Quote:
Posted By HenryS6 on 10/29/2021 12:05 PM
Posted By MaxB4 on 10/29/2021 11:58 AM
I am curious, what kind of advice are you looking for? Take one example. "Is having homeowners at a board meeting a turnoff"? Sorry, but in many states, it is a homeowner's right, whether you or any board member likes it or not. If you or any other board member is not comfortable being around people, then you have no place on your board. You might be a mathematician, but this is a people business.
This is a classic example of what I am talking about.
You make it sound like we have dozens of willing volunteers who all want to join the board, so we have to vote in the best. That is not the case in our HOA nor in many HOAs. We have few that want to volunteer anyway. Make it uncomfortable for them and we will have fewer still who volunteer. I am very concerned about asking more of our community than people can offer in terms of being volunteers, and turning away otherwise good volunteers who maybe don't like being in the spotlight.
I think people currently on the board know that. You are not one of those people, as you live in a community that doesn't have an HOA at all, so you don't have first hand experience.
Managers know how hard it is to get good board members I promise!
We also know that violating state statutes by not holding open meetings when necessary because it’s easier for board members not to have them is a really bad idea.
I love the board I currently work for. I try to shield them from the worst parts of board service as much as I can: encouraging them to direct owners to me for questions/complaints, reminding them that they can forward any of those request to me. I do all the prep work for any project so they only need to make decisions. Anything good that happens in the community - they get the credit and the glory. Anything bad - I’m the messenger. I try to minimize the amount of emails I send them, and only call if it’s an emergency. And I thank them constantly.
If a board has a competent manager, service should not be a burden.