Early one evening my father called for a meeting of our
neighbours. As elected head of the neighbourhood committee of the
apartment building, he discussed with tenants things we must do to
keep the building and surrounding area clean.
I remembered that meeting because on the morning of the coming
Sunday, most of our neighbours came out with brooms, mops, pieces
of rag or basins. I joined the commotion, cleaning step by step the
stairways. Most of all I enjoyed splashing water over the stairway
and watching the water flow down.
By noon, our building's courtyard was tidy and clean. The
stairways and walls of corridors were almost shining.
But that happened more than 30 years ago.
Today, high-rise apartment buildings dominate cities' skylines
and more and more urbanites enjoy bigger apartments in fancier
residential communities. In Beijing alone, per capita housing had
already risen to 22 square metres in 2001, more than doubling the
figure three decades ago.
The increase in per capita housing has remained on top of the
accomplishment chart of every level of government.
However, as the number of urban homeowners rises steadily and
life on the whole gets better, their complaints against real estate
developers and property management have also become louder.
Indeed their frustration grows when they discover the flats they
have paid for are short of space or lack green acreage as stated in
their contracts with the developers and when they have little room
to manoeuvre, and withdraw their purchase.
Their discontent often is aggravated after they move in, only to
find the property management companies installed by developers do
not offer services to meet the often high expectations of
homeowners.
Their life is made more difficult when their hot tap water is
cut off by property management companies, or when property
management companies quietly walked out, leaving homeowners to live
in rising garbage piles and suffer from random thievery, or when
two competing property management companies run into a stalemate
with hounds participating, to cite just a few pieces of news
reported since New Year's Day.
To make things worse, no one seems to care about the homeowners'
dissatisfaction. Homeowners have not won a single case against
property management in Beijing, while property management companies
have won almost all the cases against homeowners, who have refused
to pay not only management fees but also electrical and water
bills.
Homeowners have been partly to blame as they have not organized
themselves to effect improvements in their communities while
regulating their own conduct as neighbours.
The days when many urbanites were crowded in small apartments
rented from their work units and when most neighbours were
colleagues are long gone. Also gone is the trust and team spirit
shared by neighbours at that time.
There are homeowners who use their dissatisfaction about
property management as excuses for not paying for electricity, gas,
central heating and water, which are in the domain of public
utilities, not resources of property management. There are also
those who throw their home garbage from their windows and who let
their dogs pee and litter everywhere in public grounds.
The developers and property management companies should take the
blame for the homeowners' weal and woe. The market economy does not
mean making money while infringing upon the rights and interests of
customers, which are often the root causes of the conflicts between
homeowners and developers or property management.
But the governments at different levels should take a larger
chunk of the responsibility as they have not effectively regulated
the conduct and businesses of the developers and property
management companies by law and pushed them to improve their
services.
Governments have too many priorities on their agenda to take
homeowners' grievances seriously at present. But they should, in
due time, as increased discontent and injustice the homeowners
suffer will not contribute to sustained social harmony, as it has
already been evidenced by blockades and other activities homeowners
have staged over the past few years.
(China Daily January 5, 2006)