Category Archives: Horror Stories

Published: More Poor Advice and Propaganda

by guest blogger Nila Ridings

Every now and then some “advice” appears on the internet about buying in an HOA. And quite honestly some of it gives me a massive headache like this one. To me, this is nothing more than someone with so little HOA knowledge they should be embarrassed to publish it. I’m willing to step up and present the brutally honest truth. I think it’s only fair and right to do so.

Are you considering moving into a housing development that has a homeowner’s association? Here are eight things to consider first, according to HOA-USA, an organization that supposedly educates people about homeowners associations.

1) Be sure to do background research on the homeowner’s association.

The HOA can tell you anything, including giving you falsified documents for accounting. When I tried to do “background research” the HOA office told me no records were available to potential buyers. They were for members eyes only; proprietary information, you know. Unless a homeowner decided to “go for broke” and sue the HOA there are no records at the courthouse. Only liens and lawsuits filed for delinquent dues. The City has lockjaw. Real estate agents disclose just enough to keep from losing their licenses. Depending on what homeowners you talk to it could be a board member who says “come on in, it’s a great place.” Perhaps posting a note on the bulletin board at the closest grocery store to the HOA would be the best chance to get the truth?

2) Know who is in control. Most of the time, the homeowner’s association is a non-profit corporation that is governed by a board of directors. Only 20 percent of associations hire a professional management company to handle day-to-day operations.

This one makes me choke. With all the stories in the news of corrupt property managers, who would trust any of them? Board members come and go like jets at the gates during the holiday season. The entire board could have changed since you signed on the dotted line and before you unpack your first box of dishes. Bottom line is: THERE IS NO WAY TO KNOW WHO IS IN CONTROL BECAUSE SO MANY HOAs ARE OUT OF CONTROL WITH BOARD MEMBERS DRUNK ON THEIR NEWLY ACQUIRED POWER!

3) Be sure to read the homeowner’s association’s governing documents before making an offer on a residence.

Reading the CC&R’s is a good idea before making an offer IF you can get a copy of them from the county records. In the majority of cases buyers have not seen the CC&Rs until they’re presented by the title company at the time of closing. Lest you forget, boards don’t always follow their own rules and many make up new ones as they stumble along. Where do you go to get the rules that were fabricated while the ink was drying on the contract you just signed?

4) Review the financial records of the homeowner’s association. Make sure there is an adequate reserve fund for projects and repairs that could come up in the future.

Laughable. All across America tens of thousands of homeowners are fighting and feuding and suing HOAs to see financial records. But Joe Shmo off the street is going to just waltz in and pick up a copy of the financials? Again, proprietary information. Reserve funds? What the heck are those? You may be shown those figures on some records, but by the time you get your U-Haul trailer unloaded those figures could be wildly different and spent on who-knows-what. Massive numbers of HOAs are operating without reserve funds or severely inadequate reserves.

5) Know how much the monthly homeowners association fees are.

Dues are not etched in granite. Buyers are shocked when the $50 dues they were promised at closing suddenly jump to $485. Not to mention special assessments that can take place at the whim of the board of directors. When I purchased my home I was shown an HOA annual report by the seller that said my dues would go down significantly after the “stucco program” was completed in 2009. No mention that the “stucco program” could and would be canceled and the dues would go up by more than $60 per month over seven years.

6) Remember that HOA laws vary by state and can be complicated. It is better to be educated about the laws than become involved in an expensive lawsuit.

Educated about the HOA laws? What laws? Very few states have any laws that govern HOAs. And plenty of HOAs completely ignore the few laws that are on the books. Why? Because they know that in order for you to enforce a law you’ll have to spend mega bucks on an attorney while the HOA uses your dues to pay an attorney to keep you from exercising your rights. I spent nearly ten thousand dollars to see financial records only to have the board president tell the judge the HOA had no records! And a year later, she and another board member were caught shredding records.

7) Remember that the HOA board has the authority to assess fines and restrict access to services. HOA boards can also place liens and foreclose on properties.

THIS IS THE MOST TRUTHFUL THING LISTED!!! And it should be the one that makes you jump in your car and bust through the gate to get out of the community while you still can!

8) Know that if you purchase in a community that has HOA issues, you do have options: you can accept the issues, make things better by becoming involved, file a lawsuit, or move.

