Tag Archives: HOA

Something Has To Be Done!

We really do need to get national legislation, at least against some of the most outrageous HOA actions. The case linked below is actually a rather common problem in HOA Amerika… keeping a homeowner locked out of his gated neighborhood if he’s violated some minor covenant.

Jim Bartels of Fairview, North Carolina got into some kind of dispute with his HOA. The result? They installed a gate and wouldn’t give Bartels a gate code. The HOA board claims they can do that because he’s ‘not in good standing’ in the neighborhood.

A while back I blogged about a different case in Florida where a single mom was locked out of her neighborhood. She had to have someone drive to the gate and physically let her in. At the time I mulled over potential family emergencies and whether the whole neighborhood could possibly face a massive negligence and outrageous conduct lawsuit.

A lot of actions by HOA boards are outrageous. Some actions are despicable.

(link to WLOS News)

 

 

What Happens When Government Fails to Ensure Quality Construction in HOAs?

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

Does your HOA have problems with shoddy construction or defects in common areas such as roads, storm water drainage, street lighting? Did your developer fail to deliver what was promised at the time of sale?

If so, you’re not alone. Check out the video reports linked below. Hidden Lake Estates HOA in Sherwood, Arkansas, has issues with poor drainage, causing owners’ yards to flood every time it rains. At Stone Hill Estates HOA in Durham, North Carolina, the Developer has left roads, sidewalks and storm water drainage systems unfinished for several years.

Owners from both HOAs have appealed to city leaders to help resolve these issues. In both cases, the Cities initially balked at getting involved. However, one council member from Sherwood has called for an investigation into storm flooding at Hidden Lake, and a judge in Durham recently ruled that the City help pay for unfinished work at Stone Hill. Protracted battles will likely continue. These are just two examples, but this is becoming a common problem all over the country.

Who’s responsible, and who should pay?

During the building boom of the last decade, plenty of planned developments and condominiums were hastily approved and built to keep up with growing buyer demand. Additional contractors were hired, and some of them lacked sufficient skills. When the dust settled, problems began to appear.

It’s clear that architects, design engineers, and developers ultimately bear responsibility for the quality of their work and that done by their construction crews, but the obvious unasked question is:

What is government’s role in development of HOAs and prevention of poor construction?

Local development and planning commissions have responsibility for issuance of construction permits, establishment of building codes, inspection of work at various phases in the project, and issuance of occupancy permits upon successful completion.  In many cases, additional state and local agencies, such as the Department of Environmental Protection also play a role in ensuring development meets health and safety standards.

As taxpayers, we expect our local government agencies to ensure that our homes and major infrastructure of our communities are built to a standard of safety and reasonably sound quality. Unfortunately, as evidenced by thousands of construction defect claims in the past decade, local planners and inspectors quite often fail to do due diligence before, during, and following construction.

Why? Perhaps it is because city or county staff does not have to maintain HOA infrastructure or Condominium buildings. Therefore they are not overly concerned about quality of design and construction, and ease of maintenance.

Worse than that, sometimes our local elected officials undermine quality control policies.

Take the Lakewood City Council of Colorado, for example. (see link) The Council wants to enact an ordinance that would make it easier for Developers to avoid litigation of construction defect claims with HOAs. If passed, the ordinance would reduce rights that currently exist under state law, making it more difficult for HOAs to sue.

Supporters of the City ordinance claim that current state law makes it too easy for owners to sue Developers, drives up the cost of insurance, and makes it unfeasible to construct additional entry-level condominiums for millennial buyers.

So let me get this straight: Lakewood City Council wants to make it easier for developers to avoid liability for shoddy construction, in order for the Mayor and Council to entice Developers to build more Condos (with HOAs). No doubt, the city government’s goal is to increase its tax revenue base, with minimal impact to the city budget. But at what cost to taxpayers and consumers?

In all fairness to Lakewood City, local government politicians in cities and towns all across the nation have adopted a similarly misguided stance.

Dare I say, depending on the politics of local government, committees that vote to approve new construction projects can have cozy family or business ties to real estate developers and to investors?

