http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/business/real-estate-news/article41217018.html
Evan McKenzie on the rise of private urban governance and the law of homeowner and condominium associations. Contact me at ecmlaw@gmail.com
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
When residents clash with homeowner associations, some states step in
http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/news/business/real-estate-news/article41217018.html
Wednesday, November 04, 2015
SO MUCH FOR THE DEATH OF SPRAWL: AMERICA'S EXURBS ARE BOOMING
"It’s time to put an end to the urban legend of the impending death of America’s suburbs. With the aging of the millennial generation, and growing interest from minorities and immigrants, these communities are getting a fresh infusion of residents looking for child-friendly, affordable, lower-density living."
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
New Jersey: More accountability for HOAs?
- Homeowners associations to provide a copy of homeowners’ association insurance policies, which are needed to start personal home insurance claims processes. The association member would have to request the copy and it would have to be sent via email within 24 hours, or hard copy within 48 hours.
- Homeowners associations to offer a 24-hour emergency phone number for members.
- Homeowners associations to provide information including contact numbers for board members, as well as the most recent budget and all insurance information.
Is that what you call R-E-S-P-E-C-T?
Monday, October 26, 2015
State condo ombudsperson offices becoming "a thing"
http://www.columbian.com/news/2015/oct/25/states-stepping-in-to-help-resolve-hoa-conflicts/
Monday, October 19, 2015
Active duty sailor loses home to unpaid HOA fees
"JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The home Mark Bryant purchased in 2006 is modest but he loves it. "I worked real hard for my house," he said. While stationed at Mayport, the gunner's mate purchased the house in the Creekside subdivision with hopes of returning to Jacksonville when he retires. "Now it is being taken away from me due to a wrongful foreclosure," he said. Bryant is still active duty in the Navy, stationed in Virginia. He lost his home because of $750 in unpaid homeowners association fees. "It has been stressful," said Bryant. How did this happen? His documents show he was stationed in Bahrain during the two years the fees went unpaid -- 2012-2014. Bryant said he was never notified. Court records show an unnamed woman was served in Virginia at a previous address. Bryant said the unnamed woman in the record is not his ex-wife. "When I got back from deployment October 2014," said Bryant, "there was an eviction notice on the property, and that is the first time me actually knowing." The HOA fees went from $750, but when you add interests, late fees, court costs, attorneys fees, it jumped to $4,734.03. The property was foreclosed and sold for $10,300."
http://www.firstcoastnews.com/story/news/local/consumer/on-your-side/2015/10/16/i-was-in-bahrain-and-never-got-a-notice/74078256/
Concord (VA) homeowners struggle to get roads paved
"The Holiday Forest subdivision in Concord has been fighting a 40-year battle to get all of the neighborhood’s roads paved."
Yes--but the state doesn't want to do it because they are private roads. The picture concerning who is responsible for the hefty price tag now is complicated:
"A 1975 letter from VDOT to the then county administrator stated “I was amazed to find a number of streets constructed in a rather haphazard manner with apparently no regard for proper drainage design.” To pay for maintenance of the unpaved roads, the homeowners’ association collects $100 per house or $90 from an undeveloped lot. Goldman said they have an annual budget of $15,000 to $17,000 to maintain the roads. If the association were to raise rates, homeowners can cancel their membership in the association, as stated in association’s by-laws. The by-laws also state the association will dissolve in 2025, he said. When the subdivision was created in the 1970s, the old subdivision ordinance stated if all new lots were five acres or more, all roads within the subdivision were privately maintained and not maintained by VDOT. The subdivision was developed by Holiday Forest Corporation. “Also over the years, the homeowners have complained about the roads and decided they would rather have state maintained (roads),” said Campbell County Community Development Director Paul Harvey. About half of the roads in Holiday Forest have been taken over by VDOT but five miles still remain unpaved and under the care of the property owners’ association."
