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LynneV1 (South Carolina)
Posts: 211
Posted:
Contrary to Fed'l laws our new board has decided to ask our homeowners (who have lived here from 2004 on) to complete requests for their satellite dishes. FCC states it is illegal since 1997 to do this. They dio not care they want the forms completed even though they will allow the dishes.
our bylaws state: PAGE 18 OF 35 SECTION " No ANTENNAE"..... THE RULING STATES... NO RADIO TOWERS, SATELLITE TOWERS TELEVISION TOWERS CAN BE ERECTED ON THE (CASCADES ) PROPERTY WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE DECLARANT (WHICH WAS our builder).

I believe this means those huge towers only not individual dishes on private homes. Federal laws out rank HOA by-laws . But at the last meeting, the new president insisted 50 h/o fill out forms even if they bought the home with a dish on it.

Their reasoning is a lawyer said our Board cannot enforce one by -law and not another and no one can get a fine unles everyone follows the rules.
Any opinions?
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
I don't see any harm in this at all. It doesn't really matter either way. The lawyer's advice was just so to help with the appearance of equal enforcement. Which in reality everyone always claims "Unequal/Selective enforcement" anyways. I would classify this as a symptom of a HOA that may be a little too dependent on their legal council. A little HOA education may be needed.

The reality is that if they want to do this right, the by-laws/CC&R's need updated. A process already defined in those documents. The problem is that the process is time consuming, somewhat expensive, extemely hard to do, and necessary every 5 to 7 years in my opinion. Some documents require 75 to 90% OWNER approval to change/update. It took us over 2 years to modify ours for 5 simple changes.

I don't think they are really asking for permission to have the dishes. Just to have it recorded somewhere along the line that they were approved. This would avoid the whole updating the documentation and allow proof of no "selective enforcement" involved. A cheaper and less work option in my opinion. Changes/approval should always be recorded if possible in the records. That way a new owner isn't punished for a previous owner's mistakes or already approved status.

Former HOA President
PaulT6 (California)
Posts: 409
Posted:
To accommodate the smaller dishes we changed our Architectural Standards Rules, not the C&R's, to "allow" them. The ASC Rules can be changed with Board approval. The rule:

"Satellite dishes over 36" in diameter may be approved provided that the proposed site is compatible with the topography of the lot and is reasonably screened from the roadways, Common Areas and adjacent properties."

Dishes of 36" or smaller are routinely installed without approval.

Paul T
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,059
Posted:
Lynne,

From what I understand, the Over-the-Air Reception Devices Rule the Association may indeed require the Association to submit paperwork for the dish. However, they may not unreasonably delay or prevents use of the dish.

Therefore, having to ask permission and wait for a response would be an unreasonable delay.

Having to inform/notify the Association you have installed a dish or will install a dish on mm/dd/yyyy (without having to wait for the Associations response) would be allowed.

LynneV1 (South Carolina)
Posts: 211
Posted:
I found this online:

"Until January 1, 1997, Homeowner Associations could prohibit a homeowner from putting a satellite dish on his roof. With passage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, your local HOA is prohibited from enforcing local laws banning, or even delaying mounting of, a satellite dish that is less than 39 inches (1 meter) in diameter.
What's more, they can't even require you to request permission to put the dish on your roof! And once it's up, they can't make you take it down or even move it unless you have either created a safety hazard (which they have to prove to the FCC) or you live in a historic district (listed in the National Register of Historic Places)."
It is the point that people over the years haves asked permission and filled out forms (un-necessarily) and the ACC requests are lost as we change management companies and committees.
So when a letter came to 230 of us making us remove our lawn ornaments, mailbox covers, ADT protection signs and requesting us to fill out a form for something we have had for years - we took it personally and got annoyed. It is not a big thing - but un-necassary by Federal law.
And this is why people dislike their Boards. Apparently 3-4 foot banners across fences showing sports teams are allowed, but home protection signs had to go.

Thanks for your feedback.
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,059
Posted:
Like Paul, we also amended the guidelines:

In accordance with Federal Communications Commissions’ ruling of Over the Air Reception
Devices (OTARD), the following guidelines exist concerning dish style antennas:

Size: Dish size may not exceed 1 meter (39.37") in size.

