GeorgeS21 (Florida)
Posts: 3,808
Posts: 3,808
Posted:
I have another thread related to our "voluntary" HOA with mandatory covenants. Have gotten great advice and shared experiences from everyone. As I noted in the thread, the neighborhood is rather elderly and apathetic, but there is hope!
(http://www.hoatalk.com/Forum/tabid/55/forumid/1/postid/244179/view/topic/Default.aspx)
This is such as different topic, I am starting a new thread.
Background - 189 single family houses, elderly owners, about 20% rentals, 1 acre park and entrance signage.
I have read quite a bit about other organizations in Florida in the same circumstances - developers gave them CC&Rs based on voluntary association membership - some neighborhoods have folded and become like much of unregulated Florida neighborhoods (opinion only). Some neighborhoods figured a way to get 100% agreement to change the "voluntary" to "mandatory." I think our community might be the right kind for this to be the right solution - I say right kind as it is always going to be a magnet for older owners without much interest in involvement, and right solution because changing to mandatory might make it possible to pay a professional management company to stabilize the neighborhood by doing the administrative and financial record keeping - freeing the members to manage and provide oversight. It also is a good way to ensure even and neutral enforcement.
My thoughts... broadly, the concept involves standing up a CCR rewrite committee that would, in addition to removing "voluntary" and integrating "mandatory" throughout, remove those covenants that are unenforceable (our's has one that mandates no cars in the driveways and no garage doors open :-)). In NO way would we make the covenants more restrictive.
While the rewrite is going on, the Board and supporters in the community would talk up the need and offer to meet with anyone with questions - or, have a couple of community meetings where this could be accomplished. At every point the point would be to be open and answer questions, bring in neutral experts, etc.
Knowing there will NOT be 100% acceptance, use some of the "transition" methods spoken of on HOAT to allow continuation of voluntary status (i.e. not members) for those who want to remain so with the caveat the property will be sold with mandatory membership as terms of the sale - this seems to have worked in some areas, as those non-supporters are thinking pretty much only of themselves. Question: our CCRs are specific with a 90% requirement for modification - some on HOAT have noted this change would required 100%, others have said to try it with 90% with the strategy that unless the HOA is sued, the property will likely transfer as mandatory. Lots of fuzzy area here - BUT, some HOAs have been successful!
Without stable, fair dues payment (btw - I'm talking $50-70/year if everyone paid), the neighborhood is going to crumble ... given our circumstances, what would those that have done this, or seen this done, recommend?
Thanks!!
(http://www.hoatalk.com/Forum/tabid/55/forumid/1/postid/244179/view/topic/Default.aspx)
This is such as different topic, I am starting a new thread.
Background - 189 single family houses, elderly owners, about 20% rentals, 1 acre park and entrance signage.
I have read quite a bit about other organizations in Florida in the same circumstances - developers gave them CC&Rs based on voluntary association membership - some neighborhoods have folded and become like much of unregulated Florida neighborhoods (opinion only). Some neighborhoods figured a way to get 100% agreement to change the "voluntary" to "mandatory." I think our community might be the right kind for this to be the right solution - I say right kind as it is always going to be a magnet for older owners without much interest in involvement, and right solution because changing to mandatory might make it possible to pay a professional management company to stabilize the neighborhood by doing the administrative and financial record keeping - freeing the members to manage and provide oversight. It also is a good way to ensure even and neutral enforcement.
My thoughts... broadly, the concept involves standing up a CCR rewrite committee that would, in addition to removing "voluntary" and integrating "mandatory" throughout, remove those covenants that are unenforceable (our's has one that mandates no cars in the driveways and no garage doors open :-)). In NO way would we make the covenants more restrictive.
While the rewrite is going on, the Board and supporters in the community would talk up the need and offer to meet with anyone with questions - or, have a couple of community meetings where this could be accomplished. At every point the point would be to be open and answer questions, bring in neutral experts, etc.
Knowing there will NOT be 100% acceptance, use some of the "transition" methods spoken of on HOAT to allow continuation of voluntary status (i.e. not members) for those who want to remain so with the caveat the property will be sold with mandatory membership as terms of the sale - this seems to have worked in some areas, as those non-supporters are thinking pretty much only of themselves. Question: our CCRs are specific with a 90% requirement for modification - some on HOAT have noted this change would required 100%, others have said to try it with 90% with the strategy that unless the HOA is sued, the property will likely transfer as mandatory. Lots of fuzzy area here - BUT, some HOAs have been successful!
Without stable, fair dues payment (btw - I'm talking $50-70/year if everyone paid), the neighborhood is going to crumble ... given our circumstances, what would those that have done this, or seen this done, recommend?
Thanks!!