Attorneys representing all sides of ensuing controversies – developers, engineers, construction companies, HOAs, owner groups in HOAs – are the only clear winners when local government fails to prevent shoddy or unsafe construction in the first place.  Owners of HOA properties often find themselves stuck with unresolved problems, damages to personal property, uncooperative Boards, special assessments to cover fees for attorneys, and possibly even higher property taxes.

In HOAs, owner financial responsibility for common areas often leads to common headaches.

(link to video of defective drainage in Sherwood, AR HOA)
(link to video of unfinished development, Stone Hill HOA, Durham)
(link to article on proposed Lakewood, CO ordinance)

Stupid, Stupid HOA Board Members! Just Stupid!

The four board members of the Twin Creek South Estate Homeowners Association may be among the stupidest people on Planet Earth. These knuckle dragging hominids in San Ramon, California might even qualify for the infamous annual “Darwin Award.” Their collective IQ points could easily be totaled up on one hand.

California is in the midst of a drought so bad that smaller communities are now running completely out of water. Many Californians are paying big sums of money for water brought in by truck from other states. Reservoirs are bone dry. Aquifers are drying up or becoming too saline to use. The collective weight of trillions of gallons of missing water has actually caused land along the San Andreas Fault to rise significantly triggering swarms of thousands of mini-earthquakes. The Legislature and Governor have had to enact a law forbidding Homeowners Associations from fining residents who don’t keep their lawns green. More food crops are grown in California than in any other state, but those crops are no longer being shipped to the nation’s grocery stores. That’s why you’re seeing record prices on store shelves across the country.

Yet the Twin Creek South HOA board members have the unmitigated gall to assess monthly fines against a homeowner who tried to create a drought resistant lawn.

When a KGO-ABC news crew tried to talk to these board members they refused to comment.

Of course they did. They’re too stupid to put three words together in a coherent sentence.

“Never underestimate the power of human stupidity.” -Robert A. Heinlein

(link to KGO news story on HOA fines)

 

Damn That Old Timed Religion!

There’s nothing that angers an HOA board or management company more than the discovery that a homeowner believes in Jesus or the Virgin Mary. Well, I take it back, any expression of belief in Judaism also pops their gaskets.

Enock and Ines Berluche, a couple in the Shingle Creek Reserve in Kissimmee, Florida have been battling their HOA over the past year because the HOA says it doesn’t allow yard statuary. You couldn’t tell that by driving through the neighborhood, of course. Lots of homeowners violate the “no yard art” rule with garden frogs, cherubs and statues of Greek goddesses showing (can I say it?) bare boobs. There was even an ‘illegal’ fountain on the lawn of the HOA president.

But when a new homeowner requested permission to put up small statues of The Virgin Mary and Jesus they were denied.

After media publicity and threats of discrimination lawsuits the Shingle Creek Reserve board finally got religion. They reversed themselves and allowed Mary and Jesus to stay. The only tragic part of the story is that the couple had to spend thousands of dollars in legal fees just to assert their rights. But that’s the story with most HOAs. It’s not about the rules or rights. It’s all about harrassment and humiliation of homeowners who don’t toe the line.

(link to statuary story on WFTV, Florida)

 

The Rental Restriction Quandary in Residential HOAs

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

One of the most controversial battles in residential HOAs and Condos centers on rental restrictions. This blog analyzes the arguments for and against rental restrictions in HOAs, and why the ratio of tenants to owners in Associations has become a hot button issue.

The argument against rental restrictions

Like many Americans, I have owned homes in HOA-free neighborhoods, and I lived in these homes as my primary residence. However, when employment opportunities took my family to another state in the midst of the recent real estate bust, we found ourselves unable to sell our home of 14 years. Fortunately, we were able to lease the home to another family for about a year and half, until the market improved, when we were able to sell. I don’t know what we would have done if we had been forced to keep the house vacant due to rental restrictions that are often imposed by HOAs.

A vacant house or condominium presents financial challenges – hiring someone to maintain the yard and periodically check on the property; winterizing in cold climates; keeping the house cool and mold-free in warm, humid climates; prevention of vandalism and squatting; and increased property insurance rates.  Renting the home covers most if not all of the carrying costs, allows owners to deduct some of their expenses from income taxes, and, if the tenant is properly vetted, keeps the property relatively well maintained.

