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SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Can the majority of Board members decide to censure a Board member to keep them from sharing information to Homeowners? This Board member has done nothing wrong and has not shared any executive session information. They only discuss open information but the majority of the Board frown on this behavior and told this Board member they were going to work together to censure them if they didn’t stop talking to the homeowners because they don’t really think homeowners should be involved because they don’t know anything. If the majority of the Board work together (they are all neighbors and close friends who each have been on the Board for many years) what recourse does the targeted Board member have? How do they respond to being censured when they have done nothing wrong but the majority of the Board creatively coordinated this action to silence them or get them off the Board? I’m in Monterey California and I’m a new Board member.
MarkW18
Posts: 1,290
Posted:
The only real answer is gaining majority of the board.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MarkW18 on 05/02/2020 8:58 PM
The only real answer is gaining majority of the board.

So the majority of the Board can censure to prevent a Board member from talking to homeowner with no due cause in Monterey Ca? Sounds absolutely ridiculous to me. I’d assume then civil action would be needed to stop this corrupt Board unless there’s any other agency to report to to investigate such nonsense.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
Posted By MarkW18 on 05/02/2020 8:58 PM
The only real answer is gaining majority of the board.


So the majority of the Board can censure to prevent a Board member from talking to homeowner with no due cause in Monterey Ca? Sounds absolutely ridiculous to me. I’d assume then civil action would be needed to stop this corrupt Board unless there’s any other agency to report to to investigate such nonsense.

Or start telling homeowners of such nonsense happening on their Board, wake up and initiated a recall of those dimwits lol
MarkW18
Posts: 1,290
Posted:
Not saying it's right. Recalls take too long and can get stalled. Best chance is gain the majority through the normal election process. Get a good slate of candidates.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MarkW18 on 05/02/2020 9:12 PM
Not saying it's right. Recalls take too long and can get stalled. Best chance is gain the majority through the normal election process. Get a good slate of candidates.

Thanks for info!
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
Posted By MarkW18 on 05/02/2020 8:58 PM
The only real answer is gaining majority of the board.


So the majority of the Board can censure to prevent a Board member from talking to homeowner with no due cause in Monterey Ca? Sounds absolutely ridiculous to me. I’d assume then civil action would be needed to stop this corrupt Board unless there’s any other agency to report to to investigate such nonsense.

Unfortunately it can happen. The majority rules on an HOA board, and this can be good or bad - it's bad if the majority are power-hungry fools who don't know their jobs. Yeah, they can censure someone improperly - if they're already behaving badly, this would be just more evidence of same.

I will make one comment, though. Individual board members should not be talking one-on-one with homeowners about association business. A single board member does not speak for the board, and it is outside of official channels. This is a very good way for misinformation to be communicated to the membership, which makes an already tough job even harder.

So while I don't think the talkative board member should be censured - that should be reserved for things like revealing confidential info - that person should be told to knock it off and, if possible, removed from their officer position. Board members have a duty of loyalty: they should be effective team players, not Lone Rangers. If I were on the board, I would suggest giving Mr./Ms. Blabbermouth the newsletter-writing and website maintenance jobs (if I though they could be trusted with them). Both jobs are time-consuming, so hopefully the person won't have time to be the neighborhood gossip.
MarkW18
Posts: 1,290
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 4:59 AM
I will make one comment, though. Individual board members should not be talking one-on-one with homeowners about association business. A single board member does not speak for the board, and it is outside of official channels. This is a very good way for misinformation to be communicated to the membership, which makes an already tough job even harder.

I completely disagree. Unless the subject was of a confidential matter or from an executive session, they should be able to speak. They are acting like a Board member not the Board.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 4:59 AM
Board members have a duty of loyalty: they should be effective team players, not Lone Rangers.
How I felt about the above would probably depend on the exact circumstances. For now, I do not agree with such a blanket assertion. HOA Boards serve both a corporation but also, in a quasi-governmental capacity. Ordering Directors to never speak their opinions on non-confidential topics outside of board meetings would be like ordering City Councilors to never comment to members of the public on their positions on non-confidential topics. Board majorities can and have abused their power. To me, a blanket prohibition on directors expressing their feelings on controversial, non-confidential topics is a sign of a board that is likely behaving dishonestly and possibly, corruptly.

"Fiduciary duty" generally means to serve the best interests of the corporation. I think silence when a board majority is, say, breaking the law, and with great financial impact or risking the safety of HOA members, is not serving the best interests of the corporation.

