Tag Archives: HOA Embezzlement

Screaming, Hair-Pulling HOA Fist Fights

So you’re thinking of spending your ‘golden years’ in a beautiful peaceful retirement community? You want to live in a neighborhood where neighbors really care about each other?

You have so many really wonderful choices of communities to live, places like Mainlands 3 in Tamarac, Florida. Warm air, well-kept lawns, ocean breezes, bird songs filling the air, happy people wishing each other “Good morning,” or “Good afternoon.”

Before you get too excited, check out the video linked below. It would be hilarious if it wasn’t so tragic. It graphically demonstrates what’s going on in hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Homeowners Associations across the country.

(link to WPLG-ABC News, Miami)

 

To Spark Some Financial Brainstorming

I just finished taping a TV interview in Denver on the future of Homeowners Associations. The host generally agreed with me that a financial tidal wave is coming that will slam into the nation’s housing market. It will begin with a collapse of the U.S. mortgage industry and HOAs will be the first to be decimated. With the unprecedented amount of federal debt, the ending of quantitative easing, Japan’s weak-kneed attempt to begin its own form of quantitative easing, Russia vowing to outlaw circulation of the U.S. dollar, China’s weakening international trade, a U.S. stock market trading (weakly) at all-time highs, threats of war in Ukraine, Iran, Syria, North Korea, the US/Mexico border, former Communist leaders predicting a return to leadership in East Germany. All the signals for world-wide financial disruption are there.

Outside the TV studio the host asked me a question I had trouble answering: “OK, if you believe all this is coming, where do you put your money?”

Whew! Talk about a million dollar question.

Some experts are advising stashing savings into commodities like silver, copper, any basic manufacturing materials. Others advise using your spare money to pay down mortgages to help you hold out for the long run. Still others say to get ready for hard times you need 9 months of food and water stored in the basement.

I’m not an economist, not even a great investor, and I’m certainly not a survivalist. But if HOAs are the first to be hit in the coming tsunami, why would a homeowner want to pay off a mortgage in an HOA house? With the massive potential for a troubled HOA to bully marginal homeowners with extra fines, fees, liens, legal fees and collection costs isn’t a paid-off HOA home a prime target for greedy (or desperate) board members and managers? Isn’t a supposedly ritzy HOA neighborhood a prime target for questionable slip ‘n’ fall lawsuits where each owner has to fork up money to pay off judgments and legal expenses?

Add to the mix the Nevada court decision (and pending replication elsewhere) the fact that a super-priority lien (the HOA’s petty fine for unmowed grass) can extinguish the first deed of trust (your mortgage) and you’ve got the formula for neighborhood nitroglycerin. It’s unstable at best.

We’re learning more each day about the risks of owning HOA property. Abusive boards, management companies and complicit law firms have brought all this seeming lack of stability about. So, what is the smart investment in troubled times?

Comments?

I’m all ears.

 

HUD Cracks Down on Housing Discrimination Against Disabled

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

It saddens me that housing discrimination against the disabled is so common. An apartment complex, an independent living facility, and two HOAs are among four offending housing providers in HUD’s early November report.

From denial of an accessible parking space, to reluctance to provide wheelchair access; from denial of an emotional support animal, to terminating residency after short-term hospital stays, management of these communities continues to find ways to try to skirt around the law.

“We continue to see more cases of discrimination against persons with disabilities than any other type,” said Gustavo Velasquez, HUD’s Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity. “It is unacceptable that individuals with disabilities have to fight for the opportunity to live where they want, or to have reasonable accommodations extended to them so they can enjoy their dwelling. The cases we’re announcing today reflect our ongoing commitment to leveling the playing field for all Americans when it comes to housing.”

In 2013, almost 54 percent of the complaints filed with HUD (4,426) alleged housing discrimination based on disability.

The stark reality is that most of us will face disability at some point in our lives. For some of us, it may be temporary. For others, it may be a long-term progressive health condition that leads to limited mobility, depression and anxiety, or limited mental capacity.

Therefore, shouldn’t we all be compassionate and understanding? No one guarantees that life will be tidy and convenient for the disabled, their families, their neighbors, or the managers of their housing developments.

It is truly a silver lining that at least our Federal government still takes a role in enforcing fair housing laws. In fact, it seems as though filing a fair housing complaint is the only way to get some HOAs to comply. What a shame that some HOAs are so willing to waste assessment dollars and cause so much suffering in the process.

(link to housing discrimination news release)

HOAs As “Mini-Governments”

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

A recent article published at Virginia’s TimesDispatch.com, has summarized the proliferation of HOAs as follows:

“(Homeowners’) associations are nearly ubiquitous for new residential housing in the Richmond area, embraced by developers as a way to handle long-term care of common amenities and by local officials as “mini-governments” that can help maintain order and property value.”

The article’s author, Ted Strong, interviewed several county officials on the subject. For readers who may doubt claims of some home buyers that it is nearly impossible to find HOA-free housing in many parts of America, just feast your eyes on the following blatant admissions by Richmond, VA, area officials representing Henrico County:

Kirk Turner, Chesterfield County’s director of planning, said his county wants the associations in the vast majority of cases. “From our standpoint, we actually encourage the creation of an HOA….”