http://www.newsadvance.com/news/local/concord-homeowners-struggle-to-get-roads-paved/article_0a4905df-0318-5aaa-8ce8-0ca284d65a6f.html
Monday, October 12, 2015
As flood recedes, skinflint South Carolina faces huge infrastructure tab, limited federal aid
Halloween yard displays go over the top
http://www.complex.com/pop-culture/2015/10/graphic-halloween-decorations-too-real?utm_source=fijifrost%20facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=cmcm&utm_content=inf_20_19_2
Sunday, October 11, 2015
Private dams = bad infrastructure
http://www.npr.org/2015/10/11/447181629/aging-and-underfunded-americas-dam-safety-problem-in-4-charts utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=npr&utm_term=nprnews&utm_content=2036
Condo owners to dump Trump
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/florda-condo-owners-trump
Saturday, October 10, 2015
Why I've been off the air
At the same time, through a chain of unusual circumstances I ended up teaching an intensive summer course on urban politics at UIC. Then on the heels of that, I went to Australia for a week to give the keynote address at a conference on condominium housing (which they call "strata title"). This was a fantastic conference in an amazing country, but by the time I returned I was behind in my work. To add the final straw, I was made head of the Political Science Department at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and I've been on the learning curve with those additional responsibilities, in addition to teaching two Fall courses with a total of 172 students.
All three of my children started at new universities--two as freshmen and one as a graduate student--and that meant move-outs and move-ins. I certainly logged some travel miles--this summer I had trips to Israel, Australia, Phoenix (driving back with my oldest son in a 1997 Nissan Pathfinder with 200,000 miles and no air conditioning, in July), Los Angeles, and Springfield, IL.
So that is why I haven't been able to stay current with this blog--but I hope people will continue to send me items, because I'm back on the air.
Is living in a steel box the future of housing?
http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/oct/09/living-steel-box-shipping-containers-future-housing
Friday, October 09, 2015
South Carolina: HOAs do a terrible job maintaining dams, causing massive flooding
First up: the media has reported extensively on the massive flooding in South Carolina. One angle hasn't been reported much, even though it is at the heart of the problem. South Carolina is one of these states where they brag about how low their taxes are and how useless government is. But the reason the flooding is so bad is...privatization. They keep taxes low by not spending much public money on maintaining infrastructure like, oh...dams, for instance. Instead they trust developers to build them, and homeowners' associations to maintain them. And surprise, surprise! Many HOAs are doing a perfectly terrible job of maintaining the earthen dams that keep water from wrecking other people's neighborhoods.
http://www.thestate.com/news/local/article38043186.html
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Feds fighting to keep Las Vegas HOA fraud files secret
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Man Who Created The Pink Plastic Lawn Flamingo Dies : The Two-Way : NPR
"If you've got a plastic pink flamingo on your lawn, give it a pat on the back. The man who designed the lawn art, Donald Featherstone, has died. He was 79."
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That's quite a legacy. The symbol of the homeowners' rights movements, too.
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Dying woman who turned her yard into a giant SANDBOX so she didn't have to mow the lawn threatened with jail if she does not clean it up
Georgianna Reid has lived in her home in Brookside, Kansas City, for more than 33 years, but covered the front of the house with 80 tonnes of sand three years ago, in an operation that cost her $4,000.
'I would say I'm putting in the largest litter box in the world,' said Reid of her unusual approach to landscaping last year.
But the local council and her neighbors don't see it as the beach-like oasis Reid does/Reid received a letter from the city that said she has 10 days to remove the sand from her yard or she will face up to 180 days in jail and a $1,000 fine, KSHB reported.'I called the city, I asked permission, not once but twice,' Reid told the network.She said she gave the yard a facelift because she had grown tired of mowing and watering it."
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3136072/Dying-woman-turned-yard-giant-SANDBOX-didn-t-mow-lawn-threatened-jail-does-not-clean-up.html#ixzz3dvDOX57P
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3136072/Dying-woman-turned-yard-giant-SANDBOX-didn-t-mow-lawn-threatened-jail-does-not-clean-up.html#ixzz3dvDOX57P Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook"
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She says she'll take the sand out of the yard as ordered, but she's going to replace it with asphalt. Prepare for Round Two...
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Israel conference on residential private governmnet
Here are a few notes: Insolvency of condominium associations is a significant problem in other nations--it isn't just a US problem. And owners are ultimately liable for the debts of their associations in other nations, not just the US. Most US condo and HOA owners don't know they are potentially on the hook for their associations debts, by the way. In Spain, everybody has to rotate as a BOD member, like it or not.
http://gazit-globe.idc.ac.il/en/announcements/international-conference-private-communities-and-urban-governance-theoretical-and-c
Monday, June 08, 2015
How the rise of gated spaces like swimming pools can quietly perpetuate racial tension - The Washington Post
This horrible McKinney, Texas, incident, with a cop brutalizing and menacing black kids while white people saunter around and manhandle the teenagers themselves, is instructive. It is no accident that it happened in an HOA, nor was it an accident that Trayvon Martin was shot to death by "neighborhood watch volunteer" George Zimmerman in an HOA. These associations first became popular in the US as a way to enforce contractual bans on selling homes to African-Americans. And after Brown v. Board of Education in 1954 banned separate but equal public accommodations, private swimming pools became available (for only the white residents) in your local HOA. The boom in HOAs began in the years immediately following the Brown decision, and one factor was that the real estate industry decided this was a way they could continue making money peddling racial segregation. There were other factors, but segregation was, and still is, one of the reasons so many white people want to live in private and especially gated communities.
