Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Dissolving a Homeowners Association III > Politics > Stories > Golden > YourHub.com
Here we are on part three, and the author still hasn't given much detail. Here's how it ends, with a request that we "stay tuned."

His attorney told him that if he could bring him in-depth details concerning what the homeowner had just recited to him (details about possible HOA wrongdoings that appeared to the attorney to be the worst of which he had made notes about), such as HOA documents, audio and/or video tape recordings, etc (what is commonly known as "hard evidence"), the attorney would "go to court" with it. That is, file a lawsuit against the homeowner's HOA which might eventually lead to dissolving it (no, intelligent and rational readers, it is not easy to dissolve HOAs in a state that has legislatively mandated them - as the state of Colorado's legislators and Governor did in 1992, and then made worse in 2005 and 2006 by adding amendments to, and deleting portions of, those laws). In fact, it might be easier for HOA homeowner advocates and HOA homeowners to just gather signatures on petitions to repeal all HOA laws for your state. But that's another "story" for another time. As the HOA homeowner left his attorney's office, he was already planning how he he would get the "hard evidence" his attorney needed to start the ball rolling towards the goal of dissolving his HOA.

Stay tuned.....


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