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JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
I originally posted about this in January...

In December, our PMC mailed out a 20-page update to our ARC guidelines that our Board was going to vote on at the next meeting.

There were a couple of problems with the mailer. First, they didn't count the days right and it ended up only being 27 days when 28 days was required. Second and more importantly, there was no indication of what had changed. They basically mailed out a copy of the new rules and asked for comments.

To me, the law is very clear that not only is a 28-day notice required, that it also required that "The notice shall include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the purpose and effect of the proposed rule change."

Tonight I was flabbergasted when the board approved these updates based on that December mailing. I tried to say that I had brought this up before and they were in violation of the law, but the PMC shut me down and said the open comment section was closed...

Where do I go from here, is there any reasonable recourse? Is it possible I am misreading this section somehow?

Cal Civ Code 4360
https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?secti4360&lawCode=CIV

MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
The mailing was done in December and the rule was approved in May. That seems to me like more than 28 days. As far as the cause and effect of the change, I would sweat it. If the owners don't like the change, they can get together and overturn the Board's decision.

Good luck with that!
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
You didn't read it wrong, James: "Civil Code § 4360. Notice and Approval of Rule Change by Board...(a) The board shall provide general notice ... of a proposed rule change at least 28 days before making the rule change. The notice shall include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the purpose and effect of the proposed rule change..."

The Board should have listed each new or repealed rule and its purpose & effect, (which often re the same) Surely the entire 20 pages don't comprise all new rules. I disagree with Max. Owners shouldn't have to compare the proposed 20-page ARC package with the old one side-by-side to ferret out what is new (and what may have been repealed) in it. The purpose/effet won't b in the text anyway. The way the board sent it makes it seem they are hiding new perhaps unreasonable demands in it that they hope Owners won't notice.

Generally, the PM would write the 28-day comment letter for owners, so perhaps your PM is too lazy to correctly separate out the new rules so owners can see them clearly and distinctly.

Sure, as Max suggests, owners can try to get everyone together and call a meeting to change the new rules, blah, blah. But that is very unlikely to happen and would distract from your goal to replace the current Board.

You know what your recourse is, James. Keep up the campaign to replace this Board that refuses to comply with statute. Otherwise, IDR, which you've already tried, I think.

MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/18/2023 8:52 AM
You didn't read it wrong, James: "Civil Code § 4360. Notice and Approval of Rule Change by Board...(a) The board shall provide general notice ... of a proposed rule change at least 28 days before making the rule change. The notice shall include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the purpose and effect of the proposed rule change..."

The Board should have listed each new or repealed rule and its purpose & effect, (which often re the same) Surely the entire 20 pages don't comprise all new rules. I disagree with Max. Owners shouldn't have to compare the proposed 20-page ARC package with the old one side-by-side to ferret out what is new (and what may have been repealed) in it. The purpose/effet won't b in the text anyway. The way the board sent it makes it seem they are hiding new perhaps unreasonable demands in it that they hope Owners won't notice.

Generally, the PM would write the 28-day comment letter for owners, so perhaps your PM is too lazy to correctly separate out the new rules so owners can see them clearly and distinctly.

Sure, as Max suggests, owners can try to get everyone together and call a meeting to change the new rules, blah, blah. But that is very unlikely to happen and would distract from your goal to replace the current Board.

You know what your recourse is, James. Keep up the campaign to replace this Board that refuses to comply with statute. Otherwise, IDR, which you've already tried, I think.


First, you say the Board should have listed each new or repealed rule and its cause and effect and then you say the PM was too lazy to do it. Which is it? Have you actually seen what was mailed? James has a difficult time with the statute as it says 28 days BEFORE making the rule change. Seems to me a lot more time has passed than 28 days.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Kerry
It's hard to hear at our meetings. I am pretty sure that our community manager said something to the effect that there were too many changes to list out. I am going to try to talk to one of my neighbors who was also at the meeting and see if that was their perception also.

In the past, when other boards made changes like this - at least they would line out the old verbiage and show what they wanted to replace it with in italics or some other way to distinguish the change.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
James

You have mentioned you live in a rather large community. Typically, one that size will have its own legal counsel who would handle the legal process of changing or amending governing docs, including, but not limited to Rule changes. If a lawyer was involved, I stay away from commenting on the document.

You mention that these are ARC changes, which are a different beast from regular Rules and Regulations. I have had ARC rules created where none existed before. There was essentially a 4-5 month comment period. Did anyone comment or bring up your legal issue about having everything spelled out?

I know you had an issue with the cost of postage on this mailing. I would email to those on an approved email listed, posted on a website or portal, and let anyone know if they wanted a hard copy, it would be mailed separately.

Can you tell us some of the changes and what you would an explanation for?
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
The Board at an open meeting, Max, would have stated the actual changes and their purpose, voted on them, and then instructed the PM to place them in the notice to owners. The 28-days is not the problem here. The problem is a Board and/or PM that doesn't seem to want owners to easily see what the proposed changes are.

I, of course, haven't seen the doc, Max. I believe James when he states that only the proposed rules embedded in the entire doc--with nothing to distinguish the new rules OR their purpose--were sent to owners. Don't you believe James?