"As Yoni Appelbaum points out over at The Atlantic, this context is particularly freighted: For decades, swimming pools in America have been sites of racial exclusion. Many of the fights to desegregate communities and public resources in the 1950s were waged over access to swimming pools. And the way they're used to this day still reflects a sweeping trend — more subtle in its exclusion but no less pervasive — that arose from that era. As public resources were desegregated in American cities, communities increasingly found ways to privatize them. In McKinney on Saturday, the black teens were not using a public pool. They were swimming, rather, in the communal pool of a private community in the predominantly white part of town where civic resources like parks and pools are funded directly by homeowners."
Thursday, June 04, 2015
VT woman builds 60-foot by 24-foot 'screen' to block view of neighbor's home | Local News - WPTZ Home
This is a new one: fabric privacy screens for homes. It's only a matter of time before they come to Privatopia and join flagpoles, flags, swingsets, clothelines and treehouses as the latest battlefront between the HOA commissars and inmates.
'Naughty Neighbors' face HOA lawsuit in Parker County
So it turns out that a swingers club operating out of a 4000 square foot home in a gated community is a business, according to this HOA.
Wednesday, June 03, 2015
Vendors Flood Market with HOA Super-Lien Services | News
"Laws that give homeowners association debts "super lien" priority over all other claims have been a long-standing threat to servicers. But it wasn't until a pair of recent court rulings came out in favor of HOAs that industry vendors started to look at their existing data and technology to develop products for servicers to manage these risks. There are super lien laws on the books in 21 states, plus Washington, D.C. Historically, they've rarely been invoked, but when they are, the results can be devastating for mortgage debt holders. In a Nevada case ruled on last year, the first-lien mortgage holder lost its claim to an $885,000 debt because of $6,000 in delinquent HOA dues. "That gave everybody the awareness that this is not something that they should take lightly," said Ann Song, vice president of REO management for LRES, an industry vendor that recently launched HOA lien services for originators, servicers and investors...Vendors that have flooded the market with super lien-related products include Black Knight Financial Services, CoreLogic and LRES, as well as a partnership that incorporates services from MMREM and Equifax. The vendors all say their services can identify properties subject to super-lien laws and check for active HOA liens. LRES and MMREM will also help servicers negotiate HOA lien disputes. (The two vendors are both REO management companies, while LRES also has an appraisal services unit.)"
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Superlien statutes give HOA/condo association liens for unpaid assessments priority over the first mortgage, at least in some amount. They vary from state to state. The idea is to protect the association from having its entire lien wiped out when the bank forecloses on the first mortgage and there is nothing left over to pay the association for unpaid assessments prior to the foreclosure. The solvency of community associations hit the radar screen of policy makers since the crash of 2008. Foreclosures wrecked a lot of homeowners' lives and also left an enormous number of associations in terrible financial shape.
Tuesday, June 02, 2015
Many earthen dams on private property are behind on repairs | The Columbus Dispatch
"Almost 43 percent of the high-hazard earthen dams in Ohio are on private land — about 200 in all. They’ve been designated as such because if the dams fail, people who live in the water’s path likely will die. Like those owned by the state, private dams pose a serious threat in part because the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, the state agency that inspects dams, goes easy on dam owners. It lets some dams remain dangerous for decades as it tries to negotiate repairs. Owners also are to blame: They often are ignorant about dam safety and lack money for repairs. “I think people are not aware of the liability that comes with the dam. ... There’s potential for great disaster, and people don’t realize that,” said Hans Gottgens, a professor of environmental sciences at the University of Toledo who has studied dam failure."
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The condition of public infrastructure in this country is deplorable, and private infrastructure may be even worse. But we are doing a great job of blowing up infrastructure in other countries and then paying private contractors to rebuild it. So there's that. Thanks to Deborah for this link. By the way, take a look at this list of high speed rail miles of track by country and see where USA ranks. This is what happens when a country is run by people who think the only proper roles of government are to make war and to serve as a source of plunder for the rich.
