Tag Archives: HOA Hell

New Contest for America’s Worst Neighbor!

Please send me your submissions! ABC 20/20 did a story on these two couples on January 2nd. Amazingly bad neighbors.

I’m going to start soliciting similar nominations from you for the year’s worst neighbor…not sure what prize I’ll award for the most nightmarish neighbor…maybe a free copy of Neighbors At War, but these two couples are a prize.

God bless them. What would the rest of us do for entertainment without idiots like these?

(nightmare neighbors in New York)

 

 

HOA Embezzling Comes to Bakersfield

Because it’s Christmastime, we usually expect a little more embezzling by employees of Homeowners Associations. Michelle Haughton, the accounts receivable employee for the Bear Valley Springs HOA apparently took the word ‘receivable’ a little more literally than her job description intended. The cops won’t say how much money was missing, but it’s greater than $2000. She’s now charged with embezzlement and grand theft.

It won’t matter much to homeowners. They’ll just see a special assessment come along and no one on the board will tell them them what it’s for.

(HOA embezzlement arrest in Bakersfield)

 

Another Brag About Website Numbers

Hi Gang,

Since you’re all part of what’s getting our message out there, here’s an end-of-the-year look at website numbers.

A record 514,000 logins were recorded in 2014. And 4.8 million pages of material were either downloaded or read.

When you submit a guest blog here, just know that you’re having an impact.

Happy New Year!

A Handicapped Youngster? Screw ’em!

Great guest post by Dave Russell yesterday, good enough that I’d like to add to it.

Around the country, Homeowners Associations continue to wildly discriminate against families with handicapped youngsters. They’re shunned, they’re fined, they’re labeled ‘bad people’ who aren’t allowed to use the common areas. These stories are as disgusting as they are endemic. And they should serve as a warning to any potential home buyer that HOA property is fundamentally diseased, unfit for Americans who believe in human rights.

Yes, H.U.D. occasionally comes to the rescue on behalf of a damaged family. But these federal lawsuits are so rare they can, at best, be described as ‘show trials’ similar to the massive HOA racketeering case now being conducted in Nevada. A show trial is exactly what it sounds like. The feds ride onto the scene like rodeo cowboys, crack a few whips, and hope that other criminals across the country will be deterred from committing similar crimes. They never are.

The only solution to human rights violations by the HOA system is federal fines massive enough to stagger the imagination. Under the current system the feds win an occasional lawsuit, the HOA insurance company pays for the lawyers and fines, and the homeowners never have a hint about what really happened.

How to solve the problem? When an HOA commits an ongoing violation of federal law confiscate the entire neighborhood under public nuisance laws. Every house, every family gets evicted without compensation.

Outrageous, you say?

Impossible and illegal you say?

Hey, just look at a 2006 Supreme Court decision called Kelo. The government essentially confiscated an entire neighborhood simply for the crime of “not looking nice enough.” Actually, there was some underlying corruption there. A pharmaceutical company wanted the neighborhood for a construction project and the state gave it to them. The irony is that the drug firm decided they didn’t really want the land after all. Now this former neighborhood is just a field of weeds.

Maybe what this country really needs is a few more weeds.

(link to story on cerebral palsy family driven from Kentucky neighborhood)

 

Homeownership Rates Falling

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

 Last week the Orlando Sentinel published an excellent but concise article about the decrease in homeownership rates in Central Florida. The Sentinel reports that homeownership rates have slipped from 77% a decade ago to 66% in 2014, and at only 59% in newer neighborhoods built in the past decade.

Florida, and the Orlando Metro area in particular, suffered some of the highest foreclosure rates in the nation. So naturally, a lot of former homeowners with poor credit have now become renters. Large real estate investment firms have snatched up distressed homes at bargain prices, and turned them into rental properties. Owners interviewed for the Sentinel article lament the fact that their neighborhoods have seen a substantial influx of out-of-state landlords leasing to transient renters, and a decline in yard maintenance and property values. Large real estate investment firms have no problem paying fees for various code violations, as they collect healthy rental income.

Long-time permanent residents express concern over the lack of community cohesion, brought about by the stark decrease in homeownership rates – in some communities, reportedly as low as 37%.

Unfortunately, no public entity bothers to collect vital data specific to HOAs. Data encompasses homeownership in general.

But since the vast, vast majority of homes in Florida are in some sort of HOA – particularly anything built in the last 30 years – might we safely assume a correlation between a high percentage of HOA properties, higher than national average foreclosure rates, and lower home ownership rates in “newer” communities? You make the call.

(link to Orlando Sentinel article, homeownership fades in Central Florida)