“Accept the issues” means this: You are willing to be bullied, threatened, ridiculed, shunned, harassed, and suffer mercilessly at the hands of the HOA Nazis. Of all the HOA stories I’ve heard there is only ONE person I recall who has actually made things better. He quit his full-time job, took a major cut in pay and benefits, works 24/7 as the property manager, attends HOA legal enrichment classes, works closely with his city government and State Legislators, and does media interviews to educate others. Maybe one in five million people living in an HOA are willing to do that! File the lawsuit is music to the HOA’s ears. They all seem to love lawsuits! Perhaps that’s because the board members aren’t personally liable for the expense of defense? They use your dues money or the HOA insurance company brings in its team of attorneys to try and bankrupt you in a legal battle. File a lawsuit ONLY when you have well-documented records, photos, witnesses, and a really sharp attorney who is NOT affiliated with the CAI. And locating such an attorney is like trying to find the sunglasses you dropped into the ocean over the side of your boat. MOVE! That word has been used by every HOA in the country whenever someone stands up to speak against the de facto government.

I know this blog is long. But I hope by reading it you’ve learned that this type of ‘guidance’ from ‘industry’ websites is short on facts and long on superficial content.

The most important facts a buyer should know is: You are signing away your US Constitutional Rights. You are becoming business partners with every one of your new neighbors in a non-profit corporation. You’re using your personal bank account to pay for every single thing the board members do (lawsuits, bullying, malicious intent, whatever). The two most important words to ingrain in your brain about HOAs and condo associations are:

Buyer Beware!

(click here for more useless industry information)

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HOA Chases You Into The Grave!

guest blog by Nila Ridings

The biggest beef of living in an HOA or Condo Association is: THEY DON’T PERFORM THE MAINTENANCE YOU PAY FOR! That’s right. You pay and pay only to hear one excuse after another as to why they aren’t going to perform the work. And my own HOA experience has proven most of the work is sloppy and performed by people who don’t know which end of the hammer to use.

So, many homeowners think withholding dues is the only option to get the HOA’s attention. Keep in mind the CC&Rs say you have to pay whether or not services are rendered. So, expect the legal battle from the ready and willing attorneys who could care less about the conditions under which you are living. His/her only focus is on their bank accounts!

The condo owner and her mother (in the story linked below) are wondering if they can set up a trust to avoid the dues collection Nazis. The answer is: NO. You cannot escape paying the HOA by taking your last breath.

When I see my neighbors’ names in the obits I always think, “Well, another one had to die to get out of here!” If they owe dues you can bet the HOA is going after their estate….with one exception… my previous board president who managed to not have any accountability for TEN MILLION DOLLARS in HOA funds that vanished. No action was taken to stop his estate from settling.

(click here for related LA Times story)

 

 

What Were They Thinking?!?

Las Vegas is the nation’s home for Organized Crime posing as Homeowners Associations, with more than two dozen felony guilty pleas and nearly a dozen federal criminal trials pending. Las Vegas may have more Homeowners Associations than any other metropolitan city. Las Vegas has so many HOA horror stories that writing a blog like this is almost effortless. Home buyers everywhere are beginning to tell their Realtors, “Don’t show me anything in an HOA!”

Now, here comes a major real estate company saying it’s going into the HOA management business! Hard to believe, but Shelter Realty, Inc. says it’s ‘pleased’ to announce that it’s creating a sister company which will provide management services for Homeowners Associations.

Realtors make their living by being respectable. Realtors live or die on their reputations and client referrals. Of course there are plenty of people living in Nevada Homeowners Associations. But HOA management is a stenchy business with neck-deep corruption. For a realty company to suddenly say it’s going to clean up HOA mismanagement and corruption is beyond laughable.

I’ll have to say it again.

What were they thinking?

(click here for Digital Journal story)

http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/1638433

 

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.

Excellent Advice!

guest blog by Nila Ridings

“At any given time there’s always a certain percentage of Americans looking to buy a house, and if you’re one of them we warn you: if you want a single-family home (as opposed to a condominium or townhouse where you and your neighbors share ownership of walls, roofs and other structures) avoid any real-estate purchase that requires you to join a homeowners’ association, or HOA.” ~Jennifer Abel

I’ll add one sentence. Do not buy a townhouse or condo or Co-op either!

(click here for Consumer Affairs story)