Toss in that campaign season sometimes requires that directors differentiate themselves as needed to win election so they may address, say, improprieties.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
So the majority of the Board can censure
A board majority can "censure" all it wants. Censure has no legal meaning. I do not think I have ever see Bylaws or HOA/condo statutes discuss censure. I do not think I have ever seen case law speak of a censure.
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
to prevent a Board member from talking
You said this director is "sharing" non-confidential information. Arguendo, let me assume the director is not sharing falsehoods and is sharing her or his opinion or raw facts. A board majority has zero legal authority to stop or prohibit such sharing. A board majority that tried to do this in fact would be risking liability from the minority director(s), should she, he or they want to sue in, say, a derivative action.
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
to homeowner with no due cause...
The use of "due cause" in this scenario is a flavor of oxymoron here. Due cause would never exist under these circumstances.
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
Sounds absolutely ridiculous to me.
Correct. It also wastes precious board time. It demonstrates fifth grade, ignorant, ego-driven, bullying behavior by the board majority. Which happens all the time. It is hard to be a board minority when the majority is abusing HOA resources to, for example, lie about the directors in the minority on an issue.
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 9:08 PM
I’d assume then civil action would be needed to stop this corrupt Board
The censure is not stoppable, because it is nothing more than an attempt to humiliate a director. If the Board majority threatens say a restraining order to silence the director, then under California law, IDR should be considered. Or even better, the minority director should just ignore the Board until they (stupidly) take him to court.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/02/2020 8:52 PM
How do they respond to being censured when they have done nothing wrong but the majority of the Board creatively coordinated this action to silence them or get them off the Board?
California has laws about the use of HOA resources to effectively campaign. The HOA/condo must give the dissident (minority) board member equal access to HOA resources on controversial topics. Whether the HOA board will agree to do this could be the stuff of a valid legal battle. The dissident board member(s) would start with Internal Dispute Resolution. See https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOME/Election-Campaigning, especially the link to "equal access."

If you are the director being attacked by a board majority, and since you are new, I think this is a difficult start to your board service, to say the least. But I have seen new directors insist on their right to records and their right to speak to HOA members outside the board meeting. The fights were ugly, but over a few years, it helped improve the board in general.
MarkM19 (Texas)
Posts: 1,459
Posted:
I am with MarkW here.

When you are elected to aboard position you are not removed from being a Homeowner. You have every right that every other member has and as long as you follow a few basic rules you should be able to speak your mind on your thoughts. You obviously can't talk about anything Executive Session issues. That is a hard line that should never be crossed. If you are in the Open Session and have a debate over an Agenda item that you have strong feelings about I think you have every right to speak to homeowners. I always say that I am not speaking on behave of the HOA Board as I am just 1 of 5 Board members. The Board discusses, debates and has all of the information. A Vote is taken and sometimes you Win and sometimes you lose. That is the system that we have in place.

If they want to Censure you they have every right to do so. I would demand that it be done in the Open Session and this would allow you to state your case to anyone in attendance and also speak up afterwards. I would also tell the Board that if they want a Fight they will get one and some stones are going to get over turned. They better have a good case or they will look the Fool not you.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Thank you so much MarkW, MarkM and Augustin for the great information. Yes it is I and another Board member though he has been in for 10 years and has been the minority with the greatest intentions. Now that I’m on, I have questioned several actions by the majority board such as: One of the majority board member sharing executive session to other homeowners and I know because the homeowner was telling me this happened however they did not this was executive session information. Also, working with the property manager to ignore the violations reported of her friends but enforce those reported of her non-friends. Asking the property manager to keep HOA information from me and this other minority Board member. Requesting ā€œBoard members onlyā€ meetings to discuss important HOA information such as making the decision to change a major vendor without letting the homeowners know about this change or meeting. Now they are emailing saying if I continue talking to homeowners that they will censure me. I or the other minority Board member never share executive session information. We never speak as the Board only as individual Board members and as HOA members about the things that we disagree with. We want to motivate homeowners to get involved because for many years they haven’t been involved and perhaps this is how these majority Board members have all this control, and I think they do what’s best for them and not thinking of the entire association in some of their decisions.
JohnC46 (South Carolina)
Posts: 14,265
Posted:
Sasha

A few questions. Please answer:

1. How large is you HOA in units/members?
2. How many on the BOD?
3. Physically what type units (high rise, individual units, townhomes, etc.)are there?
4. What is you annual budget?
5. Whatis your professional experience?
6. Have you ever served on a BOD?

Thanks
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:

* No matter how many times the board member includes a disclaimer that they don't speak for the board and this is their personal opinion only, the homeowner will hear it as "the board says...".

* The homeowner will likely pass this on to other homeowners in some garbled, incomplete, and out of context fashion. As with the old game of Telephone, you end up with bad information being passed around the community. This may be merely a nuisance - or it can cause serious issues in the hands of your professional complainers who are looking for ways to undermine whatever the board does, good or bad.

