'I'm not a troublemaker': Condo board orders resident to remove Canadian flags from balcony
A senior in Calgary's southeast is left wondering why his condo board is no longer allowing him to display Canadian flags on his property.
Jim McLeman, 78, is the retired owner of a 14th-floor suite in The Lookout, located at 801 2nd Avenue S.W.
Despite displaying Canadian flags outside of his property for around two decades, he was surprised to recently learn his condo board has a bylaw with a zero-tolerance policy for flags.
'Basically, I'm breaking the bylaws and they're giving me until June 26 to remove it,' McLeman said.
As of June 27, McLeman remains in his home and the flag still stands on his balcony.
The flag flap comes as Canada Day, the celebration embracing the country's colours and flag, approaches.
McLeman bought the property back in 1998 and moved in after the building was constructed in 2000. Every summer, he would proudly display a few of his Canadian flags.
Originally, he had three on display. Now, he only has a single flag situated on the corner of his patio.
The three-by-five-foot Canadian flag is attached to a broom handle, which is secured to a post.
After receiving an email notifying him of the bylaw violation, he searched for answers as to why this was suddenly an issue.
'They haven't said what the penalty would be,' he said. 'They just said I was violating the board of condos' bylaws.'
It indicated an anonymous individual brought the issue to the board's attention, and that their bylaws prohibit the display of flags since it can face challenges if it allows one but not another.
When contacted by Postmedia, the property manager responsible for The Lookout stated they would not discuss the company's policy with a third party, or provide a reason why the flag was not permitted.
An annual general meeting for condo owners and tenants was held June 19, but McLeman couldn't attend as his wife suffers from end-stage Parkinson's.
Additionally, he would have been unable to address the issue there as unit-specific issues or disputes are addressed outside of the meeting.
'I thought that this could've been brought up with owners at the meeting, but I guess they feel it's not the time or place,' he said.
As an immigrant from the extreme northern end of Scotland, McLeman said he's proud to display the Canadian flag outside of his property.
'I came here back in '67, I was just a 20-year-old kid,' he said. 'I'm proud to be a Canadian. I'm told I cannot fly my country's flag, and I cannot believe it.'
As a symbol that some have died for, McLeman is shocked he's being told to remove it.
'I'm not a troublemaker, nobody's said anything about it or told me I can't do that,' he said. 'But if there was a good reason, nobody has given me anything.'
Erin Berney, a partner with Field Law in Edmonton, said condo boards have the authority to pass bylaws pursuant to the Condominium Property Act in Alberta.
'So, when you think bylaws, think almost like regulations,' Berney said. 'That's how they're treated, interpreted, and that's how they're enforced by the courts. The Condominium Property Act actually gives the (condo) board the authority and the mandate to enforce their bylaws for their particular condo corporation.'
Since each condo corporation is unique, bylaws vary from one property to the next.
Regardless, Berney said prohibitions on flying flags or hanging flags and signs in windows are fairly common bylaw prohibitions.
In the end, it all goes back to the condominium's bylaws.
'Does the board give any discretion at all to allow the owner to fly a flag or post a flag somewhere, anywhere?' Berney said. 'If it doesn't give the board any discretion, then there's not much he can do.
'That said, if there is discretion under the bylaws, then we want to look at whether the board has been exercising that reasonably and consistently with its past decisions on similar issues.'
Although the National Flag Act of Canada exists, it's not very mandating.
'All it says really is that individuals who are in control of apartment buildings or condominium buildings should be encouraged to allow the national flag of Canada to be displayed,' she said.
'I could conceivably see somebody, an owner or a resident in a condo trying to invoke this legislation to challenge a condo bylaw, prohibiting flags from being displayed.