Monday, June 01, 2015
How California Homeowners Are Dealing with Drought | Digital Trends
"Per the new regulations, watering lawns within 48 hours of “measurable” rainfall is a finable offense. Some people are forgoing their lawns all together, either following the State Water Resources Control Board’s urgings to let the die or finding creative solutions. Some are painting their lawns green. Others are ripping them up and putting in artificial turf (to the dismay of homeowners associations) or shrubs and plants that thrive in drought conditions (known as xeriscaping), thanks to rebates available in some areas."
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Maybe the political system's reflexive deference to HOA regulations has finally run out, along with the state California's water supply. After all these decades of state legislatures and courts acting like the whims of some long-gone developer and his lawyer are holy writ, it would be nice to see some recognition that private law-making is subordinate to public policy.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Franklin HOA settles suit after denying room for disabled kids
File this one in the "some people never learn" category:
"A Franklin homeowners association has agreed to pay $156,000 to parents who said they were unfairly barred from building a therapeutic space for their two children with Down syndrome. The specially designed sun room would have been a place for Charles and Melanie Hollis' young kids to play and receive physical therapy, but the Chestnut Bend Homeowners Association denied their request to construct it based on concerns about the way the addition would look, a 2012 federal lawsuit alleged. That, the lawsuit said, constituted discrimination and a violation of the Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal for agencies to turn down what are called "reasonable modifications" that make it possible for residents with disabilities to more fully enjoy their homes."
Homeowners sue Barrington Hills after tree dispute bars them from moving in - Barrington Courier-Review
"Homeowners have sued the village of Barrington Hills after being denied permission to move into their newly built mansion because of a dispute over the number of trees on the property. Najamul and Nausheen Hasan built a 9,200-square-foot estate on a five-acre lot they purchased in 2007, but they sued last week after they were recently denied an occupancy permit by the village. The Hasans claim in the suit that the village's tree ordinance — spelling out how builders must replace the trees that they remove during construction — is unconstitutional. They also say their civil rights are being violated, and that the matter is "of an emergency nature" because they have leased their residence in Hoffman Estates after being told by the village's building officer that they would be granted a temporary occupancy permit. The temporary permit for occupancy was later denied."
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This complicated dispute about the number and species of trees that the Hasans are supposed to plant, to replace the ones they cut down during construction, all started when the president of the HOA contacted the village of Barrington Hills. She says she "speaks for the trees." Remember the Lorax, from Dr. Seuss? That's what he said. One of my favorite stories, by the way--not to take sides in this Barrington Hills tree saga.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Foreclosure scam ordered to repay $11M to distressed homeowners | TheHill
"The lawyers behind a foreclosure scam were ordered Friday in federal court to repay more than $11 million that it took for vulnerable homeowners. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the state of Florida accused the scammers, led by the Hoffman Law Group, of tricking distressed homeowners into joining frivolous lawsuits that would supposedly provide foreclosure relief."
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After the housing market crashed in 2007-08, a whole lot of "foreclosure rescue" businesses were set up. Many of them were nothing more than fraud rings and they operated for years--with many still in business. It's a great example of how little our policy makers care about homeowners and how much they care about banks.
New law aims to lift artificial turf ban on HOA property | FOX5 San Diego – San Diego news, weather, traffic, sports from KSWB
"CHULA VISTA, Calif. — On the heels of new water regulations that start Monday across San Diego, one answer to California’s massive drought may come in the form of something fake. There’s a turf war brewing over a bill making its way to the State Senate. The bill would make it illegal for homeowners associations (HOAs) to prohibit fake turf."
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This has passed the Assembly. If it passes the Senate, I hope the Governor signs it this time.
HOA tows heart attack victim's car from neighborhood - News3LV
"Virginia says she also heard her car was towed because it was in the same spot for more than 72 hours. "Just because my mom doesn't drive her vehicle very often, doesn't give them the right to tow it," says Jason Lenderman, Virginia's son."
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Of course this story doesn't have all the facts, but this sounds like one of those all-too-common situations where the owner is outraged and the media coverage implies that the association is being unreasonable, but when all is said and done the association has the law on its side and they can do this is if they want to. So it's just a question of whether they want to put up with the bad press.