Location: In order to maintain a colonial style to the property, the Board of Directors
has established a hierarchy of locations when installing dish style antennas to obtain an
acceptable signal quality.

1. Devices shall be installed solely within such individual Lot and shall not be installed on
Common Area, and are to be placed at the rear roof portion or rear yard, or yard area,
within the lot. Ideally, the device should not be visible from the street unless acceptable
signal quality is unavailable.

2. To the maximum extent possible, Devices shall be located in a place shielded from view
when standing on the street and from the view of other lots; provided, however, that
nothing in these Rules would require installation in a location from which an acceptable
quality signal cannot be received. This section does not permit installation on Common
Area, even if an acceptable quality signal cannot be received from the individual Lot.

3. If acceptable signal quality still cannot be obtained dish antennas may be installed within
the front of the property. Notification of this type of installation should be sent to the
ACC along with a statement from the installer that this is the only location that could be
used to receive acceptable signal quality.

4. The Association shall not be required to alter or remove any landscaping on common
property for reception purposes.

No antenna may be mounted on the common areas of the Association.

Cabling: Cables associated with the installation and use of dish style antennas should be
bundled together and, if required to run outside of the home, attached to the home so it does not detract from the appearance of the property or community.

Installation: Homeowners are responsible for ensuring that antennas are securely
installed and they in no way affect the safety of others.
CarolR11 (Colorado)
Posts: 2,563
Posted:
It's my understanding too that dishes up to apps. 39" must be permitted without unreasonable delay. In our (high rise) case they're erected on balconies, so we have rules based on our CC&Rs that the dishes must be free standing, i,.e, cannot be affixed to any wall of the balcony just as nothing else may be affixed to these walls or ceilings.
CarolR11 (Colorado)
Posts: 2,563
Posted:
It's my understanding too that dishes up to apps. 39" must be permitted without unreasonable delay. In our (high rise) case they're erected on balconies, so we have rules based on our CC&Rs that the dishes must be free standing, i,.e, cannot be affixed to any wall of the balcony just as nothing else may be affixed to these walls or ceilings.
BruceF1 (Connecticut)
Posts: 2,535
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/08/2012 6:35 AM
Contrary to Fed'l laws our new board has decided to ask our homeowners (who have lived here from 2004 on) to complete requests for their satellite dishes. FCC states it is illegal since 1997 to do this. They dio not care they want the forms completed even though they will allow the dishes.
our bylaws state: PAGE 18 OF 35 SECTION " No ANTENNAE"..... THE RULING STATES... NO RADIO TOWERS, SATELLITE TOWERS TELEVISION TOWERS CAN BE ERECTED ON THE (CASCADES ) PROPERTY WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE DECLARANT (WHICH WAS our builder).

I believe this means those huge towers only not individual dishes on private homes. Federal laws out rank HOA by-laws . But at the last meeting, the new president insisted 50 h/o fill out forms even if they bought the home with a dish on it.

Their reasoning is a lawyer said our Board cannot enforce one by -law and not another and no one can get a fine unles everyone follows the rules.
Any opinions?

Since Federal law prohibits homeowners associations from requiring homeowners to submit requests for advance approval, ask the board what they intend to do if someone fails or refuses to comply with their request.
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,059
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By BruceF1 on 12/08/2012 11:35 AM

Since Federal law prohibits homeowners associations from requiring homeowners to submit requests for advance approval,

Bruce,

I didn't see that anywhere in the ruling.

I did see that Associations may not adopt restrictions that impair a person's ability to install, maintain, or use an antenna covered by the rule.

I agree that unless the board is going to respond immediately to a request that a valid argument would be that waiting for a committee to rubber stamp the application is impairing the installation process by delaying the installation. However, that isn't the same thing as saying the ruling prohibits Associations to submit requests.

