Category Archives: Horror Stories

PR2 HOA reaches confidential settlement w/City House, Frisco, TX

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

Several weeks ago, I told you about a pending legal dispute between Plantation Resort 2 HOA vs. City House, a non-profit organization that assists homeless youths. Several months ago, City House purchased and remodeled a 5-bedroom home in PR2 HOA, for use as transitional living for young adults in need of a home. Shortly after the purchase, PR2 notified City House that it would not be permitted to use the home as intended, citing violation of its Restrictive Covenants.

Earlier this week, WFAA Channel 8 was notified that a confidential, out-of-court settlement has been reached. The video and transcript is linked below.

The dispute centered on PR2 HOA’s restrictions. The attorney for the HOA, Chad Robinson, had argued that the proposed use of the residence City House now owns – as transitional living for up to 8 young women that would otherwise be homeless – does not fall within their definition of “single family use.”  Monica Velazquez, attorney for City House, has maintained that “single family use” pertains to how the property is used, not the people who live there. City House planned to use the residence to meet basic housing needs of its residents, all of whom work and attend school, but share expenses for rent, utilities and meals.  The dispute was headed for court, where a judge would decide the matter.

But, in typical HOA fashion, a legal settlement has been reached, complete with a sealed file and a gag order. Rob Scichili of City House states that they have decided not to pursue the expense of litigation and to instead move away from PR2 HOA, where they are clearly unwelcome anyway.

Sound familiar? Ah, yes, the old HOA playbook: “We have rules here, and if you don’t like them, MOVE.” The HOA gets its way once again. Of course, with a confidential settlement, the public will never know the details of what was discussed by the parties involved. And that’s just the way the HOA likes it. I certainly hope that City House was at least able to recover its closing costs, remodeling costs, and relocation expenses.

Watching the video report made my blood boil. The arrogance of the two neighbors interviewed, with their not-in-my-back-yard attitude, was nothing short of outrageous, in my opinion.

Do all PR2 residents share these NIMBY views? Probably not, but they will all have to pay for the attorney fees and the legal settlement. They will all have to live with negative publicity for their HOA. Hard to say what effect that might have on their property values.

It seems like we publish at least one blog on NAW each week, featuring yet another story of HOA discrimination, harassment, or bullying. Talk about a huge deterrent for a buyer (or tenant) to living under the HOA regime. Anyone who cares about social justice, fair play, kindness, or compassion will be sorely disappointed under corporate governance by CC&Rs.

(link to WFAA Channel 8 news report on legal settlement)

The previous blogs can be found

Here http://neighborsatwar.com/2014/10/texas-judge-decide-meaning-family-hoa/

and here http://neighborsatwar.com/2014/11/judge-rules-frisco-city-house-can-stay-hoa-civil-case-pending/

HUD’s Push to Privatize Public Housing Parallels Rise of HOA Land

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

Although not widely reported in the news, Federal and local governments, working with private investors, have created a yet another privatization plan to “save” Affordable Housing in America. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has begun a pilot program known as Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD), which they claim promises to preserve our dwindling, aging stock of Public Housing, much of it constructed in the 1960s and 1970s.

Although affordable housing provides a safety net to over 2 million low-income Americans, it has become politically unpopular in Congress, and Federal funding has dropped significantly over the last 2 decades. Insufficient appropriations to local housing authorities has, in turn, led to deterioration of aging structures, with the loss of over 300,000 HUD units. One recent study estimates an additional $26 million is needed to adequately preserve existing Public Housing infrastructure. Proponents of RAD  (HUD and a group of interested Developers) claim that private capital funding is necessary to preserve the remaining 1.2 million affordable units.

Adopted in 2012, HUD seeks to privatize up to 60,000 existing affordable housing units through 2015. Under RAD, local government housing authorities can now leverage equity in aging multifamily properties to obtain private mortgage funding from investors. You read that right – in an effort to fund expensive repairs and remodeling as a result of years of deferred maintenance from lack of public funding, the government is now willing to allow local governments to take out the equivalent of private home equity loans on Public Housing.

RAD also provides long term rent subsidy contracts to owners to cover the difference between actual operating costs and the amount of subsidized rent paid by low-income tenants. But the local housing authority is not required to maintain public ownership. Certain deals financed through the Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program will transfer ownership from local governments to private, for-profit owners, while also providing tax breaks for private developers.

Note the parallel to HOA-Land: HOAs are supply-side driven by local governments seeking ways to increase property tax revenue through development of private communities. The rise of HOAs is a direct result of underfunded local governments, state-imposed caps on tax increases, and reduction in Federal funding.  Private developer-controlled HOAs, first regarded by local government leaders as saviors, are now seen as indispensable Cash Cows.

Similar Fundamental Flaws

But, in addition to strikingly parallel motivating factors that led to the proliferation of HOAs, the RAD pilot program contains several fundamental flaws.

First, skeptics, myself included, envision that investors will simply cherry-pick the most profitable projects in prime locations. Investors are in business to make a profit, first and foremost. Properties in less desirable locations, or in greater need of renovation, would be least likely to attract private investment.

Second, as currently written, with significant input from Developers and Real Estate Investors, RAD only guarantees Federal subsidy funding of half of all affordable units, unless those units are reserved for elderly or disabled tenants. Critics say that will either lead investors to favor elderly and disabled tenants over families with children, or result in a net loss in affordability of 50% of existing units, as existing tenant agreements expire. The unfunded units are likely to end up with either minimally affordable rates or market-rate rents. Thousands of tenants are likely to be displaced.