* Talking to individual homeowners one-on-one can give the appearance of favoritism, and boards should avoid that.

* It can also foster a climate of secrecy. There is a good reason that official association business is conducted in writing and in open session.

* Yes, board members don't stop being homeowners and having all of the same concerns that non-board members do. On the other hand, they don't ever stop being board members in the eyes of non-board members, either, and ignoring this doesn't make it go away.

I'd said earlier that I didn't think censuring was appropriate in this case, and I re-iterate that any board member who is hot to trot on communications should take on the newsletter and web site jobs. They'll get to communicate until they're well and truly sick of it.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JohnC46 on 05/03/2020 12:14 PM
Sasha

A few questions. Please answer:

1. How large is you HOA in units/members?
2. How many on the BOD?
3. Physically what type units (high rise, individual units, townhomes, etc.)are there?
4. What is you annual budget?
5. Whatis your professional experience?
6. Have you ever served on a BOD?

Thanks

1. 426 units
2. 5
3. Condominiums
4. 1M
5. I’m a LCSW
6. First time HOA Board member
GenoS (Florida)
Posts: 4,276
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 12:35 PM
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:

* No matter how many times the board member includes a disclaimer that they don't speak for the board and this is their personal opinion only, the homeowner will hear it as "the board says...".

I think that's true, but that's the homeowner's problem. There's no "apparent authority" an owner may rely on when the CC&Rs or Bylaws specifically state that individual board members have to inherent authority on their own and that only the board as a whole makes decisions.

An outside party such as a vendor or contractor may rely on the word of an Officer or Director due to his or her apparent authority. The outside vendor has no duty to research the association's governing documents to determine whether the President, for instance, has the authority to bind the association to a contract.

It's different for owners who are on notice that the association is governed by its governing documents. If a homeowner is (or chooses) to be ignorant about that, then that's his or her problem. If the president, for example, tells an owner to go ahead and pour that 20x50 ft concrete patio next to their house and the governing documents do not give the president the authority to approve that on his own, then the homeowner doesn't get off the hook afterwards by saying, "the president told me I could do it".
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
I tend to agree with the advice Cathy received. Directors should all have their eyes fixed on what's in the best interests of their community. Complaining to various individual owners about the board's alleged poor judgement, or worse, does not benefit the larger community at all.

We've gone over one of Saha's complaints above --that the board will be in executive session to discuss changing management companies: "Requesting ā€œBoard members onlyā€ meetings to discuss important HOA information such as making the decision to change a major vendor without letting the homeowners know about this change or meeting."

There are many reasons why this topic should be in executive session. I advised Sasha to go to davis-stirling.com, Index, Executive Session, what Sasha calls Board members only" meetings, but s/he seems to reject reading & learning about HOA topics. Now, these executive sessions must be noticed 2 days in advance with general topics listed, in this case, Personnel Matter.

Sasha is outnumbered on the board and, so far as I can tell, is being ignored. Gossiping and griping to owners about the Board's alleged bad behavior not only is not good for the community, it harms Sasha's chance to make any difference whatsoever in the HOA.

(ps I'm curious about what "HOA information" the PM won't give to her/him. will you tell us, Sasha?
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
I tend to agree with the advice Cathy's HOA attorney's received. Directors should all have their eyes fixed on what's in the best interests of their community. Complaining to various individual owners about the board's alleged poor judgement, or worse, does not benefit the larger community at all.

We've gone over one of Sasha's complaints above --that the board will be in executive session to discuss changing management companies: "Requesting 'Board members only' meetings to discuss important HOA information such as making the decision to change a major vendor without letting the homeowners know about this change or meeting."

There are many reasons why this topic should be in executive session. I advised Sasha to go to davis-stirling.com, Index, Executive Session, what Sasha calls "Board members only" meetings, but s/he seems to reject reading & learning about HOA topics. Now, these executive sessions must be noticed 2 days in advance with general topics listed, in this case, Personnel Matter.

Sasha is outnumbered on the board and, so far as I can tell, is being ignored. Gossiping and griping to owners about the Board's alleged bad behavior not only is not good for the community, it harms Sasha's chance to make any difference whatsoever in the HOA.

(ps I'm curious about what "HOA information" the PM won't give to her/him. will you tell us, Sasha?
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/03/2020 1:11 PM
I tend to agree with the advice Cathy received. Directors should all have their eyes fixed on what's in the best interests of their community. Complaining to various individual owners about the board's alleged poor judgement, or worse, does not benefit the larger community at all.

We've gone over one of Saha's complaints above --that the board will be in executive session to discuss changing management companies: "Requesting ā€œBoard members onlyā€ meetings to discuss important HOA information such as making the decision to change a major vendor without letting the homeowners know about this change or meeting."