It also wouldn't prohibit the Association from requiring notification of the dish installation (as a notification doesn't require an approval/disapproval).
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,059
Posted:
Forgot to add that I agree with Lynn that her Association is not using common sense.
LarryB13 (Arizona)
Posts: 4,099
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/08/2012 6:35 AM
Contrary to Fed'l laws our new board has decided to ask our homeowners (who have lived here from 2004 on) to complete requests for their satellite dishes. FCC states it is illegal since 1997 to do this. They dio not care they want the forms completed even though they will allow the dishes.
our bylaws state: PAGE 18 OF 35 SECTION " No ANTENNAE"..... THE RULING STATES... NO RADIO TOWERS, SATELLITE TOWERS TELEVISION TOWERS CAN BE ERECTED ON THE (CASCADES ) PROPERTY WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE DECLARANT (WHICH WAS our builder).

Does the Declarant still control your board? The reason I ask is that the passage you quoted requires permission from the Declarant and not the from the Board. Why does the Board believe it has the power to act for the Declarant?

LynneV1 (South Carolina)
Posts: 211
Posted:
Thank you all and - thank you Larry - Exactly -- I still think this means only that large "towers" could not be placed inside the community by TV and Radio stations without the Declarant's approval, not 329 inch dishes. The FCC law was in effect in 1997 and the builder started building in 2004 . He finished in 2006 and turned the community over to us 12/2006.
Again the FCC quote says they "can not require us to request permission" .
This started because some one will not take down a "For Sale" sign from the middle of their front yard until all garden and welcome signs and home protection signs are removed and everyone requests permission for their satellites. Why does one obstinent H/O get to dictate to the board ? Why can't they fine him for breaking the "no signs" rules without 230 h/o getting letters.? That mailing cost us over $150.

But we are working on new by-laws - they will need 66 percent approval.
I just wanted some feed back for the next meeting>
RobertC14 (Colorado)
Posts: 78
Posted:
all your questions answered here. the OTARD rule applies to more than just 1 meter and smaller satellite dishes. it applies to wireless/satellite internet antenna's, and over the air tv antenna's as well.

https://www.fcc.gov/guides/over-air-reception-devices-rule

RobertC14

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MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Most HOA's allow for ONLY signs of "For sale/For rent" to be displayed. All others must not be displayed. These type of signs are typically the ONLY signs allowed.

This caused us a bit of a headache as we couldn't put "No parking" signs up to make sure people parked on one side of the street only. Our streets weren't wide enough to accommodate parking on both sides and people driving down the middle. Instead we had to go to the city and have them paint our curbs red instead. The city owned our streets and they had to make a law allowing this to happen.

So your HOA is NOT off base to ask to remove garden, alarm, or other signs.

Former HOA President
KellyM3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 2,239
Posted:
Lynne,

The HOA can't restrict dish antenna installation but could regulate their placement in conjunction with dish installers as long as a strong signal can be obtained. So, have dish antennas installed on the side of one's home instead of in the middle of the front lawn, for instance. But, installations in the middle of the lawn can't be banned if a signal cannot be obtained in any other location.

The board needs careful treading but it can regulate dish antennas to a small degree for aesthetic reasons.

http://www.fcc.gov/guides/over-air-reception-devices-rule
PaulT6 (California)
Posts: 409
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MelissaP1 on 12/08/2012 3:30 PM
Most HOA's allow for ONLY signs of "For sale/For rent" to be displayed. All others must not be displayed. These type of signs are typically the ONLY signs allowed.

This caused us a bit of a headache as we couldn't put "No parking" signs up to make sure people parked on one side of the street only. Our streets weren't wide enough to accommodate parking on both sides and people driving down the middle. Instead we had to go to the city and have them paint our curbs red instead. The city owned our streets and they had to make a law allowing this to happen.

So your HOA is NOT off base to ask to remove garden, alarm, or other signs.

Mellisa,

Below is what the State of California crammed down our throats some years back:

"Noncommercial signs, posters, flags or banners may be made of paper, cardboard, cloth, plastic, or
fabric, and may be posted or displayed from the yard, window, door, balcony, or outside wall, but may not be made of lights, roofing, siding, paving materials, flora, balloons, any other similar building, landscaping, or decorative component, or include the painting of architectural surfaces.

Signs and posters are limited to 9 square feet, and flags or banners are limited to 15 square feet in size."

Basically, anything can be said on the sign unless it is lewd or "offensive"

Paul T
LynneV1 (South Carolina)
Posts: 211
Posted:
Thank you all for your input. Sorry for the typo in my prior post " 329 inches" should have been "39 inches" -- I like living in a clean /neat neighborhood. I guess this is why we do have rules. We are single family homes. After reading the FCC rules I understand condos with a common roof and outside walls which belong to the asociation( not the owner) do need some restrictions.
I am mostly annoyed that the ACC requests done over the past 8 yrs are not organized by H/O address and that they are going back over things already done. But in the big picture - it is just a one page form.
I do not even have a dish.(I used to).. I just want to defend my friends and neighbors rights.
Happy Holidays to All of You.

JM10 (California)
Posts: 503
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By PaulT6 on 12/08/2012 4:01 PM
Posted By MelissaP1 on 12/08/2012 3:30 PM
Most HOA's allow for ONLY signs of "For sale/For rent" to be displayed. All others must not be displayed. These type of signs are typically the ONLY signs allowed.

This caused us a bit of a headache as we couldn't put "No parking" signs up to make sure people parked on one side of the street only. Our streets weren't wide enough to accommodate parking on both sides and people driving down the middle. Instead we had to go to the city and have them paint our curbs red instead. The city owned our streets and they had to make a law allowing this to happen.

So your HOA is NOT off base to ask to remove garden, alarm, or other signs.


Mellisa,

Below is what the State of California crammed down our throats some years back:

"Noncommercial signs, posters, flags or banners may be made of paper, cardboard, cloth, plastic, or
fabric, and may be posted or displayed from the yard, window, door, balcony, or outside wall, but may not be made of lights, roofing, siding, paving materials, flora, balloons, any other similar building, landscaping, or decorative component, or include the painting of architectural surfaces.

Signs and posters are limited to 9 square feet, and flags or banners are limited to 15 square feet in size."

Basically, anything can be said on the sign unless it is lewd or "offensive"

Paul T

I used this rule in order to publicize that our rogue board was holding secret meetings so the noncommercial signs rule is a matter of free speech IMHO.
PaulT6 (California)
Posts: 409
Posted:
JM,

Point taken. Our biggest concern wasn't so much what the message was but the basic
unlimited "any gaudy color goes". we are a forested mountain community and until this State ruling ALL of our signs were limited to brown and white, which still applies to commercial signs. As about 80% of our 6,400 properties are part timers it appeared not too many people knew or cared about it. We put the change on a Board meeting agenda which the Board quietly approved. So far, it has not been the problem we thought it would be.

We had a Member who had about 500 bright, gaudy Tibetan Prayer flags surrounding their property just to annoy their neighbor. The Board agreed that was an "unreasonable annoyance" and the flags were reduced to a few on the back deck. Fun and games.

Paul T
BruceF1 (Connecticut)
Posts: 2,535
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By TimB4 on 12/08/2012 12:12 PM
Posted By BruceF1 on 12/08/2012 11:35 AM

Since Federal law prohibits homeowners associations from requiring homeowners to submit requests for advance approval,


Bruce,

I didn't see that anywhere in the ruling.

I did see that Associations may not adopt restrictions that impair a person's ability to install, maintain, or use an antenna covered by the rule.

I agree that unless the board is going to respond immediately to a request that a valid argument would be that waiting for a committee to rubber stamp the application is impairing the installation process by delaying the installation. However, that isn't the same thing as saying the ruling prohibits Associations to submit requests.

It also wouldn't prohibit the Association from requiring notification of the dish installation (as a notification doesn't require an approval/disapproval).

Tim,

From the FCC Fact Sheet regarding Over-the-Air Reception Devices:

"Procedural requirements can also unreasonably delay installation, maintenance or use of an antenna covered by this rule. For example, local rules or regulations that require a person to obtain a permit or approval prior to installation create unreasonable delay and are generally prohibited. Permits or prior approval necessary to serve a legitimate written safety or historic preservation purpose may be permissible. Although a simple notification process (e.g. post installation) might be permissible, such a process cannot be used as a prior approval requirement and may not delay or increase the cost of installation. The burden is on the association to show that a notification process does not violate our rule."

I think we are in agreement, except for our interpretations of the word "request." I understood LynneV's words "to complete requests for their satellite dishes" to imply that the board was requiring approval, which is prohibited. That is, to me, "submitting a request" implies some sort of approval process.

Also, there is a section on the FCC's website where a number of actual FCC rulings regarding individual cases are given. I believe that section is still there. Interesting reading. I seem to recall one case where an association tried three times to either prohibit a homeowner from installing a dish, or force him to take it down, even trying the safety angle. The association got shot down by the FCC all three times. What a waste of association dollars over attorney fees!

Perhaps the board is merely only seeking to document units that have installed satellite dishes, which is not prohibited. However, the word "request" doesn't imply that to me.

In any even, my question still stands: Ask the board what they intend to do if someone fails or refuses to comply.
BruceF1 (Connecticut)
Posts: 2,535
Posted:
I just checked and the Declaratory Rulings regarding individual cases are still there. The list and links to rulings (in Acrobat and Word format) appears at the bottom of the OTARD Fact Sheet. It takes time, but it is interesting reading because it provides insight as to how the FCC views the OTARD rules and applies them in each case. Most of the cases involve homeowners associations.
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,059
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By BruceF1 on 12/09/2012 5:44 AM [emphasis added]
local rules or regulations that require a person to obtain a permit or approval prior to installation create unreasonable delay and are generally prohibited.

Bruce,

I agree we are in agreement.

Your looking at the term "request" as the OP indicated the Association used.
I'm looking at the time line that this paperwork is being requested after the installation:

Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/08/2012 6:35 AM [emphasis added]

our new board has decided to ask our homeowners (who have lived here from 2004 on) to complete requests for their satellite dishes.

Further reading on the thread indicates that this is actually being done because a member who is in violation of the covenants is hollering selective enforcement:

Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/08/2012 2:56 PM [emphasis added]

This started because some one will not take down a "For Sale" sign from the middle of their front yard until all garden and welcome signs and home protection signs are removed and everyone requests permission for their satellites.

Based on this posting, it appears that Lynn's Board is a bit fearful of legal action if they push this issue. Perhaps because that Association's past boards failed to keep the records safe and organized (as outlined in another of the OP's posting):

Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/08/2012 4:11 PM

I am mostly annoyed that the ACC requests done over the past 8 yrs are not organized by H/O address and that they are going back over things already done.

For this specific issue (file management), the suggestion is simple. Lynn should volunteer to serve on the ACC and organize the files (I would be willing to share how my Association accomplished a similar task after 30 years of similar file keeping issues).

Of course, if you read more into the thread, you discover that this whole issue of Satellite dishes is really a minor issue:

Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/08/2012 4:11 PM

But in the big picture - it is just a one page form. I do not even have a dish

To summarize (as I understand the issue):

1) Association Files are incomplete and unorganized.

2) Violator hollers selective enforcement.

3) Associations can't disprove selective enforcement due to incomplete and unorganized files

4) Association attempts to correct incomplete file issue by asking members to complete request forms for exterior changes as required by the CC&Rs (there could have been a better way but this is the method the Association chose).

5) Members are agitated because they don't fully understand the issue and are focusing on the fact that it causes them more work and they wonder why records weren't properly kept.

6) One of those members started this thread which led us to believe the Association was violating federal law and what should be done about it.

My recommendation:

a) Members need to become active in the Association so the work load can be shared and things (like record management) doesn't get overlooked.

b) Board should adopt a "notification" of a Satellite dish installation form so the covenant requiring prior approval is complied with (no approval is necessary because the authority for Associations to approve dish installations was removed by Federal regulations).

c) The Board needs to better explain the issues (even if it causes them or past board members some embarrassment) so they can have the support of the membership.

d) Did I mention that the membership needs to become involved

KellyM3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 2,239
Posted:
Satellite dishes should not be part of the sign discussion. A private property owner does not set the rules of the HOA for the HOA board to adhere.

However, if there are garden signs and other signage on other properties, I can't see how the HOA board picks a fight with an owner over a "For Sale" sign.

The property owner demand is quite lame and ignorant.
TimB4 (Tennessee)
Posts: 21,059
Posted:
Kelly,

I agree.

However, it appears that that Board either had other issues that aren't known to us or chose the course of action they did based on misunderstanding of the information available or information available to them that is not known to the original poster (and thus, not shared with us).
BruceF1 (Connecticut)
Posts: 2,535
Posted:
Judging from the last sentence in the OP, "Their reasoning is a lawyer said our Board cannot enforce one by -law and not another and no one can get a fine unles everyone follows the rules," I'm beginning to think that the board misunderstood what they were told and are taking things to extremes.
LynneV1 (South Carolina)
Posts: 211
Posted:
Thank you Tim and Bruce and everyone else! - if 48 h/o have had these on their roofs for 5 to 6 to 8 years - and by Fed'l law, no permission is needed - then it seems the board is picking on 48 people because one guy has a "For Sale" sign in his yard.
Any how enough said - thanks for letting me vent and for your input.
PaulT6 (California)
Posts: 409
Posted:
Lynne,

After briefly re-reading all this it looks like the dish may be a very small part of the puzzle. I can only speak from my own experience of working with many Directors as The Chairman of our Covenants Committee for 16 years. Many of our Directors were former high level executives in large corporations and apparently couldn't get over no longer having power over others. Also, it is my opinion that most ran for the Board because they had a specific agenda, not necessarily "for the good of the Assn".

Sounds like your Board should save their bullets for a bigger battle. :-)

Paul T
PaulT6 (California)
Posts: 409
Posted:
Lynne,

After briefly re-reading all this it looks like the dish may be a very small part of the puzzle. I can only speak from my own experience of working with many Directors as The Chairman of our Covenants Committee for 16 years. Many of our Directors were former high level executives in large corporations and apparently couldn't get over no longer having power over others. Also, it is my opinion that most ran for the Board because they had a specific agenda, not necessarily "for the good of the Assn".

Sounds like your Board should save their bullets for a bigger battle. :-)

Paul T
JohnC46 (South Carolina)
Posts: 14,265
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/09/2012 4:55 PM
Thank you Tim and Bruce and everyone else! - if 48 h/o have had these on their roofs for 5 to 6 to 8 years - and by Fed'l law, no permission is needed - then it seems the board is picking on 48 people because one guy has a "For Sale" sign in his yard.
Any how enough said - thanks for letting me vent and for your input.

Lynne

Me thinks your BOD should grow a pair and go after the one causing the problem.

Hope this helps.

BruceF1 (Connecticut)
Posts: 2,535
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By LynneV1 on 12/09/2012 4:55 PM
\it seems the board is picking on 48 people because one guy has a "For Sale" sign in his yard.

Maybe the BOD should just hope for a quick sale. Then the "For Sale" sign will be gone.
TeddieL (Texas)
Posts: 13
Posted:
I had a similar situation. My HOA Board sued me for a direct tv satellite dish placed on the back of my townhome (not visible from the street). The HOA lost the case because of the FCC ruling. However---caveat----make sure you live in a townhome and not in a condo (rules are different for condos). make sure that the satellite dish is not visible to the street or a safety hazard---or you live in a historical building. Otherwise, the HOA cannot require you to ask for approval and cannot deny approval---however, the HOA can still sue you---but they will loose.
LauraR5 (Tennessee)
Posts: 220
Posted:
I just wanted to say that I am glad that I read this because I know that it says that we are supposed to have permission for satellite dishes, and I'm glad to know that is illegal.

They have also been going after folks who have "unsightly wires and cables" from their satellite install. This wouldn't be an issue with me except that they are working on an exclusive deal with Comcast. This doesn't mean that folks couldn't use Comcast, but it wouldn't allow satellite providers to use the pre-wired Comcast system to power the dishes, which is what causes the unsightly wires, according to my Dish Network guy.
NancyA4 (Florida)
Posts: 17
Posted:
Check the wording of the law. For condos, I believe you can prohibit the dishes from being erected on common elements. Also, for condos, you can prohibit a hole being drilled thru the outside wall for the cable.
LauraR5 (Tennessee)
Posts: 220
Posted:
I know we have guidelines on where the dishes can be placed (although it sounds like we have to make accommodations if they impair someone's ability to get a signal). And, while I'm sure that there are rules saying we can prohibit folks from having cables outside, I don't know how we can enforce it if we're not going to let them use their central cable line for satellite.

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