Third, because RAD is essentially an equity line of credit for taxpayer subsidized housing, the risk of foreclosure is very real. There are no loan guarantees provided by either FHA or HUD. So if the Federal government shuts down again, as it has in the past, and stops the flow of monthly subsidy checks to the owners, defaults could occur. If the property is not properly managed, and falls into financial distress, it may either be reacquired by HUD – on the taxpayer’s dime  – or acquired by a third-party private bank or owner. That would terminate the subsidy contract and leave the door open for the new investor to convert the property to a market-based or high-end rental property, or possibly even luxury condominiums or commercial property.

Fourth, RAD relies heavily on HUD’s duty to enforce its standards and regulations. But as an executive branch agency, political considerations typically lead to weak enforcement of toothless regulations. HUD has a history of inconsistent enforcement of its own regulations. Additionally, tenant advocates are very concerned about the lack of Constitutional protections that result from private contracts affecting residents.

Sound familiar?

I can say with confidence that the critics are right to be skeptical of privatizing Public Housing.  As we see with the proliferation of HOAs, Developers and real estate investors do cherry pick prime properties, then seek to convert them to higher-profit use, displacing thousands of owners and tenants alike.

Private management of HOAs has resulted in fiscal distress and failure for many communities. The only reason more HOAs have not defaulted is because they are able to assess the owners as needed, and confiscate homes through foreclosure for non-payment of those assessments. Low-income tenants cannot be assessed to make up for a budget shortfall, so poor fiscal management will certainly result in foreclosures in times of economic stress.

CAI has convinced the majority of our Courts that HOAs are private corporations and not state actors subject to Constitutional constraints. States generally fail to adequately enforce HOA regulations, even where regulatory executive-level agencies exist. HOA legislation is scoffed at by corporate interests and merely provides the illusion of consumer protection.

RAD is only an experiment at this point. But so were HOAs before 1973.

References for more information:

Risks vs. Rewards: Inside HUD’s Favorite New Program

http://nextcity.org/daily/entry/public-housing-privatized-hud-rad-section-8

Private Funding, Public Housing: The Devil in the Details

http://www.vjspl.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/2.20.14-FINAL-LAYOUT-Private-Funding-Public-Housing_Smetak.pdf

ULI Promotes Urbanization, While Developers Prefer Rental Properties To Condos

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

Members of a recent Urban Land Institute (ULI) panel are reporting high demand for urban housing, both within existing city cores and in densely populated “instant cities” (HOAs), created by developers in suburban locations near mass transit.

The attached article highlights how the major players in American housing policy and the real estate industry are not all on the same page.

Housing policy makers still push home ownership as the endgame, while NAR and CAI lobby Congress to pass FHFA proposals to relax mortgage standards. Meanwhile, developers and investors are shying away from less profitable, more risky condominiums, and engaging in new construction and redevelopment for the rental market.

Housing is becoming less affordable, across the board, as cities become more and more gentrified. If left unchecked, the majority of Americans will left with few housing choices: rent for the long-term in an apartment community, or buy or rent a single family home in a private, corporate-governed HOA.

(link to Urban Land Magazine: Changing Face of Residential)

(link to Urban Land Institute – mission and priorities)

 

“You Saved My Life!”

guest blog by Nila Ridings

“Hey, Nila! How are you?” “Great, how are you?” “I’m great, too. I’m buying a condo!!!”

I’m not sure if my heart stopped or just skipped several beats. Janice said my face instantly drained of color and she thought I was going to faint. I remember feeling frozen in place and my mouth suddenly became as dry as a California river bed.

“Janice! You can’t do that!!!!!” I blurted out as she was bringing me a cup of water. Janice was planning to buy a condo because she didn’t want to mow grass or shovel snow any longer. I told her to hire that work out. And proceeded to educate her with my arsenal of information about HOA and condo living. She sent the Realtor a text message cancelling their Saturday morning appointment. The Realtor responded by questioning if there was a scheduling conflict. Janice wrote back, “No, I don’t want to buy anything with an HOA!”

Janice walked out from behind the cash register and gave me a big hug while telling me I had saved her life. I refused her offer to buy my groceries in exchange for “saving her life.” She literally was going to sign a contract for a condo in less than forty-eight hours.

Janice is the classic candidate for HOA abuse. She’s getting a divorce, over sixty, paying cash, and seeking maintenance-free living. Our loyal readers know just the thoughts of her buying that condo makes the board members salivate. Like lions on a fresh piece of raw meat they were hunkered down just waiting for her arrival.

Talk about timing! Today, I was in the right place at the right time. I’m so thankful another innocent person is not going to walk into the hell of HOA living. Education is a powerful thing!

Tragic Loss Of Personal Rights

On this blog we rant and rave about the alarming loss of Constitutional rights in our covenant controlled communities. 65 million people have moved into these neighborhoods having no idea how arbitrary and illegal these petty dictatorships can be.

In tonight’s blog and link I’m going to stray way, way over the line and suggest that anyone concerned about the dramatic loss of our 240 year old Constitutional Republic watch a documentary that was published on YouTube a year ago.

As a lifelong journalist, I’m not much of an alarmist. Yes, I watch and read material from the left and the right, the liberal media and the conservative. And I am usually thoughtful as I mull it all over. But I’ve always been more of an observer than an activist.

That being said, somehow I missed the documentary linked below. It pulled material from FOX News, CBS, ABC and various liberal and conservative commentators and sources. It looks at the loss of personal rights over the past ten years. In the name of terrorism a massive bureaucracy has emerged which is doing things that would have been incomprehensible fifteen or twenty years ago. Technology has essentially made privacy and personal rights obsolete.

Be forewarned, if you’re timid this may cost you a few hours of sleep.

(link to documentary on government overreach)