But what if your HOA restricts rentals in your community to just 5% of homes? One woman in a Pennsylvania HOA is now challenging her Board because, as explained in the story linked below, the Board of Freedom Woods HOA, a community of 275 homes, has enacted that rather draconian rental restriction without a vote of its membership. The Association attorney claims the Board has the authority to enact these restrictions under the “business judgment rule,” however now that the HOA has been challenged, he is also recommending an amendment of the Declaration. (CC&Rs)

Aside from the issue that the Board may have overstepped its boundaries by unilaterally creating rental restrictions, when a formal amendment is most likely required, there are larger considerations.

What about the property rights of individuals to rent their homes? In HOAs, that right is simply not guaranteed. It is very common for HOA and condo associations to cap the percentage of units rented to 20-30%, but, as this example illustrates, the restrictions can lead to enforcement of any arbitrary ratio decided by the Association, including an outright ban.

Why would owners want to discourage rentals in HOAs?

The flip side of the argument in favor of restricting rentals is that when the number of rentals exceeds a certain ratio (currently not more than 50% for FHA), many buyers cannot qualify for financing, thereby reducing the marketability of homes. And then there are the somewhat debatable arguments that too many rental properties result in a less stable neighborhood with a transient population, and that properties tend to be less well maintained by renters than owners. All of these factors are believe to drive property values lower.

Additionally, let’s consider why HOA and especially Condo and Townhouse communities tend to evolve toward a relatively high percentage of rentals, when compared to HOA-free neighborhoods.

During the recent economic downturn, many owners became reluctant landlords. But very few non-HOA neighborhoods changed from primarily resident-owners to tenants with absentee investor-landlords. For the most part, people who rented their single-family homes were those that had no other viable economic alternative.

On the other hand, a significant number of HOA buyers never intend to live in their units. It is common for investors to purchase multiple properties within the same community, particularly in locations that are in high demand, gaining voting rights for each unit. In short, they acquire a significant share of the corporate HOA, in order to obtain greater control over the community. The more they can affect the direction of the Board (often serving on the Board) the more control they have over variables that affect their profit potential.

Typically, investors buy units at low prices, hoping to sell later at a profit, and generating rental income during the holding period. Sometimes they buy early in the process to take advantage of price incentives. Often they will purchase in a depressed market, or in transitional communities – where owners are moving to newer homes or more desirable locations. HOAs or Condos that occupy valuable land are particularly attractive to investors or developers. Once they purchase several units, investors can entice or pressure existing owners to sell to them, sometimes at a low price. Over time, a few investors can acquire a majority of units, perhaps even enough to stage a hostile takeover by voting to dissolve the Association. After dissolution, investors are free to redevelop and convert to different, more profitable residential or commercial uses.

Of course, that is exactly what we see happening in HOAs, and especially condominiums. Notably, in the state of Florida, investors can vote for dissolution with an 80% voting interest. So it is little wonder that HOA owners fear the increased presence of tenants in their communities.

A new kind of block busting?

Investor influx and takeovers are rarely seen in HOA-free neighborhoods, where owners cannot accumulate multiple votes within the voting jurisdiction. There is no corporate Board, and votes at the municipal and county level are allocated one per resident rather than based upon shares of property owned. In other words, there is no inherent advantage to acquiring and holding onto multiple homes within a defined geographic neighborhood.

A review of history prior to passage of the Fair Housing Act in 1968 calls to mind the once-profitable practice of block busting. Although economic circumstances and owner fears are somewhat different nowadays, it certainly appears that real estate investors and developers have seized upon a similarly profitable but onerous process in HOAs.

The controversial decision in your HOA

No matter which side of the issue you favor, if you are part of the voting minority, you must abide by whatever the majority decides. If most of the owners are full-time residents, the Board may easily convince them to restrict rentals, with the consequence of limiting owner rights in the future.

But keep in mind that sometimes a minority of individual owners is the voting “majority.” If a few individuals just so happen to own multiple properties, they control the vote. And if most of the properties they own happen to be rentals, then they will most likely favor lax restrictions that could lead owners to migrating out of the HOA, and making the community vulnerable to decline and investor takeover.

Definitely a quandary.