The Supreme Court Could Transfer A Lot Of Political Power Away From Cities | FiveThirtyEight
The conservative majority on the Supreme Court seems to have decided that they need to get their thumb on the scale of partisan politics. They have destroyed campaign finance regulation, they gutted the Voting Rights Act, and now they have two redistricting cases that could give the Republicans a huge advantage--which they just happen to need, because their voters are dying off. Coincidence? Sure.
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Las Vegas HOA takeover fraud ring sentencings
Man charged in $4.1 million condo fraud
Oh, Canada:
"A St. Catharines man has been charged with defrauding 13 Hamilton and Burlington condominium corporations of $4.1 million. Police say Brett Mackenzie Leahey, 45, acted as the owner/operator of Integrated Condominium Management, a property management firm responsible for servicing and managing the finances of 10 condominium corporations in Burlington and three in Hamilton."
Using Drones To Enforce HOA Violations
See the article below, in which I guess nobody knows whose drone is involved. But be aware that the CID industry, which is basically a whole lot of businesses who want to sell their services and products to HOAs and condo associations, is thinking about droning it up. Ward Lucas thinks so. See this article from HOA Institute, which I think is by attorney Clint Goodman:
"Since the spike in private ownership of remote-controlled drones, more of us are asking whether homeowners associations can (or should) be using drones to enforce HOA violations. There are mixed feelings about HOA drones. Some are worried about privacy. Others think their use will lead to abuse and “unreasonable enforcement” because it has too much of a “big brother” feel. Others believe that technology is supposed to make life easier and having drones for their HOA’s code enforcement will significantly reduce the time and expense traditional enforcement brings. Whatever your opinion is, when (not if) drone enforcement becomes a reality, associations need to be careful that the association uses them with prudence. Right now HOAs cannot use drones “commercially” without FAA approval. Whether enforcement drones in HOAs are considered “commercial use” depends on who is using them and how. For example, use of a drone is likely not “commercial” if it is privately owned by the President and used by the President or another director without pay. Conversely, hiring a company to use drones for code enforcement may cross the line, at least right now. If Amazon can get permission to do it, I have a feeling we will see the use of drones in the commercial context across the board very soon."
Homeowner’s association puts end to family’s ministry - The Newnan Times-Herald
This nice Christian family started a volunteer project to collect and distribute household items to needy families, and eventually they incorporated it as a not-for-profit. That's when the HOA struck:
“We started, literally, out of our garage, collecting items. We got a P.O. box, we rented a storage unit which filled up rather quickly,” he said. They have storage space at their church, Vineyard, for linens, a food pantry at Turin United Methodist, and mattresses and beds in the storage unit.
Everything else went into their garage. But not anymore. The Novaks were recently cited by their homeowner’s association for conducting a business out of their home.
The citation, issued April 9, said, “Please do not conduct a business out of your home.”
Exclusive: Brickell Key Woman Says Drone Spied On Her As She Breastfed « CBS Miami
"MIAMI (CBSMiami) — Imagine you’re in the privacy of your own home — possibly in a compromising position — and you turn around and see a drone just a few feet from you. A Brickell Key woman says that’s what happened to her while she was breastfeeding her child earlier this week inside the family’s 12th floor condo."
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I guess with this technology available now we are going to need new laws to protect us, and that's what is happening in Florida:
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Las Vegas HOA takeover fraudster sentenced
The message of this is obvious--HOAs and condo associations are fragile institutions that are totally dependent on the resources of their owners. By resources I mean money, time, loyalty, and expertise. With virtually no governmental oversight and most residents not paying attention, it is easy for associations to be taken over by groups of people who don't have the community's best interest in mind. Some are just petty neighborhood dictators, some are looking to engage in self-dealing to help themselves and their friends, and some are fraudsters.
http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/bribe-figure-avoids-prison-hoa-takeover-scheme#st_refDomain=t.co&st_refQuery=/MUnfZTwjSV
HOA insurer not obligated to defend suit against HOA board absent underlying liabiltiy claim, court rules
That may be changing if a recent Kentucky case is any indication. A Kentucky federal district court ruled an insurer had no duty to defend a claim under an HOA policy's directors and officers coverage, reasoning that D&O coverage is intended to shield corporate directors and officers for personal liability and not to protect the corporate entity itself.
Click here for a summary of the ruling in State Auto Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Highland Terrace Counsel of Co-Owners, Inc., 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59663 (W.D. Ky. May 7, 2015) by Traub Lieberman Straus & Shrewsberry LLP.
