PaulM30 (B)
Posts: 41
Posts: 41
Posted:
Hi, I'm the HOA President of a small condo building. We only have 15 units, and several of them are either rented out, or owned by part time residents. As a result, I'm the HOA President by default, and the 2 other board members are not full time residents. Nobody else in the building is willing to serve on the board. I want to protect my investment, so we need a functioning board, but other than that, I have no personal desire whatsoever to serve on the board. We have a property manager who is not 'on site', and mainly coordinates with vendors, and will visit the building periodically or for major projects. He operates from 8am-6pm, and the company provide an emergency number where he can be paged. We operate a relaxed HOA, and enforce the major rules, but we're not trying to micro manage anyone. In 3 years of being there, I believe we've only issued 2 warnings for minor violations around garbage disposal.
I have a very busy job, and travel pretty frequently, so I've made it clear that all building issues need to be sent to our property manager, who will then address them with me and the board, as I simply don't have the time to manage the workflow, and I don't want to be thought of as a proxy property manager. I usually forward emails on to the property manager that are sent to me directly, but I have told several owners that I will no longer do so, and to consider any emails sent to me as unread and that all communication must go via the manager.
I'd like to go one step further and tell owners that I am unwilling to discuss HOA issues other than in writing via the property manager, or at HOA meetings. It's reached a point where two or three owners will always bring up some minor issue with me whenever I see them, and on a couple of occasions have even knocked on my door because of a stuck garage door, and even an internal electrical problem in their unit. One owner even called me on a Friday night to say they had a delivery arriving tomorrow and could I please hang up the pads which protect the elevator because the property manager hadn't responded at 9pm on a Friday. I want to make it clear that if our property manager is not available, or hasn't responded to a short notice request, I am not his 'back up'.
As HOA President, do I have any obligation to talk to owners or to make myself available to them? I don't see anything in our CCR documents. I'm generally a social person, but I basically just want to tell everyone (in person, not in writing) that I'm no longer willing to discuss building issues in person, other than that meetings, and all communication must go through our property manager. Is this something I likely can do from a legal standpoint?
I have a very busy job, and travel pretty frequently, so I've made it clear that all building issues need to be sent to our property manager, who will then address them with me and the board, as I simply don't have the time to manage the workflow, and I don't want to be thought of as a proxy property manager. I usually forward emails on to the property manager that are sent to me directly, but I have told several owners that I will no longer do so, and to consider any emails sent to me as unread and that all communication must go via the manager.
I'd like to go one step further and tell owners that I am unwilling to discuss HOA issues other than in writing via the property manager, or at HOA meetings. It's reached a point where two or three owners will always bring up some minor issue with me whenever I see them, and on a couple of occasions have even knocked on my door because of a stuck garage door, and even an internal electrical problem in their unit. One owner even called me on a Friday night to say they had a delivery arriving tomorrow and could I please hang up the pads which protect the elevator because the property manager hadn't responded at 9pm on a Friday. I want to make it clear that if our property manager is not available, or hasn't responded to a short notice request, I am not his 'back up'.
As HOA President, do I have any obligation to talk to owners or to make myself available to them? I don't see anything in our CCR documents. I'm generally a social person, but I basically just want to tell everyone (in person, not in writing) that I'm no longer willing to discuss building issues in person, other than that meetings, and all communication must go through our property manager. Is this something I likely can do from a legal standpoint?