There are many reasons why this topic should be in executive session. I advised Sasha to go to davis-stirling.com, Index, Executive Session, what Sasha calls Board members only" meetings, but s/he seems to reject reading & learning about HOA topics. Now, these executive sessions must be noticed 2 days in advance with general topics listed, in this case, Personnel Matter.

Sasha is outnumbered on the board and, so far as I can tell, is being ignored. Gossiping and griping to owners about the Board's alleged bad behavior not only is not good for the community, it harms Sasha's chance to make any difference whatsoever in the HOA.

(ps I'm curious about what "HOA information" the PM won't give to her/him. will you tell us, Sasha?

Hi Kerry - No one is gossiping or complaining about the Board or any particular Board member to other homeowners. However the majority of the Board members do this but want to censure us two for talking to homeowner about regular meeting information and about how to access information like the governing documents. Also, if the majority of the Board aren’t making choices in the best interest of the community, sharing that with others makes a lot of sense and is in the best interest of the community, even though the minority board members here are not doing that out of integrity. As to reading the link you shared, to assume i’m not reading is silly. If i’m reading to learn and doing my best to understand does that then mean i cannot ask here to obtain insight as well from other experienced Board members to solidify what I am reading and understanding and to continue to learn and obtain new resources or leads to continue reading and developing as a new Board member? Come on now.
JohnT38 (South Carolina)
Posts: 1,631
Posted:
You know common sense does apply to this topic. To say that a Board member should never discuss anything is foolish. I'll give you my example. Our HOA reserve account was never funded properly and as a result our clubhouse, roads, etc were in poor shape. The last reserve study was done 10 years ago and shoved in a draw and ignored. The first year I was on the Board the majority didn't vote to get a current study done for fear of raising the regime fees and pissing residents off.

I was constantly asked why everything was in a state of disrepair. I diplomatically explained what a reserve study was and stated that this Board and previous ones made the decision not to use a reserve study to find out what the appropriate regime fee should be. I was always asked why other Board members voted no and I always told them to come to our monthly meeting and ask this question during the open Q&A section. I didn't throw anyone under the bus but I made it clear I disagreed with the overall vote and I explained why. I don't regret it and would do it again in a heartbeat.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JohnT38 on 05/03/2020 2:31 PM
You know common sense does apply to this topic. To say that a Board member should never discuss anything is foolish. I'll give you my example. Our HOA reserve account was never funded properly and as a result our clubhouse, roads, etc were in poor shape. The last reserve study was done 10 years ago and shoved in a draw and ignored. The first year I was on the Board the majority didn't vote to get a current study done for fear of raising the regime fees and pissing residents off.
Great example.

Aside: I was wondering if JohnT38 was trying to be cute with his phrase, "regime fees." Au contraire. From the net: "Regime fees are condominium association costs typically charged on a monthly basis to the owners of condos that cover budgeted items. Although the terms 'HOA' and 'condo association fees' are more widely used, 'regime fee' is a common term in southern states, and more specifically here in South Carolina." I guess I am still wondering if in the South, 'regime fee' derives from general disdain for government regulation.
JohnT38 (South Carolina)
Posts: 1,631
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By AugustinD on 05/03/2020 2:36 PM
Posted By JohnT38 on 05/03/2020 2:31 PM
You know common sense does apply to this topic. To say that a Board member should never discuss anything is foolish. I'll give you my example. Our HOA reserve account was never funded properly and as a result our clubhouse, roads, etc were in poor shape. The last reserve study was done 10 years ago and shoved in a draw and ignored. The first year I was on the Board the majority didn't vote to get a current study done for fear of raising the regime fees and pissing residents off.
Great example.

Aside: I was wondering if JohnT38 was trying to be cute with his phrase, "regime fees." Au contraire. From the net: "Regime fees are condominium association costs typically charged on a monthly basis to the owners of condos that cover budgeted items. Although the terms 'HOA' and 'condo association fees' are more widely used, 'regime fee' is a common term in southern states, and more specifically here in South Carolina." I guess I am still wondering if in the South, 'regime fee' derives from general disdain for government regulation.

I really wasn't! We are a condo association though.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/03/2020 11:53 AM
Asking the property manager to keep HOA information from me and this other minority Board member.
You cannot do your job as a director without having the access to HOA records that your governing documents and state law require. In fact you could be held liable if you vote a certain way on an issue without having access to certain records. I realize you are in a terrible position as a director in the minority. If you elaborate a little on what records you are being denied, folks here may be able to give specific advice on how to proceed.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JohnT38 on 05/03/2020 2:40 PM
I really wasn't! We are a condo association though.
It's cool. Plus I learned a new vocabulary phrase. Even if I do chuckle every time I hear it.
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/03/2020 1:51 PM
... stuff snipped...Also, if the majority of the Board aren’t making choices in the best interest of the community, sharing that with others makes a lot of sense and is in the best interest of the community, even though the minority board members here are not doing that out of integrity.