American condo buyer losing condo in Mexico due to liens
http://www.kpho.com/story/29096892/mexican-court-takes-away-arizona-womans-condo?autostart=false
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Two conversations about constitutional rights
http://www.scotusblog.com/2015/04/opinion-analysis-traffic-stops-cant-last-too-long-or-go-too-far-and-no-extra-dog-sniffs/
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
House Republicans want to do away with consumer protections for mobile home buyers
I just listened to (Vice) Presidential candidate Marco Rubio make the argument that Big Government regulation is the reason ordinary people are getting screwed by banks. If you can believe that, you can believe the Republicans have your best interests in mind, mobile home owners:
"The House will vote Tuesday to repeal consumer protections for low-income borrowers in rural America who have seen the promise of affordable housing turned into a financial sinkhole by a mobile home industry that makes pre-manufactured houses far more expensive to buy than they need to be.
Monday, April 13, 2015
HOA oversight bills die in Florida
Saturday, April 11, 2015
WTVC NewsChannel 9 :: News - Top Stories - Utah Homeowner Asked To Remove US Navy Flag From Home
Lucia Sandoval says she put the flag up to remember her husband, who is currently deployed with the U.S Navy. But shortly after the flag went up, she received a notice stating it was out of conformity with neighborhood standards.
"In a recent review of the community, it was brought to our attention that you may not be aware of one or more of the rules for the community," the letter from the HOA reads. "Your front yard had a flag displayed not in accordance with the accepted standards. Please remove the flag ASAP."
In the letter, the HOA cites community guidelines, which read, "Flags and flagpoles shall be uniformly placed and consistent in size and shape and shall not interfere with on site utilities."
Sandoval says she didn't understand how her flag violated any of those policies and is refusing to take it down.
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Another flag flap, this one in the Utah sector of Privatopia. Film at 10 on WTVC Channel 9.
Friday, April 10, 2015
The town fascism built
"Nestled in eastern Long Island is a sleepy little town called Yaphank where the streets have cozy names like Oak and Park, names that hide a dark past: they once bore signs like Hitler and Goebbels Streets.Yaphank, in the 1930s, appeared as a haven for Americans--most of them of German heritage--who sympathized with the causes of the Third Reich.
In fact, it was largely founded as a Nazi camp, one of several scattered across the U.S., where the children in the German American Bund (AKA American Nazis) could fish, swim, hunt and learn about things like eugenics."
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3033153/The-town-fascism-built-Inside-New-York-hamlet-home-pro-Nazi-camp-street-named-Hitler.html#ixzz3Wtt5bosL
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Thursday, April 09, 2015
Robert Meisner Says Condo/Homeowners Associations Beware: The Michigan Legislature Has Dealt You a Severe Blow
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/robert-meisner-says-condohomeowners-associations-beware-the-michigan-legislature-has-dealt-you-a-severe-blow-300056151.html
update: and here is another attorney's summary of the changes.
Wednesday, April 08, 2015
HOA wins--developer has to pay the electric bill
Collier Circuit Judge Hugh Hayes ruled that Glen Eagle, the development’s master association, must pay Lago Villaggio Homeowners Association $18,000, with 4.75 percent interest from March 18, 2014, and reimburse the HOA for its lawyer’s fees."
Monday, April 06, 2015
Judge rules owners can begin trying to take back property from receiver
Thanks to Ward Lucas for this link. Across the nation, failing condo projects have been placed in the hands of court appointed receivers who are supposed to make good decisions to get the projects back on their feet, if possible. Here is one story of a situation where the receiver and the owners are in major conflict, with allegations that the receiver isn't doing his job.
The Fossum Files--don't miss this!
And here is a brief summary of her detailed empirical analysis---
"This is an analysis of the unforeseen consequences of the City of Alexandria, Virginia privatizing many services that it has traditionally provided to its homeowners. Alexandria was first settled in the mid-1700s and over the years has been home to the likes of George Washington, Robert E. Lee, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Jim Morrison, lead singer of The Doors. Today, after three major annexations of land in 1915, 1930, and 1952, Alexandria now occupies 15.6 square miles directly across the Potomac River from the District of Columbia and is home to an estimated 142,000 people, making it one of the more densely populated cities in the United States.1 On a functional basis, however, Alexandria today is two separate “cities” of relatively equal physical size and population that differ markedly in community structure and political influence. In one of these “cities,” the average homeowner pays their taxes and receives all their services from City Hall. In the other “city,” the average homeowner pays their taxes, but receives only some of their services from City Hall."
