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Home » Maintenance & Common Property » Common Property NSW » NSW: Q&A Access to the Communal Fuse Box in our Apartment Building

NSW: Q&A Access to the Communal Fuse Box in our Apartment Building

Published November 13, 2018 By The LookUpStrata Team 6 Comments Last Updated July 20, 2022

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An NSW Lot Owner is wondering whether they should be providing access to the fuse box in their apartment building.

Question: For some reason, I have a key to the communal Fuse Box in our apartment building and I have been providing access for tenants who trip their fuse. I’m just trying to help. Why is this a problem?

I’m based in NSW and the fuse box in our apartment building is located in the communal stairwell. It contains all of the fuses for the apartments.

This cupboard is locked and most tenants don’t have a key. I have a key – not sure how I acquired one, I think it was provided when we bought the apartment.

We have recently been opening the fuse box in our apartment building for tenants who tripped the fuse or need access.

Another person on the strata committee has advised that I’m not supposed to have a key to the fuse box and I should not be providing access to tenants. According to the Committee member, tenants should be calling the electrician who has a universal key.

Is this correct? It seems unreasonable that a tenant should have to call an electrician and pay the callout fee just so the Electrician can flip a tripped fuse switch.

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Answer: Fortunately, the strata manager has issued a notice to comply with the peaceful enjoyment bylaw as the owners corporation should be enforcing the by-laws.

Dino Biordi: Off the bat, it’s not the best electrical design/installation if individual fuse boxes in the apartment building are located within a common area space albeit I have seen this on other schemes.

What needs to be established is:

  1. Is the room/cupboard labelled or set as a plant room? If so, residents (people without safety knowledge) should not have access into this area.
  2. If indeed this area is safe and suitable for the residents to enter, this needs Strata Committee approval or a By-Law to avoid neighbourly disputes (the blame game) if residents accidentally affecting other apartments power source.

These measures seem ridiculous until someone is severely injured or death occurs through electrocution.

Leanne Habib: Usually, no-one is given the key for WH&S reasons – if unlicensed persons enter into the main switch room, this can result in a wrong switch(es) etc being turned, electrocution and so on.

Technically, you do not have rights to access or grant access to the common property fuse box in the apartment building and the key belongs to the owners corporation (though you are trying to be helpful to your neighbours and inadvertently acquired the key).

We also consider it harsh to expect tenants to call out electricians merely to flip a tripped switch – however, there are liability issues you may be exposing yourself and the owners corporation to.

Leanne Habib
Premium Strata
E: [email protected]
P: 02 9281 6440

Dino Biordi
Luna Management 
E: [email protected]
P: 1800 005 862

This post appears in Strata News #217.

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Read next:

  • NSW: Q&A Shutting Facilities and Restricting Access to Common Areas
  • WA Insurance Terms with the Upcoming Strata Reforms

These articles are not intended to be personal advice and you should not rely on it as a substitute for any form of advice.

Visit Maintenance and Common Property OR NSW Strata Legislation.

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Comments

  1. Nikki Jovicic says

    November 20, 2018 at 12:52 pm

    We have also received this comment in via email from Tyrone Shandiman, Strata Insurance Solutions:

    Strata Insurance provides cover for Public Liability which is for the owners corporation if someone is injured and takes legal action against the owners corporation. The lot owner who holds the key should be careful as a legal claim can be brought against them for injury as a result of providing access – such a claim may not be covered by the Strata Insurance as the policy only covers claims against the owners corporation (not individuals). The committee should always try to manage the risk of potential claims as a large liability claim may effect the ability to get insurance into the future.

    Reply
  2. LVC says

    November 16, 2018 at 11:57 am

    If it is constantly tripping, then an electrician should look in to it. There is a risk to the Owners Corporation if someone suffers an electric shock (legal nightmare) because they started fiddling around in the box. I would not give the key to the tenant but if an owner lives on site and is part of the Committee, then they should have the key.
    Personally this should be reported to the body corporate manager who will be able to keep a log and will be able to report back to the committee that IE, an electrician has been called out more than 3 times this month.

    Reply
  3. Deborah Salter says

    November 13, 2018 at 11:47 am

    Are we able to get an article for Qld in relation to this topic? I am currently looking into this at the moment. Thank you

    Reply
    • Nikki Jovicic says

      November 13, 2018 at 11:48 am

      Thanks Deborah

      I’ll look into this and see what I can find out!

      Nikki

      Reply
    • Deborah Salter says

      November 13, 2018 at 12:16 pm

      I will be a bit more specific in my previous message. I was recently informed that the QLD legislation says that a committee member other than the building mangers should have a key to the electricity box room and the fire alarm box for emergency periods. Under our building managers contract they do not work on weekends or public holidays and I had a triggered electricity box on a public holiday. If you could please advise the Qld legislation that i could put forth to the committee would be greatly appreciated.

      Reply
      • Nikki Jovicic says

        November 14, 2018 at 8:20 am

        Hi Deborah

        We have received the following reply from Frank Higginson, Hynes Legal:

        To me, this is more about a body corporate acting reasonably. There is certainly nothing in the BCCM legislation about the rights of committee members to access infrastructure, but if it is going to fail (no matter what it is), then the body corporate needs to put in place appropriate mechanisms to allow access if the sole holder of access is not around.

        Reply

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