One comment: What is in the best interest of the community can be very much a matter of opinion, and one's view of that should change as one gets more experience serving on the board. It's not uncommon for newbie board members to have an agenda, only to run up against the realities of the job. In fact, if you don't spend most of your first year feeling like you're in over your head, then you're not learning the ropes. During my first year, I found it helpful to approach disagreements with experienced board members with the attitude of "what do they know that I don't?" Quite a lot, as it turned out.
MarkW18
Posts: 1,290
Posted:
Congress people speak openly about topics that come before their committees, UNLESS it was discussed in secret or a closed meeting. I served on a Neighborhood Council for the City of Los Angeles and there was NEVER an issue if we spoke to neighbors outside of a meeting.

Let's say the member was at a board meeting and saw you voted no on a proposal, that eventually passed. There is no harm in asking why they thought they were correct in voting no. Working against a majority vote of a board decision is a completely different story. Afterall, World War III is not getting started because one board member spoke with their neighbor.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 12:35 PM
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:
I wonder if this attorney's advice would change if a Board majority was disregarding the advice of counsel and blatantly violating some statute, say, putting at risk in a major way the financial integrity of the HOA.

The directors in the minority should not express their concerns to HOA/condo members in conversations outside of board meetings? Really? Do such conversations put the HOA at legal risk? I am having trouble seeing this, but I will hear out what others think the legal risk is. If there is no legal risk, and Mr./Ms. attorney is just giving the board the benefit of his or her well-honed experience with corporations, then I suggest said attorney needs to serve as a City Attorney for awhile, and then contemplate that, incredibly, City Attorneys do not get to advise City Councilors about what they may say to their constitutents. Or perhaps said attorney is in fact simply allying with an ego-driven out of control board majority that he or she knows pays his or her bills? So shut the minority directors up. I have seen this.

Minority directors being forced to pay thousands of dollars to their own attorney to be able to review records pursuant to their "absolute right" (per the Bylaws) to review certain records and so be able to fulfill their statutory fiduciary duty happens. If said minority directors want to publicize this (instead of pay their own attorney thousands of dollars), then while it will be disruptive, it is disrupting a corrupt board. I have no patience for an attorney who allies with a board majority where said board majority is obviously breaking the law, and with major consequences for same being likely in the not-too-distant future.
GeorgeS21 (Florida)
Posts: 3,808
Posted:
A lot of he said-she said.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By AugustinD on 05/03/2020 3:54 PM
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 12:35 PM
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:
I wonder if this attorney's advice would change if a Board majority was disregarding the advice of counsel and blatantly violating some statute, say, putting at risk in a major way the financial integrity of the HOA.

The directors in the minority should not express their concerns to HOA/condo members in conversations outside of board meetings? Really? Do such conversations put the HOA at legal risk? I am having trouble seeing this, but I will hear out what others think the legal risk is. If there is no legal risk, and Mr./Ms. attorney is just giving the board the benefit of his or her well-honed experience with corporations, then I suggest said attorney needs to serve as a City Attorney for awhile, and then contemplate that, incredibly, City Attorneys do not get to advise City Councilors about what they may say to their constitutents. Or perhaps said attorney is in fact simply allying with an ego-driven out of control board majority that he or she knows pays his or her bills? So shut the minority directors up. I have seen this.

Minority directors being forced to pay thousands of dollars to their own attorney to be able to review records pursuant to their "absolute right" (per the Bylaws) to review certain records and so be able to fulfill their statutory fiduciary duty happens. If said minority directors want to publicize this (instead of pay their own attorney thousands of dollars), then while it will be disruptive, it is disrupting a corrupt board. I have no patience for an attorney who allies with a board majority where said board majority is obviously breaking the law, and with major consequences for same being likely in the not-too-distant future.

