Tag Archives: HOA Abuse

Touchy, Touchy Millionaires

A condo association in Snowmass Village, just outside of Aspen, Colorado, is filing a lawsuit against the town. Owners in the Sonnenblick Condominiums complain that the town council illegally approved the placement of two cell phone antennas on top of the Westin Hotel.

Sprint says it needs the antennas to improve cell phone reception in the Aspen area. These things are not exactly cell phone towers. One of the two antennas will extend beyond the roof line by about three feet. But the condo association says those three extra feet will ruin their view of the mountains.

These kinds of lawsuits sometimes backfire against the plaintiffs who get hit with huge special assessments to pay off all the lawyers. 

But these homeowners can afford a frivolous lawsuit here and there. Just to live in a ski town like Snowmass you’ve got to have a mass of money. And all the lawyers involved in this case will take a good-sized chunk of that cash.

All over three feet.

(click here for Aspen Daily News story)

 

HOA Leaves $60,000 At The Side Of The Road

guest blog by Nila Ridings
 
It wasn’t cash in a bank bag.  Nope, these crooks just sawed the hoofs off a bronze deer, stole the deer and a dozen maple leaf light covers from the Rockwood Falls community entrance. It’s the second time they’ve done that! 
 
Who would think it’s a good idea to place tens of thousands of dollars worth of art out in the open alongside the road?   If it was to provide a visual indication of the prosperous residents that reside within, it did not serve them well.  However, it did make them a target for thieves.  
 
It’s undecided if the board will be replacing the sculptures.  Really?  Call in some common sense here folks!  The news is broadcasting daily about the theft of copper from air conditioning units at schools, churches, light poles, and more.  And bronze statues have been stolen before around Kansas City. Shall we hope the HOA members will stop the madness of their money going to the scrap-metal yards?
 
And since this happened in the city where I live, my tax dollars are now being spent to find and arrest the culprits.  So that makes us all losers in the expense of the missing bronze deer.
 
 
 

How to Comment!

It’s come to my attention that some people haven’t been able to add comments to my posts. It’s incredibly easy. Right beside my photo at the upper right corner of each post there’s a bag.

Think of this as YOUR punching bag. Imagine that you were aiming at my head and missed and hit the bag! Then let us all know whatever’s on your mind.

Standard laws of Internet etiquette apply!  No cussing, swearing, flaming, threats, all the standard stuff. Oh, and don’t use all caps. that means you’re unnecessarily shouting and you’ll probably get deleted. And if I see something that looks libelous or slanderous your comment won’t appear.  

Finally, I do make a rare change on a post regardless of which side you’re on. I only do it to correct occasional grammar and spelling problems just to make you sound more articulate.

 

 

 

 

 

HOA Communism

Kids these days don’t know much about Communism. They don’t get much more than a passing overview in their history or civics classes. Sadly, as George Santayana pointed out, “Those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” So that means our kids and grandkids may, themselves, have to someday experience such things as Communism and Facism. It’s so subtle, and you’re stuck before you know it.

In fact, isn’t that exactly what many young people are facing in the structure of today’s Homeowners Associations?

After reading the blog linked below, and pondering the identity of ‘Alex’, an anti-Communist dissident/writer who left the Soviet Union to seek peace elsewhere, you might ponder the reality of being doomed to repeat history.

I’ve bloggged about this blogger before, but since he’s re-posting I’ll re-post him as well.

(click here for excellent blog post from Virginia attorney)

http://www.urbanophile.com/2013/12/17/how-homeowners-associations-stifle-expression-and-sustainability-by-kaid-benfield/

Due Process? Screw Process!

One of my angriest complaints against the HOA movement is the almost complete void of the recognition of this fundamental principle in the documents of a typical Homeowners Association. Due Process isn’t some newfangled thing invented by our nation’s founders. No, the concept of Due Process has it’s roots in the Magna Carta, a document developed by freedom minded revolutionaries who were trying to bring a tyrannical British monarch under control.

So when our founders were establishing the kind of republic that had never existed on this Earth, a republic guaranteeing the maximum amount of freedom to the maximum number of people, they sought to interweave the concept of Due Process into our founding documents. They even wrote into our Constitution ways of correcting errors of Due Process, although it took a Civil War and a half million lives to bring that about.

But here comes the HOA movement, a movement dedicated to fleecing unwitting homeowners out of their life savings. One of the first things they had to do was generate corporate ‘agreements’ where American home buyers unwittingly signed away their rights to Constitutional Due Process. And 62 million homeowners did exactly that, leading to a fifty billion dollar industry that routinely fleeces homeowners.

Enough of my blabbing. Here comes a Homeowners Rights advocate in Nevada who gets himself appointed to a state commission overseeing Homeowners Associations. Fighting a majority of committee members who are actually part of this fifty billion dollar a year industry, he makes some crazy recommendations, like…. well, like restoring Due Process to all Nevada Homeowners.

