Community Association Executive Earns Top Industry Professional Credential

Top Quote Tonya L. Davenport, CMCA, AMS, PCAM, Director of Property Management at Bricck Property Management, earns the high rank of PCAM. She received certificate #3331 that was issued in the history of the world. End Quote
  • Philadelphia, PA-NJ (1888PressRelease) June 23, 2021 - Tonya L. Davenport, CMCA, AMS, PCAM, Director of Property Management at Bricck Property Management, recently joined the elite group of community association managers who have earned the Professional Community Association Manager (PCAM®) credential from Community Associations Institute (CAI). Davenport is one of more than 3,400 managers worldwide who have earned the highest level of professional recognition in the community association field.

    More than 60 million Americans live in an estimated 315,000 association-governed communities.

    Tonya L. Davenport, CMCA, AMS, PCAM, has over twenty (20) years of facility and property management experience. Tonya is the Chairperson of the Manager’s Committee for CAI in the Keystone Chapter. Tonya genuinely enjoys managing communities and developing a team of managers. Community management is her passion, and she understands the impact that property management has on each and every resident within a community. Tonya joined the Bricck Property Management Team in 2021 and serves as their Director of Property Management.

    Bricck Property Management is a boutique property management firm, located in King of Prussia, PA. Bricck provides best-in-class property management services to Condominiums, Homeowner’s Associations (HOA’s), Co-ops, and Planned Communities in the Greater Philadelphia and Delaware Valley Area. To learn more about Bricck and property management services available, please visit: www.bricck.com.

    To earn the PCAM credential, managers must have five years of community association management experience and complete more than 100 hours of course work. In addition, credentialed PCAMs must fulfill continuing education and service requirements, as well as adhere to a code of ethics.

    “Professionals who earn CAI credentials maximize the value they can provide to their community association clients,” said CAI Chief Executive Officer Thomas M. Skiba, CAE. “Not only have these professionals demonstrated a personal commitment to self-improvement, but they have also elevated their practical knowledge and expertise. That’s what all community associations need, and what board members and residents deserve.”

    Professional managers provide administrative, operational and managerial counsel to the boards that govern homeowners and condominium associations. Managers typically are responsible for managing budgets and contractors, directing association personnel and overseeing compliance with association covenants and restrictions.

    CAI is an international organization dedicated to building better communities. CAI and its 60 chapters work on behalf of the professionals and volunteers engaged in the management and governance of homeowner and condominium associations, cooperatives and other planned communities. CAI’s nearly 32,000 members include community association volunteer leaders, managers, management companies and businesses that provide products and services to these communities.

    More information is available at www.caionline.org.

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