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Tseung Kwan O residents are fighting for access to their tennis court. Photo: Bloomberg
Opinion
Lai See
by Howard Winn
Lai See
by Howard Winn

Tennis court saga reflects weakness of the Building Management Ordinance

We hear of more building management related nonsense. This story concerns the tennis court at the Oscar by the Sea development at Tseung Kwan O, and is another example of how the Building Management Ordinance offers little protection to minority owners in the face of an entrenched owners' committee.

We hear of more building management related nonsense. This story concerns the tennis court at the Oscar by the Sea development at Tseung Kwan O, and is another example of how the Building Management Ordinance offers little protection to minority owners in the face of an entrenched owners' committee.

Last November the owners' committee wanted to replace the mesh fence surrounding the tennis court, which was rusting, with one made of plastic wood. This was deemed to be unsuitable by the Hong Kong Tennis Association as it was likely to bend and break if players ran into it. The other problem was that this fancy new fence would cost HK$1 million, which some residents felt was high since it was about twice as much as the standard mesh fence.

After a mail shot to residents raising these points and suggesting the tender should be examined more closely, and another letter questioning the transparency of finances of the owners' committee, the proposal was vetoed. The owners' committee then spent HK$18,000 on a survey report that concluded the court was safe but should be inspected every three months.

Nevertheless, at the beginning of February the management company Hong Yip Services, which is owned by Sun Hung Kai Properties, was told by the owners' committee to lock the court. Two residents then broke in and played tennis to assert their right to use the court. The management company called the police who determined this was a civil and not a criminal matter and left.

The next day, there was a lock and chain on the court. The same residents broke the lock and played tennis again, having checked with the police that they were not committing a criminal act. Meanwhile, Hong Yip tried to stop the tennis players from explaining their position to other residents by warning their security guards that if they allowed the players to put letters into residents mail boxes they would face disciplinary action.

This is despite police advice to the contrary, and the existence of a Lands Tribunal case that also supports this. However, the tennis court is now heavily padlocked and the players are reluctant to keep breaking into the court. Since there is no avenue for resolving this issue except a visit to the Lands Tribunal, this situation, like so many others in Hong Kong, remains in limbo.

The Home Affairs Department, which is supposed to administer these matters, wrings its hands and pleads that since they are not lawyers they can't prosecute anyone, even when they witness obvious breaches of the BMO.

Wealth-X has come up with another survey about the rich. This one ranks the world's top 10 richest individuals under 40. The list is dominated by male technopreneurs, with four deriving their fortunes from their early involvement in Facebook.

Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: Bloomberg
Mark Zuckerberg, 30, is estimated to be worth US$35.1 billion - more than 40 per cent of the combined net worth of all the other billionaires on the list. Another individual on the list who is linked to Facebook is Jan Koum, co-founder and chief executive of mobile messaging application WhatsApp, which was acquired by Facebook last year for US$19 billion. Koum's personal fortune of US$7.7 billion puts him in third place.

The only self-made woman in the top ten is Elizabeth Holmes who dropped out of her second year at Stanford in 2003 to form Theranos a blood testing company. Her personal stake in the company is valued at US$4.5 billion ranking her eighth.

Six of the top ten are from the US, one Yang Huiyan, vice-chairman of real estate company Country Garden, is from China and one is from India.

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