He could never get such a thing passed, could he? Well don’t ever underestimate the power of a single man who stands up against the mob. Commissioner Jonathan Friedrich, long my hero, and long the hero of millions of Nevadans actually got a Due Process pledge passed by his seven member commission.

Certainly, Friedrich has miles to go before he sleeps, and his Due Process resolution has a ways to go before it becomes law. It’s not perfect, even he would admit that. But who knew such a resolution could come out of a State committee which is basically bought and paid for by the HOA industry? Still, it’s a privilege to reprint the words of the new resolution here, for everyone to read:       

                                              PROPOSED REGULATION OF

               THE COMMISSION FOR COMMON-INTEREST COMMUNITIES

                                               AND CONDOMINIUM HOTELS

                                                      November 15, 2013 Draft

                                                     Unassigned File #116-31085

 EXPLANATION – Matter in italics is proposed new language; matter in brackets [omitted material] is material to be omitted.

 AUTHORITY: NRS 116.615

 Create a new section or amend NAC 116.31085 to add the following language:

 Section 1.

Timing of notice of hearing: In accordance with NRS 116.31031(4)(a), a notice of a hearing setting forth the date, time, and location for the hearing and a telephone number and mailing address that the recipient may contact to request an continuance or change of hearing time or date must be sent to the record owner at the last known postal mailing address of that record owner or, if none, to the postal address to which the annual assessment notice is mailed and any other party in interest to that party’s last known postal mailing address by certified mail return receipt requested not less than 30 days prior to the date of the hearing. The 30 days shall be counted starting the next business day after mailing and ending the day before the proposed  hearing. Notice shall be considered sufficient whether or not the certified mailing has been  claimed by the addressee, provided that the sender has the stub from the United States Postal Service showing the certified mailing number, name and address of the addressee, and payment of the required fees to the Postal Service.

Personal service is not required but is an acceptable alternative to mailing as set forth herein if made within the time frame specified 

 Section 2.

Contents of Notice: Notice delivered pursuant to Section 2 shall, in addition to the date, time and location of the proposed hearing, include a specific detailed description of the alleged violation in plain language, including but not limited to a recital of the number and language of the specific section of the governing documents alleged to have been violated and including a legible photograph of any property condition alleged to constitute the violation. The Notice must also set out the  fine for this violation then in effect in accordance with the governing documents and a reasonable time within which to cure the violation, the reasonableness of the cure time being commensurate to the magnitude and seriousness of the alleged violation. The Notice must also advise the addressee of the addressee’s rights set out in Section 3 and list the members of the hearing panel with their names. and addresses.

 Section 3.

Rights of alleged violator:

1.The property owner alleged to have violated the governing documents shall be entitled to one continuance of the proposed hearing of not more than 30 days for any reason whatsoever and any additional continuances to which all the parties agree.

2. At any hearing, the alleged violator may be represented by legal counsel or by any other person of his or her choosing or by any person acting as officer, managing partner or trustee of the entity owning the property. 

 3. The alleged violator must be given written notice that they can request in writing that within 5 days the hearing be held in open session rather than in closed session within.

4. The parties may present witnesses and all witnesses shall be subject to cross-examination by the opposing party and may not without the consent of all the parties be present when other witnesses are testifying except for the alleged violator who may be present for the entire hearing and may testify if he or she so chooses.

5. Any party may make an audio and/or video recording of the hearing at that party’s own cost and expense.

 6. A transcript of the hearing shall be paid for by the party requesting same or shared by the parties if both sides so request a copy.

7. Any party needing a language interpreter or sign language presenter may bring such interpreter and/or sign language presenter to the hearing at that party’s own cost and expense. 

8. All documentary evidence to be presented at the hearing by any party must be delivered to the opposing party not less than 5 days prior to the hearing along with a list of all proposed witnesses except that the alleged violator(s) may testify without being included on a witness list.

9. An alleged violator may challenge any member of the proposed hearing panel for bias or conflict of interest or for any disqualification permitted under NRS 116. 

10. The alleged violator may make a rebuttal at the end of the presentation of all evidence and all parties shall have the opportunity to address the hearing panel with a summation at the end of the presentation of all evidence. 

11. The hearing panel, by majority decision thereof, must render its decision within 10 days .

12. The decision of the hearing panel must be mailed in writing to all parties by regular mail within  10 days of its rendering along with an explanation as to a party’s right to appeal and setting out the applicable appeal procedure.

13. A unit owner shall be entitled to appeal a decision of the Board under the Real Estate Division’s Mediation Program as per NRS 38.300-360.

 14. No additional fines shall accrue while the decision is under appeal through the Mediation Program.

15. Each side shall be responsible for their own fees and costs.