Here are two links to the page, in case one doesn't work:
http://fossumfiles.org
Sunday, April 05, 2015
"Condos on the road back"
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20150404/article/150409874?p=1&tc=pg
Thursday, April 02, 2015
Nevada state legislator proposes to repeal all HOA and condo laws
http://www.scrippsmedia.com/ktnv/news/Nevada-lawmakers-aim-to-delegate-HOA-disputes-to-lower-level-298479291.html
You can read up on Hansen at Wikipedia. He's a piece of work. Former right wing radio talk show host and columnist. Here's a taste:
"In his columns, Hansen has written that the Oklahoma City bombing was a false flag operation orchestrated by the administration of President Clinton, that women do not belong in the United States Armed Forces, that President Obama is a "negro", that he owns and flies a Confederate battle flag, that gays are disproportionally prone to engaging in child abuse, that a "grossly disproportionate" number of crimes are committed by Latinos, and that the relationship between "Negroes and Democrats" is that of a "master-slave relationship with the benevolent master knowing what’s best for his simple minded darkies."
Wednesday, April 01, 2015
Mandatory water restrictions for California
http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/01/us/california-water-restrictions-drought/
Monday, March 30, 2015
Drones present opportunity, challenge for community associations - Chicago Tribune
Drones in the hands of condo and HOA boards? What could possibly go wrong?
"In the not-too-distant future, community associations could launch camera-equipped, unmanned aerial vehicles, also known as drones, for many routine tasks. They will be able to examine buildings for leaks and damage, check on the performances of contractors and find illegal barbecue grills on upper balconies."
TEPCO not paying for Fukushima cleanup
Saturday, March 28, 2015
Homeowners face HOA fines for children playing in driveway and on sidewalk
"Some Chula Vista homeowners contacted Team 10, furious that their homeowners association is fining them if their children are caught playing outside on the driveway or sidewalk. Under the Agave and Saguaro HOA's rules, there are no wheeled toys -- including, but not limited to, bicycles, scooters, rollerblades, skateboards or roller skates -- allowed to be ridden in the HOA's common areas. Common areas include driveways, sidewalks and streets in the complex. According to the property manager, it's for safety reasons, but resident Karen Deviolini said, "You're fined because you live in a place where kids can't be kids."
http://www.10news.com/news/investigations/chula-vista-homeowners-face-hoa-fines-for-children-playing-on-driveway-sidewalk
Thursday, March 26, 2015
Is suburban sprawl stifling the US economy?
http://www.vox.com/2015/3/26/8291889/suburban-sprawl-economy
What is the most private city in the world?
"The word “private” is derived from the ancient Greek word idiotes, which means somebody who does not participate in public life. In ancient Greece, private life was confined to the home; the public, democratic life of citizens took place in the polis or city, and in the agora or assembly. The contemporary gated community, which focuses on privatising the experience of home as much as possible, fits well within this classical definition of private. There are literally millions of people living in gated communities: they have become the model of choice in the many societies around the world that are subject to extreme wealth inequalities."
http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/mar/26/what-most-private-city-world
How Wall Street used swaps to get rich at the expense of cities
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2015/03/getting-rich-expense-cities.html#comments
And for the worst case scenario, consider Jefferson County, Alabama. After a series of swaps orchestrated by J. P. Morgan to pay for a new sewer system, they went bankrupt. Until Detroit, it was the largest local government bankruptcy in US history.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Condo requiring DNA samples of all pets so they can test their poop!
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Actually this nonsense has been going on for some time. Obviously people should clean up after their dogs, but somehow in my HOA-free neighborhood everybody nearly always does. Now there are companies peddling this silly service and of course all the costs end up falling on the owner of the miscreant dog. Increasingly life for the American middle class is one boondoggle after another--red light cameras, usurious loans, grifting cable TV companies, fake calls threatening IRS suits, and of course chiseling condo associations and HOAs.
http://www.mrctv.org/blog/apartment-building-require-dna-samples-all-pets#tmhmdj:pDFL
Sunday, March 22, 2015
Garden City movement aims at accreditation
http://sustainablecitiescollective.com/david-thorpe/1057256/new-alliance-aims-set-accreditation-standards-garden-cities?utm_source=hootsuite&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=hootsuite_tweets