What this means for Fraser Valley strata councils
This guide covers how to vet a strata report provider for strata corporations across Fraser Valley. The requirements are province-wide, but two things are local to your council — the deadline you are working toward and the kind of building you manage.
The Fraser Valley Regional District covers Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission, Hope, and the surrounding rural communities. Strata stock here is townhouse-dominant with low-rise wood-frame condo developments through the urban cores, plus growing mid-rise concrete development around Highstreet and central Abbotsford.
- Electrical Planning Report (EPR): due December 31, 2026 for Fraser Valley stratas of five or more lots, under the Strata Property Act.
The full guide
Your strata council is about to approve thousands of dollars of consulting work — an Electrical Planning Report. Before the vote, there are two short requests that will tell you more than the proposal alone:
- Ask to see a sample report.
- Ask for references from comparable stratas.
Both are ordinary due-diligence requests, and providers who do this work regularly are used to them.
Why a sample report tells you what a proposal can't
A proposal describes what you will get. A sample report shows it. They are not the same thing, and the gap between them is exactly where councils get surprised months later, when the finished document lands and nobody can use it.
A redacted sample of the provider's actual deliverable answers the questions that decide whether the report will be worth the money:
- Is it written in plain language a council member can read — or is it a dense technical document?
- Are the recommendations specific and actionable, or generic boilerplate that could describe any building?
- Does it set honest expectations about what the report can and cannot do?
- Is it something your owners and a future buyer could actually pick up and use?
Two reports can both be fully compliant and read nothing alike. We explained why in why EPR quality varies so widely and in a council's guide to acting on its EPR. A sample is the fastest way to see, before you commit, which kind you are about to buy.
What to look for in the sample
- A plain-language summary a non-technical council member can read in a few minutes and understand.
- A clear answer to the question the report exists to answer — for an EPR, how much spare capacity the building has.
- Recommendations tied to something concrete — capacity unlocked, cost, or timing — not a vague "consider upgrading."
- Honesty about scope and limits, so the report can be relied on for years rather than oversold.
- A structure your council could brief owners from at an AGM.
Why references matter — and what to ask them
A sample shows you the product; references tell you whether the provider actually delivers it. Ask for two or three references from comparable stratas — similar size, building type, and ideally the same region — and then actually call them. A few direct questions cut straight to what you need to know:
- Did the report arrive on the timeline you were promised?
- Was the final scope what was quoted — or were there surprise change orders?
- Could your council understand and act on the report without a technical background?
- Did the provider present the findings to your council or owners?
- Would you hire them again?
One useful distinction: references are not the same as online reviews. Star ratings are easy to find but may reflect unrelated work. Ask specifically for references from strata report clients — councils that received the exact kind of report you are commissioning.
Put all three together: sample, references, checklist
Each of these checks a different box, and together they de-risk the whole decision:
- the sample report shows you the quality of the deliverable;
- the references confirm the provider actually delivers it; and
- checking each proposal against BC's official preparation guidance confirms the scope meets what BC strata law requires.
Price belongs in that picture too — but it is the last question, not the first. We wrote about why EPR prices range from about $2,500 to $14,000, and how to check what any quote — high or low — actually includes.
What CF Electrical Services will show you
We are glad to share a sample report and to connect you with references on request — before you commit to anything. Every report we prepare comes as a fixed-price proposal, written in plain language for the council and owners who have to use it — and, included with every report, a Living Report: an interactive web version every owner can open alongside the PDF the council keeps on file. We would rather your council approve the work with its eyes open. Ask us for the sample — that is exactly the conversation we want to have.
Comparing providers now? Start with the questions in how to choose an EPR provider, then ask each provider for a sample report and references and see who says yes.
Next steps for Fraser Valley councils
When your council is ready to act, CF Electrical Services prepares Electrical Planning Reports and EV Ready Plans for stratas across Fraser Valley — everything written in plain language for the council and owners who have to use it. When the plan becomes a project, we can manage that too.
- Electrical Planning Reports in Abbotsford
- Electrical Planning Reports in Chilliwack
- Electrical Planning Reports in Mission
- Electrical Planning Reports in Hope
- Electrical Planning Reports in Kent (Agassiz)
- Electrical Planning Reports in Harrison Hot Springs
See all Fraser Valley strata services, or browse the full guide library.
Written by CF Electrical Services — BC strata electrical consulting: Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and electrification project management. Published June 9, 2026.