Augustin: They tell the property manager not to inform us of meetings they have regarding property walk dates. They ask the property manager to not give us copy of contracts that instead let them (the majority of the board) know and they will give us two the information we need. They have emails communications (the majority of the board) which exclude us two and we discovered this because decisions were made and we weren’t aware of when it happened and when we ask they said they communicated in between meetings via email but that those weren’t considered meetings and the choice was made at the regular (or executive meeting) with us all present so it doesn’t matter according to the majority of the Board. However it seems to us two minority that we should be included in all email discussions too and that the homeowners should know unless it’s executive session information, of course.
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
Ah, the PM isn't giving you copies of contract for your review. All owners may have these. I'd ask the PM again in writing--cite the place in your own documents that state you may have these OR cite the statute that you can find at Davis-stirling.com, Index, Records, and copy the PM's boss.
MarkW18
Posts: 1,290
Posted:
I had been in the same position with my first Board. They had a 3-2 majority and the PM and attorney on their side.
BenA2 (Texas)
Posts: 1,273
Posted:
As I understand censure, it's a formal vote voicing the board's disapproval with no penalty. If that is also the case in California, I would proudly let all the owners know that you were censured and why, pointing out you did nothing wrong. That turns the tables and makes the board look bad.
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By BenA2 on 05/03/2020 7:36 PM
As I understand censure, it's a formal vote voicing the board's disapproval with no penalty. If that is also the case in California, I would proudly let all the owners know that you were censured and why, pointing out you did nothing wrong. That turns the tables and makes the board look bad.

Thanks everyone for information. I read on the Davis-Stirling website the following regarding items allowed in an executive session:
4. Personnel Issues. Personnel matters includes anything involving employees including, but not limited to, hiring, firing, raises, disciplinary matters, performance reviews, and adopting or amending employee policies. Filling officer or director vacancies and appointing or removing committee members do not qualify as personnel matters. They need to be done in open session.

Would having a discussion of deciding to change a major vendor qualify for this? The Board of Directors want to change a major vendor that the homeowners are very happy with for personal reasons of their own. Therefore they want to do it all in executive session and then announce to the homeowners that they have a new vendor when all contracts are signed. I don’t agree with the lack of transparency and think these discussions would be best in a regular board meeting. why exclude the homeowners from knowing this and being part of the discussion? Thoughts?
SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By SashaE1 on 05/03/2020 10:24 PM
Posted By BenA2 on 05/03/2020 7:36 PM
As I understand censure, it's a formal vote voicing the board's disapproval with no penalty. If that is also the case in California, I would proudly let all the owners know that you were censured and why, pointing out you did nothing wrong. That turns the tables and makes the board look bad.


Thanks everyone for information. I read on the Davis-Stirling website the following regarding items allowed in an executive session:
4. Personnel Issues. Personnel matters includes anything involving employees including, but not limited to, hiring, firing, raises, disciplinary matters, performance reviews, and adopting or amending employee policies. Filling officer or director vacancies and appointing or removing committee members do not qualify as personnel matters. They need to be done in open session.

Would having a discussion of deciding to change a major vendor qualify for this? The Board of Directors want to change a major vendor that the homeowners are very happy with for personal reasons of their own. Therefore they want to do it all in executive session and then announce to the homeowners that they have a new vendor when all contracts are signed. I don’t agree with the lack of transparency and think these discussions would be best in a regular board meeting. why exclude the homeowners from knowing this and being part of the discussion? Thoughts?

Oops my mistake. This is another topic. Will start a new thread. Don’t see an option to delete this last post.
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By AugustinD on 05/03/2020 3:54 PM
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 12:35 PM
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:
I wonder if this attorney's advice would change if a Board majority was disregarding the advice of counsel and blatantly violating some statute, say, putting at risk in a major way the financial integrity of the HOA. ...


I suspect that it would. Their advice isn't "the law", it's guidance to prevent misinformation from circulating and to stop would-be troublemakers from creating problems where none exist. But you always have to decide whether keeping silent would cause more harm than talking, as would be the case if someone found out that certain board members were truly up to no good. Individual circumstances, as well as an individual's motivation, should drive the decision. Whistle blower vs. blabbermouth.

That said, people who cause trouble always have some allegedly high-minded reason for behaving badly. You can't evaluate the issues without hearing the other side of the story and having some idea of the complainant's credibility.

I'm always suspicious when I hear a newly-elected board member spouting off about how awful and incompetent the other board members are. Of course it's possible that this is true, we've all heard the stories. It's also possible that the new person is your typical clueless newbie who doesn't know enough to evaluate what they're looking at and is getting it wrong. And maybe the membership has just elected a "vocational dissident" to the board, and boy won't they be in for a good time then! (We had a new board member in my community who loudly criticized the other members because we would not agree to erect a street sign on the commercial property adjacent to us - even though township officials had told her repeatedly that this was not a street, and we told her repeatedly this is was not, ya know, our property. But she was *outraged*. So yeah, huge grain of salt here.)

JohnC46 (South Carolina)
Posts: 14,265
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/04/2020 6:18 AM
Posted By AugustinD on 05/03/2020 3:54 PM
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 12:35 PM
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:
I wonder if this attorney's advice would change if a Board majority was disregarding the advice of counsel and blatantly violating some statute, say, putting at risk in a major way the financial integrity of the HOA. ...



I suspect that it would. Their advice isn't "the law", it's guidance to prevent misinformation from circulating and to stop would-be troublemakers from creating problems where none exist. But you always have to decide whether keeping silent would cause more harm than talking, as would be the case if someone found out that certain board members were truly up to no good. Individual circumstances, as well as an individual's motivation, should drive the decision. Whistle blower vs. blabbermouth.

That said, people who cause trouble always have some allegedly high-minded reason for behaving badly. You can't evaluate the issues without hearing the other side of the story and having some idea of the complainant's credibility.

I'm always suspicious when I hear a newly-elected board member spouting off about how awful and incompetent the other board members are. Of course it's possible that this is true, we've all heard the stories. It's also possible that the new person is your typical clueless newbie who doesn't know enough to evaluate what they're looking at and is getting it wrong. And maybe the membership has just elected a "vocational dissident" to the board, and boy won't they be in for a good time then! (We had a new board member in my community who loudly criticized the other members because we would not agree to erect a street sign on the commercial property adjacent to us - even though township officials had told her repeatedly that this was not a street, and we told her repeatedly this is was not, ya know, our property. But she was *outraged*. So yeah, huge grain of salt here.)


Well said.

SashaE1
Posts: 110
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/04/2020 6:18 AM
Posted By AugustinD on 05/03/2020 3:54 PM
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/03/2020 12:35 PM
I'm going to play devil's advocate here and summarize what our attorney told us about individual board members responding to individual homeowner questions outside of normal channels:
I wonder if this attorney's advice would change if a Board majority was disregarding the advice of counsel and blatantly violating some statute, say, putting at risk in a major way the financial integrity of the HOA. ...



I suspect that it would. Their advice isn't "the law", it's guidance to prevent misinformation from circulating and to stop would-be troublemakers from creating problems where none exist. But you always have to decide whether keeping silent would cause more harm than talking, as would be the case if someone found out that certain board members were truly up to no good. Individual circumstances, as well as an individual's motivation, should drive the decision. Whistle blower vs. blabbermouth.

That said, people who cause trouble always have some allegedly high-minded reason for behaving badly. You can't evaluate the issues without hearing the other side of the story and having some idea of the complainant's credibility.

I'm always suspicious when I hear a newly-elected board member spouting off about how awful and incompetent the other board members are. Of course it's possible that this is true, we've all heard the stories. It's also possible that the new person is your typical clueless newbie who doesn't know enough to evaluate what they're looking at and is getting it wrong. And maybe the membership has just elected a "vocational dissident" to the board, and boy won't they be in for a good time then! (We had a new board member in my community who loudly criticized the other members because we would not agree to erect a street sign on the commercial property adjacent to us - even though township officials had told her repeatedly that this was not a street, and we told her repeatedly this is was not, ya know, our property. But she was *outraged*. So yeah, huge grain of salt here.)


Yup, thst newly elected Board member was wasting precious time causing chaos it seems to me. If township officials told her it was not a street and the Board told her it’s was not their property, then sounds like if this new Board member was that passionate about sign on commercial property they should’ve talked to the owner of that property to see if they could negotiate putting up the sign for whatever reasons they had. Bad mouthing other Board members without any evidence of wrong doing could be a liability of slander. Thanks for sharing your experience Cathy.
GeorgeS21 (Florida)
Posts: 3,808
Posted:
Slander?
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By GeorgeS21 on 05/04/2020 7:38 PM
Slander?

Yeah, it could be, depending on what was being said. One of the ways you can recognize certain types of vocational dissidents is by the sometimes vile accusations they sling around. One of our chronic complainers loves to trot out the accusation of "willful misconduct", which was amusingly wrong since our board has been sticklers for doing everything by the book.

In a number of states there are certain types of defamation for which damages are assumed because of their particularly harmful effects. If I recall correction, one of them was suffering from a "loathsome disease" (I think that's a holdover from the Victorian era when people got "pox"). Another was accusations of ethical violations, and willful misconduct is flirting with that. Depending on how energetic the accuser is, you can see how such rumors can undermine the community's trust in the board and make it even more difficult for the board to do their jobs - which is why our attorney said we should consider sending a cease-and-desist letter if the accuser won't give it rest.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/05/2020 5:29 AM
In a number of states there are certain types of defamation for which damages are assumed because of their particularly harmful effects. If I recall correction, one of them was suffering from a "loathsome disease" (I think that's a holdover from the Victorian era when people got "pox").
Agreed re the "loathsome disease"; defamation per se; and the requirement for damages being automatically met in such instances.
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/05/2020 5:29 AM
Another was accusations of ethical violations, and willful misconduct is flirting with that.
I realize people often write quickly here. I realize directors are often disgusted with being attacked as board members. But the statement above seems to me to be its own flirtation with oppression of important free speech rights as follows.

When the person accused of ethical violations is a well-known figure (a.k.a. 'quasi-public official' in the case of HOA directors and managers), then the bar for proving defamation is high. The accusations may be untrue, but the person making the accusations has to have had "actual malice." When free of actual malice, the person making the accusations against a well-known figure has qualified privilege to make erroneous statements about public or quasi-public officials. In other words, suppose a homeowners association (or director's) sues a HOA member for accusing a board of, say, violating its fiduciary duty on account of doing _____. The facts are that the HOA member made an unwitting mistake (like the real-life example CathyA3 gave). As a result, the homeowners association will lose the lawsuit. Plus I see the judge rolling her or his eyes at the HOA attorney for bringing the suit.

Public or quasi-public officials have a notoriously poor track record when it comes to winning defamation suits, for good reason. Why do public figures, including HOA board members and HOA managers, get less protection when falsehoods are told about them (with said falsehoods pertaining to their acts in overseeing and operating the HOA)? As I bet many here at hoatalk know, the standard derives from the 1964, unanimous (9-0) Supreme Court decision in Sullivan v. New York Times. Justice Brennan wrote of "a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials."
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/05/2020 5:29 AM
Depending on how energetic the accuser is, you can see how such rumors can undermine the community's trust in the board and make it even more difficult for the board to do their jobs
Being a HOA Director means serving as a volunteer. Rewards of any kind are absent. Plus one is under fire constantly, and yes, often by members ignorant of law who speak falsehoods. But the board has abundant resources (HOA members' money; the manager who serves at their command) to get out the truth via newsletters, mass emails, publication of minutes, and open board meetings. The board also has any pit-bull attorney it wants at its command. Members have none of these.
Quote:
Posted By CathyA3 on 05/05/2020 5:29 AM
- which is why our attorney said we should consider sending a cease-and-desist letter if the accuser won't give it rest.
... and if the HOA ultimately sued the owner making false statements (without malice), your HOA could get hit with a SLAPP-type suit. The acronym "SLAPP" refers to "strategic lawsuit against public participation." More likely the owner would simply exercise the defense of "qualified privilege" and see if she or he could get his or her attorneys' fees paid per statute.

I wonder whether the reason CathyA3 and I are approaching this from different ends of the spectrum is a comment on the income levels of our respective HOAs/condos. Two of my three HOAs/condos were middle-middle class, with not a lot of refined (so to speak) education. The directors were often no more enlightened on the covenants than the members.
AugustinD
Posts: 5,144
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By GeorgeS21 on 05/04/2020 7:38 PM
Slander?
In the instance CathyA3 described, not a chance.
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By AugustinD on 05/05/2020 8:09 AM
.... snippage .....
I wonder whether the reason CathyA3 and I are approaching this from different ends of the spectrum is a comment on the income levels of our respective HOAs/condos. Two of my three HOAs/condos were middle-middle class, with not a lot of refined (so to speak) education. The directors were often no more enlightened on the covenants than the members.

Judging by the price of our homes, we're middle-middle class. The immediate area is very mixed, with remnants of the rural area that it was not too long ago mixed with high end McMansions and even pricier neighborhoods. The area also attracts corporations. As a result, our residents tend to be professionals and retirees from the corporations, ethnically mixed. The large majority have college degrees (several degrees for some of us). Financially we have those who are living paycheck to paycheck as well as millionaires, although you can't tell which is which by appearance.

One thing that could account for differences is that this is a condo community, and condo buyers often consider their homes to be temporary glorified apartments. I suspect that as a group they are less invested in their communities than the typical single family home HOA resident. The ignorance is a deliberate choice, in other words, and not a reflection of economic or educational background. I've also heard some horror stories out of some of the high priced HOA communities, though, so money is no guarantee of good behavior.
LaskaS (Texas)
Posts: 1,025
Posted:
sasha,, as long as you are not revealing anything that is priveledged information.

i believe you have every right to communicate with anyone you want to..

the majority group in board will often try and shut down a dissenting minority , .. been there, done that.

just make sure if you communicate with the owners,, you clearly state that you are writing as a concerned homeowner. who is a member of the board,, you aren't speaking for the board..

there's a difference between being in minority on an issue put up to vote.

and being in the minority on the legality of what the majority is doing or attempting to do.

If a motion is made and it's a proper motion within the boards authority to decide,,and the majority vote one way, which you disagree with. In that case., I don't think it's proper to then go to the owners to plead your side..

but if the issue is the board acting outside of their legal authority,, or not following the legal requirements for board decisions.. I would definitely speak up. and keep on speaking up.

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