learning curve for freshman board mem-  bers.   State Requirements?  As with most issues governing busi-  ness activities in the United States, there’s  sey. “I believe orientation and training is   not much in the way of national unifor-  mity. Requirements (or the lack thereof)  companies are helpful in this regard. I   are set at the state and local level.     Sheila  van  Duyne,  a  community  law  regularly read   attorney and principal of the Van Duyne  ommend books,  pamphlets, and  other   Law  Firm in Reno,  Nevada,  points  out  materials from CAI.”  that  in  her  state,  “New  board  members   need to comply with NRS 116.31034 and   certify that they have read and under-  stand both their governing documents  are also one-time or one-day events on   and NRS 116.”     Nevada Revised Statute (NRS)  members. As an example, CNYC is offer-  116.31034 states, “Each member of the  ing a course titled  executive board shall, within 90 days after   his or her appointment or election, certify  it.   in writing to the association, on a form   prescribed by the Administrator, that the   member has read and understands the  org/.   governing documents of the association   and the provisions of this chapter to the   best of his or her ability. The Administra-  tion at the time the association registers   116.31158.”   “Typically,” says Van Duyne, “new   board  members  do  go  through  an  edu-  educational events and classes.”  On the other hand, “New Jersey does   not require such training,” says Scott   Piekarsky, an attorney with the law firm   Philips Nizer, which has offices in both   New York City and Hackensack, New Jer-  a good idea, though. Good management   also recommend to new people that they   The Cooperator  , and I rec-  Professional Training  Both CAI and CNYC offer courses of   all types for board members. Often there   particular subjects of interest to all board    Introduction to Board   Responsibilities  . Help is there if you need   Visit CNYC online at www.cnyc.com/.  Visit CAI online at www.caionline.  n  A J Sidransky is a staff writer/reporter for   The Cooperator, and a published novelist.   sexual harassment, discriminatory harass-  ment, or any type of harassing behavior that  es may be harassment in one case, but not   rises to the level of violence is considered  in the other,” Hakim continues.   criminal—and as such should be reported   immediately to the police. Th  e New York  of Marcus, Errico, Emmer & Brooks, PC,   City Commission on Human Rights defi nes  which has offi  ces in Masscahusetts, New   discriminatory harassment as “threats, in-  timidation, harassment, coercion, or vio-  lence that interferes with a person’s civil  very personal issue. What of course may be   or  constitutional  rights  and  is  motivated  harassment to one person may merely be   in part by that person’s actual or perceived  conversation to another.”   race, creed, color, national origin, gender,   sexual orientation, age, disability, or alien-  age or citizenship status, or other protected  Kim, of counsel at Schoenberg Finkel New-  status.”  Mark Hakim, a New York City attorney  that “it could even be a matter of personal   with  the  fi rm  of Schwartz Sladkus Reich  style—like in a restaurant where a server   Greenberg Atlas specializing in community  calls a customer ‘dear’ or ‘honey.’ In certain   law, defi nes criminal harassment as “the  contexts, that’s not necessarily problematic;   intent to harass, annoy, or alarm another  nothing inappropriate is being suggested.   person in or about public places, engage in  But  in  other  contexts,  where  that  kind  of   conduct, or repeatedly commit acts which  familiar behavior isn’t normalized or ex-  alarm or seriously annoy the victim, and  pected, it isn’t appropriate.”  serve no legitimate purpose.” He notes that   proving criminal harassment is oft en a mat-  ter of proving the perpetrator’s intent or   purpose—which can be very diffi  cult in   the  absence  of  any  substantive  indication   of what someone is thinking or feeling in a   given moment. Th  at means that “the same   behavior repeated in diff erent circumstanc-  Ellen Shapiro, a partner at the law fi rm   Hampshire and Rhode Island, has a simi-  lar perspective. She says, “Harassment is a   Oft en, the attorneys indicate, it comes   down to context and language. Michael C.   man & Rosenberg, LLC, in Chicago, says   Chris Florio, attorney with Stark & Stark   in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, equates ha-  HANDLING...  continued from page 1  continued on page 8 


































































































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