Author Archives: Beanie
ARIZONA – A case of the HOA blues
Before I lived in one, I always thought that neighborhoods with Homeowner’s Associations were better than those without. I imagined manicured lawns and pride of ownership and major curb appeal—all great things when it comes to resale value. I’m here to tell you that I was wrong. Now that I own a home and am subject to CC&R’s, I get to see the good, the bad and the oh so very ugly.
My husband and I own a home outside of Tucson’s city limits among the tumbleweeds and cacti of the dusty desert. Our community is gated, but that is about the extent of the amenities our neighborhood affords its residents. There is no community pool. No clubhouse. We don’t even have stinking sidewalks, for Pete’s sake. Still, we pay fees to the HOA monthly. From what I can gather, most of the fees go towards fixing the perpetually-broken gate and paying postage for the nastygrams that the HOA is so fond of mailing out every two weeks or so. My husband and I have been on the receiving end of several nastygrams over the course of our nine years in this neighborhood. Read more:
FLORIDA – Florida law lets investors force out condo owners at a loss
TALLAHASSEE — Condo owners say a 7-year-old change in state law now is forcing them from their homes as investors convert their buildings into rentals.
The Florida Condominium Act once required agreement from all owners before a condominium pact could be dissolved. In 2007, lawmakers lowered that threshold to 80 percent — even after then-Gov. Jeb Bush vetoed the change a year before.
The change was approved by the first-year governor at the time, Charlie Crist, then a Republican and now the Democrat challenging incumbent GOP Gov. Rick Scott this year.
Now, some condo owners say they’re being pressured to sell as investment groups slowly take over whole complexes, often by snapping up foreclosed units. Their goal is to sell the properties at a profit. Read more:
New Jersey – Free speech on trial in co-op’s leafleting ban case
The New Jersey Supreme Court is considering whether the board of directors of a massive co-op can prohibit leafleting by dissident residents who want to seek election to the board.
The court heard arguments Sept. 8 in a case where the board of directors of a co-op in Fort Lee, N.J., is seeking to overturn an appeals court’s ruling that said it violated a tenant’s free-speech rights when it prohibited him from passing out leaflets to other residents, even though the board itself regularly passed out leaflets touting its accomplishments and attacking its critics.
In Dublirer v. 200 Linwood Avenue Owners, the Supreme Court is set to determine whether the board violated the tenant’s rights under Article I, Paragraph 6 of the state constitution.
The board’s attorney, Natalie Mantell, said during arguments that the board has the right to restrict speech because the co-op is private property. The board is exempt from its own rule because it is required to communicate with the residents, Mantell added. Read more:
CALIFORNIA – Red tag could force hundreds out of National City’s Bayview Tower
NATIONAL CITY, Calif. – Hundreds of South Bay residents are preparing to be kicked out of their homes. National City is considering red tagging the Bayview Tower because the 12-story tower violates several city building codes. “Every day that people do live here, they are at risk,” said Gary Wasserman, the attorney hired by the tower’s homeowners association.
Letters were placed on the doors to all 170 condos on Tuesday. Wasserman said a simple inspection found the 20-year-old building does not have the proper firewalls between condos and the staircases are literally falling apart. “It’s not just their immediate weight, but the vibration on these stairs,” Wasserman warned while pointing out where emergency staircases are rotting and falling apart. Read more:
TEXAS – Homeowners plan protest over pool that was never built
A job transfer brought the Logans here from Chicago. Good schools for their two young daughters and the promise of a swimming pool within walking distance attracted them to Canyon Lakes West in Cypress, one of the area’s ubiquitous master-planned communities.
Three years later, the two-acre site they were told was set aside for the pool, playground and other recreational features in the Grove section where they live remains untouched. A sign detailing where the pool and cabana, basketball pavilion and a splash pad water playground would be built was recently taken down and replaced with something less specific and, to the Logans and their neighbors, disconcerting. Read more:
NORTH CAROLINA – Meeting puts the focus on HOA rights
Al Ripley, director of the consumer and housing project at the N.C. Justice Center, will be the main speaker. Ole Madsen, founder of HEAR4nc, also is expected to give a presentation, on pending homeowners association laws.
House Bill 883, for instance, would require that new HOA board members receive four hours of training on HOA laws within 60 days of starting their position. The N.C. Senate passed that bill out of the rules committee; it now is sitting in the Senate judiciary Subcommittee B.
“I think it would help them be better decision-makers as they serve on those boards,” said N.C. Rep. Rodney Moore, D-District 99, who co-sponsored the bill. “A lot of times you have people who serve on these boards and they really don’t understand that the fiduciary responsibilities are not only to that board but to their neighbors and their community.”
Moore said he’s hopeful that bill will pass. Read more:
FLORIDA – Forced-out condo owners ask governor for help
These owners are not in foreclosure, nor are they behind on their mortgages. Instead they are being threatened by a group of developers, Madison Oaks Partners, who are using a Florida state law originally designed to protect homeowners from natural disaster, to terminate the condominium agreement and force them to sell their units. Read more:
FLORIDA – Condo president buys car, pays himself, with association funds
http://privatopia.blogspot.com/ : Condo president buys car, pays himself, with association funds
“Ed Ryan, a long-time condominium president in Fort Lauderdale, has been violating the law for years by paying himself tens of thousands of dollars — and even buying himself a car — out of neighborhood funds, according to state records. In September, the Department of Business and Professional Regulation alleged Ryan was illegally managing the association without a license and issued a cease and desist order to stop him from paying himself after he’d received $45,000 in the first nine months of the year alone. But Ryan, president of Georgian Court North Apartments, hasn’t missed a beat, admitting to Local 10 News that he’s still paying himself. “
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NATIONAL – Titleholder Equity Is The Association’s Windfall
NEW MEXICO – Realty employee allegedly embezzled $100,000+ from Rio Rancho homeowners association
By: Erica Zucco, KOB Eyewitness News 4 RIO RANCHO — For weeks, Rio Rancho police have investigated a business they say embezzled hundreds of thousands of dollars from property owners and homeowners associations. Meanwhile, associations are dealing with the consequences of reportedly mismanaged funds.
Money paid to homeowners associations is typically supposed to be for special touches.
“They keep the exterior of the neighborhood looking good,” homeowner Ryan Swanson said. “A lot of it has to do with the walls; we had some walls [needing] to be replaced, some of the watering that goes on…we have a pathway that connects parts of the neighborhood to keep it looking nice.”
But a letter sent to people in the Seven Bar North Homeowners Association says their money was instead mismanaged by Double R Realty. Read more: