JL5 (Michigan)
Posts: 8
Posts: 8
Posted:
As an HOA member am I within my rights to have a list of the names and contact information for my fellow HOA members?
We are co-owners in a HOA in Michigan. It's a large condo property with 100+ units. We've been here for five years and as far as I can tell, it's about half owner-occupied; the other half being rentals. We would like to communicate with our fellow members but can't figure out how to do so. The obvious way would be to attend the HOA meetings. Sadly, fewer than a dozen individuals attend those (including the board). It seemed like a no brainer to me that there would be some sort of "directory" for the co-owners. So, last month I casually asked a board member about this. (He happens to be our neighbor.) He told me that they don't give out that information due to privacy issues. They won't even give out the contact information for the board members; only the names of the board members.
Huh?
I am not sure what the expectation of privacy is when you own property with other people, especially given that property ownership is public information. But I know that HOA law can defy logic. On the other hand, failing to maintain an effective forum for communication seems unwise. (Not to mention, just plain weird.) Is there any precedent for this? I mean for withholding the names of the members from the other members?
My second question is a request for advice. I realize that I can look up the names of the co-owners on the tax rolls. (My husband is a tax and financial compliance attorney at a bank but used to be a real estate lawyer so he would do this frequently.) However, my ideal goal is to create a directory. Given the way that the names and contact information has been handled in the past, I fear that any proposal to do so would be seen as confrontational.
Another troubling bit of information ... when I mentioned all of this to another neighbor who used to sit on our HOA board but does so no longer, he told me that the president of the property management company (who doesn't own any properties here but does sit on the board) holds the proxy votes for a majority of the homeowners. I know that we personally have been pressured multiple times by the property manger to sign over our proxy.
Given all this new information that has come to light in the past two weeks, my initial motivation, which was to talk with the owners about planting a hedge, has now turned a bit paranoid.
Advice?
We are co-owners in a HOA in Michigan. It's a large condo property with 100+ units. We've been here for five years and as far as I can tell, it's about half owner-occupied; the other half being rentals. We would like to communicate with our fellow members but can't figure out how to do so. The obvious way would be to attend the HOA meetings. Sadly, fewer than a dozen individuals attend those (including the board). It seemed like a no brainer to me that there would be some sort of "directory" for the co-owners. So, last month I casually asked a board member about this. (He happens to be our neighbor.) He told me that they don't give out that information due to privacy issues. They won't even give out the contact information for the board members; only the names of the board members.
Huh?
I am not sure what the expectation of privacy is when you own property with other people, especially given that property ownership is public information. But I know that HOA law can defy logic. On the other hand, failing to maintain an effective forum for communication seems unwise. (Not to mention, just plain weird.) Is there any precedent for this? I mean for withholding the names of the members from the other members?
My second question is a request for advice. I realize that I can look up the names of the co-owners on the tax rolls. (My husband is a tax and financial compliance attorney at a bank but used to be a real estate lawyer so he would do this frequently.) However, my ideal goal is to create a directory. Given the way that the names and contact information has been handled in the past, I fear that any proposal to do so would be seen as confrontational.
Another troubling bit of information ... when I mentioned all of this to another neighbor who used to sit on our HOA board but does so no longer, he told me that the president of the property management company (who doesn't own any properties here but does sit on the board) holds the proxy votes for a majority of the homeowners. I know that we personally have been pressured multiple times by the property manger to sign over our proxy.
Given all this new information that has come to light in the past two weeks, my initial motivation, which was to talk with the owners about planting a hedge, has now turned a bit paranoid.
Advice?