'I'm just not sure if it would succeed, given that this legislation just encourages. It doesn't mandate anybody to do anything.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Washington Post
24 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Live updates: Senate considering raft of amendments to Trump's massive tax and immigration bill
The Senate is set to convene Monday morning to consider a raft of amendments to President Donald Trump's massive tax and immigration package, most of them offered by Democrats and destined to fail in the Republican-led chamber. Trump has urged Congress to get the bill to his desk by July 4, which is Friday. A Senate-passed bill would require action in the House, which narrowly passed its own version of the One Big Beautiful Bill last month. The legislation would extend tax cuts passed in 2017, enact campaign promises such as no tax on tips and spend hundreds of billions of dollars on the White House's mass deportation drive and national defense priorities. To partially offset the cost, it would make steep cuts to safety-net programs. Democrats are united in opposition. Democratic groups are launching a major organizing push Monday to attack Republicans' signature bill this summer and prepare for the coming elections, an effort that will focus on voter registration and volunteer efforts to make their case to community groups not focused on politics. TORONTO — Canada said late Sunday it would rescind a new tax it planned to collect from large tech companies after President Donald Trump last week called the levy a 'blatant attack' on the United States and said he would suspend trade talks with Ottawa over it. Senate Republicans spent Sunday marshaling support for the centerpiece of President Donald Trump's second-term agenda, a sprawling tax and immigration package, working to prevent defections after a near-revolt over the weekend. The GOP is racing to push the mammoth budget proposal across Trump's desk by a self-imposed July 4 deadline, but fissures remain within the party over the cuts to social benefit and anti-poverty programs and the bill's growing price tag. Republican Sen. Thom Tillis said Sunday that he will not seek reelection next year, less than 24 hours after President Donald Trump threatened him with a primary challenge for opposing Trump's massive tax and immigration bill.


Bloomberg
30 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Trump Tax Bill Hits Senate, Canada Drops Tech Tax
Senate Majority Leader John Thune is rushing to meet President Donald Trump's July 4 deadline for pushing through his massive tax and spending bill, but first he has to work through a list of approximately eight Republican senators who have expressed opposition to portions of it. Within the next two days, he needs to find a way to appease most of them. Canada has withdrawn its digital services tax on technology companies such as Meta and Alphabet in a move to restart trade talks with the US. The Opening Trade has everything you need to know as markets open across Europe. With analysis you won't find anywhere else, we break down the biggest stories of the day and speak to top guests who have skin in the game. Hosted by Guy Johnson, Tom Mackenzie and Valerie Tytel. (Source: Bloomberg)
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Canada drops tech tax to restart US trade talks
Canada has scrapped a tax on big US technology firms, just hours before it was due to come into force, to allow trade talks between the two countries to restart. On Friday, US President Donald Trump called off negotiations over a trade deal, describing the tax as a "blatant attack", and threatened higher tariffs on imports from Canada. In response, Canada has said it is removing the tax, which should have come into effect on Monday. The digital services tax (DST) would have meant US tech giants including Amazon, Meta, Google and Apple, facing a 3% charge on Canadian revenue above $20m. Canada's finance minister François-Philippe Champagne issued a statement saying the tax would be rescinded. "The DST was announced in 2020 to address the fact that many large technology companies operating in Canada may not otherwise pay tax on revenues generated from Canadians," it said. "Canada's preference has always been a multilateral agreement related to digital services taxation," the statement added. Many countries, including the UK, are changing how they tax large multinational technology firms, which have millions of customers and advertisers around the world, but high corporation tax bills due to the way their businesses are structured. It was estimated that Canada's tax would cost the tech giants more than $2bn a year in total. Trump, who has forged a close relationship with tech company owners in his second term in office, has pushed back against such taxes. He described Canada's policy as "egregious" adding "economically we have such power over Canada". Three quarters of Canada's goods exports go to the US, worth more than $400bn a year, while Canada takes just 17% of US production. Canada's climbdown comes after a rollercoaster few months for US-Canada relations. Shortly after taking office Trump threatened to impose sweeping new tariffs and even to annex the US's northern neighbour. The antagonism helped propel Canada's Liberal Party, led by former central banker, Mark Carney, back into power. Since then there appeared to be a rapprochement, with Canada and the US saying they aimed to agree new trade terms by 21 July. UK-US tariff deal begins but still no news on steel 'We have all the cards' - Trump says he is ending Canada trade talks What tariffs has Trump announced and why?