At this point, “probably 100 percent” of new subdivisions in Chesterfield County of at least 20 lots have associations, Turner said.

“To me, the HOA is like a mini-government,” said Henrico County Attorney Joseph P. Rapisarda Jr.

There you have it. The ubiquitous nature of HOA-Land is driven by supply-side expediency and economics. The Developer gets to increase housing density, and therefore, profits. Local planning boards encourage HOAs, because such organizations are viewed as extensions of local government.

Developers love to preserve their “visions” – i.e. perpetual control – of communities they have created. Local governments love the fact that they can just sit back and collect property tax revenue, and leave strict code enforcement to HOAs.

Says Attorney G. Elmore, of the Community Associations Institute (CAI)-member Community Association law firm:

“Associations often help to preserve developers’ visions for common features or aesthetics.”  Elmore is an attorney at Chadwick, Washington, Moriarty, Elmore & Bunn P.C., which represents community associations extensively.

“Well-kept common features help property values and a neighborhood’s livability,” he said. “And associations are necessary if a neighborhood hopes to maintain aesthetic standards stricter than those in county laws.”

Ah, CAI’s vision now becomes crystal clear: without HOAs, aesthetic standards would suffer and property values would plummet. Or would they?

Do we really buy Elmore’s premise?

I think it is true that HOAs can, and often do, enforce stricter aesthetic standards than counties. But, is that a good thing for residents? Not necessarily, when strict standards result in costly lawsuits over flagpoles or home-based businesses.

And taking it one step further, Elmore fails to mention that HOAs can, and often do, enforce standards that limit Constitutional rights of free speech and expression. He also forgot to mention that HOAs tend to fall short when it comes to upholding important government duties such as conducting fair elections and handling disputes over violations with sufficient due process.

Isn’t that the least residents should expect from “mini-governments?”

But wait a minute – back in 2007, CAI issued the following press release in regard to the Supreme Court decision in Committee for a Better Twin Rivers v. Twin Rivers Community Association. Back then, the court decided that HOAs are not governments, and CAI happily echoed the sentiment. Here’s a quick refresher:

• The Twin Rivers decision held that residents of an association not only have the right to express themselves; they also have the freedom to adopt reasonable policies regulating expression in their communities.

• Community Associations are not governments, but rather, private agreements among neighbors; the New Jersey Supreme Court ruling indicated that the government should be respectful of these private agreements.

• Homeowners’ rights of expression and speech are not changed in New Jersey or elsewhere by the Twin Rivers decision, but rather, the case affirmed residents’ freedom to adopt reasonable policies governing such expression.

• Although courts across the country may find the decision in Twin Rivers persuasive, it does not have the binding authority of precedent outside of New Jersey.

• At its core, the Twin Rivers decision supports the rights of residents within community associations to make reasonable decisions for themselves without being second-guessed by courts or politicians.

Well, CAI better get their local government allies on the same page. Are HOAs “contractual agreements” or “mini-governments?”

The last statement about residents making decisions for themselves is blatantly false on its face in most Associations. The Developer creates rules long before there are residents, even before construction begins. And the HOA Board – often controlled by Developers for many years – makes nearly all decisions on behalf of its residents. In reality, the Twin Rivers decision supports the rights of the HOA Board to make most, if not all, decisions, and not be second-guessed by any branch of US government.

Last but not least, note the veiled admission of classic CAI philosophy – that the HOA Board of Directors (aided and abetted by the Community Manager and/or the HOA Attorney) is absolutely essential to maintaining the “vision” by “taking the lead on enforcement, “ because individual owners cannot be relied upon to exercise good judgment.

“It’s a lot easier to maintain a certain style or look or quality if you have an organization taking the lead on enforcement as opposed to relying on individual owners,” Elmore said.

(link to Times Dispatch article on HOAs as mini-governments)

(link to CAI news release about Twin Rivers decision in 2007)

 

The Death Of Common Sense

Living in Colorado, I know there’s a big problem in this state with coyotes killing pet cats and dogs. Driving up and down suburban boulevards you see countless posters asking for people to help find a missing pet. In almost every case the pets have been killed by coyotes. And it’s not just small pets, either, it’s German shepherds, boxers, even pit bulls and mastiffs. When a pack of coyotes starts ‘harvesting’ there’s no breed of dog that can’t be easily taken down.

Some communities in Colorado have populations of mountain lions that exist primarily on household pets. In fact, the Division of Wildlife says Colorado has a population of between 5000 and 8000 mountain lions. The attacks are bold. It just amazing that more humans haven’t been killed by wildlife.

Nevada’s KTNV Hall of Shame report by Darcy Spears shows there’s an easy way to end backyard pet killings. But Homeowners Associations across the southwest refuse to recognize the solution: a four inch high fence top roller that prevents predators from jumping fences. It’s easy. It’s inexpensive. It’s certainly not a threat to power-hungry HOA board members.

But in HOA Amerika, self-interested board members don’t seem to be interested in welcoming sensible solutions to neighborhood problems. Their personal power trip is sometimes just beyond reason.

(link to KTNV story on solution to pet killings)