In the recently received budget document for OKW, the Capital Reserve Analysis on page 4 shows an Estimated Fund Balance of $19,881,021 as of 12/31/07, while the Estimated Current Replacement Costs for the items covered for 531 vacation homes is $38,495,441. This reserve is thus over 50% of the total estimated replacement cost. Is it common for such reserves to hold such a large percentage of the total replacement cost, especially given that the items covered have useful lives remaining of 1-17 years? Is there a ceiling at which point the reserves are or should be capped as a percentage of replacement cost, and thus dues increases be slowed?
It just struck me as odd to have a fund covering over half the expected cost of replacing all these items at one time, given they have with "useful lives" of 1-30 years. Hopefully they would never need to replace all, nor even half, of such items at one time. In fact based upon useful lives listed, at worst only 1/15 - 1/30 of any one item should be expected to be replaced in any one year. So why the big reserve? Am I not understanding this table correctly? And what would happen to these large reserves when the ownership interest ends, complicated even more by the dual ending dates now?
Thanks for any help with this.
It just struck me as odd to have a fund covering over half the expected cost of replacing all these items at one time, given they have with "useful lives" of 1-30 years. Hopefully they would never need to replace all, nor even half, of such items at one time. In fact based upon useful lives listed, at worst only 1/15 - 1/30 of any one item should be expected to be replaced in any one year. So why the big reserve? Am I not understanding this table correctly? And what would happen to these large reserves when the ownership interest ends, complicated even more by the dual ending dates now?
Thanks for any help with this.