James notes a different way to show the changes to owners-- Send the whole doc and insert the new rules within the ARC doc italicized or in color. But somehow, the purpose for each new or repealed rule must be stated.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/18/2023 10:58 AM
The Board at an open meeting, Max, would have stated the actual changes and their purpose, voted on them, and then instructed the PM to place them in the notice to owners.

Seriously, are you going to read 20 pages of changes at a meeting and state the purpose of each change, when maybe two owners show up?
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Max

There is a cover sheet that indicates:

"the Board of directors has made changes to the current Architectural Guidelines. The updated guidelines are attached for your review. Please review the changes and send any comments to ..."

Then on the second page, which is the table of contents, there is a notation "Redline changes recommended by (HOA's Attorney's Name). So yes, the HOA attorney apparently made redline changes.

To me, this is an example of a "redline change", compliments of OpenAI:

"The redline version of a legal draft typically displays the original text with strikeouts or deletions marked in red and insertions or additions shown in red and underlined or highlighted. This format allows the reader to easily identify the specific modifications made to the document, aiding in the review and comparison of different versions."

Again, there were no redline changes included, or any other type of notations. They simply sent out their new version of our Architectural Guidelines. The only way to discern a change, good or bad, would be to go through them, paragraph by paragraph, and compare them to our old rules. No one is going to do that, not even me. Which is probably the reason why they made a law about it...

MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 11:21 AM
The only way to discern a change, good or bad, would be to go through them, paragraph by paragraph, and compare them to our old rules. No one is going to do that, not even me. Which is probably the reason why they made a law about it...


And no one reads the governing documents prior to purchasing in an HOA community, but it appears that is A-OK.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 11:21 AM

And you want to be a Board member?
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 11:21 AM
Max

There is a cover sheet that indicates:

"the Board of directors has made changes to the current Architectural Guidelines. The updated guidelines are attached for your review. Please review the changes and send any comments to ..."

Then on the second page, which is the table of contents, there is a notation "Redline changes recommended by (HOA's Attorney's Name). So yes, the HOA attorney apparently made redline changes.

To me, this is an example of a "redline change", compliments of OpenAI:

"The redline version of a legal draft typically displays the original text with strikeouts or deletions marked in red and insertions or additions shown in red and underlined or highlighted. This format allows the reader to easily identify the specific modifications made to the document, aiding in the review and comparison of different versions."

Again, there were no redline changes included, or any other type of notations. They simply sent out their new version of our Architectural Guidelines. The only way to discern a change, good or bad, would be to go through them, paragraph by paragraph, and compare them to our old rules. No one is going to do that, not even me. Which is probably the reason why they made a law about it...


So, the attorney violated the law, good luck with that!
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
No, I *think* the attorney made the redline changes and sent the document back to the PMC. The PMC screwed up by not sending out the changes, they just sent out the finished document
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Yes - I don't understand your point, are you belittling me because of something I wrote or what (it went over my head if you were)
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 11:41 AM
No, I *think* the attorney made the redline changes and sent the document back to the PMC. The PMC screwed up by not sending out the changes, they just sent out the finished document

Let us know if the attorney made the changes. If this would have me, I would have just sent what the attorney drafted and not waste my time on the initial draft.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
And how do I find that out - If I ask for the 'redline changes' aren't they going to say that is privileged info?
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 11:47 AM
And how do I find that out - If I ask for the 'redline changes' aren't they going to say that is privileged info?

Why would that be considered privileged information?
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Attorney Client Privilege? I don't know, that is why I asked. Why didn't they just include it like they were supposed to?
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Good Luck
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
Posted By KerryL1: "The Board at an open meeting, Max, would have stated the actual [proposed] changes and their purpose, voted on them, and then instructed the PM to place them in the notice to owners."

Max replied: "Seriously, are you going to read 20 pages of changes at a meeting and state the purpose of each change, when maybe two owners show up?"

The ARC doc is 20 pages long, Max. Within it, there might be a dozen proposed new rules, and/or old rules that are proposed for repeal. All of the proposed rule changes may total a page or two. How you could possibly think that the entire 20 pages revision is comprised entirely of all proposed rule changes is plain goofy. Next, how many members show up at board meetings is irrelevant. What matters is that every proposed rule change should be recorded in the minutes of that meeting. THAT is why they must be enumerated at the meeting.

Then James shows the only way Owners can figure out which among the 20 pages of text are proposed new rules: "The only way to discern a change, good or bad, would be to go through them, paragraph by paragraph, and compare them to our old rules. No one is going to do that, not even me. Which is probably the reason why they made a law about it..." Yes, one would have to put the two docs side-by-side and compare them. The statute, when adhered to by boards, eliminates that owner-hostile task, which only can mean the board wanted to hide its proposed changes from Owners. As James points out elsewhere. this lack of transparency characterizes this Board.

Max's oh-so-clever and I agree, "belittling" reply? "And no one reads the governing documents prior to purchasing in an HOA community, but it appears that is A-OK." What does his question have to do with James' issue?? Apparently Max thinks James and his few hundred fellow owners should have to compare the two 20 page docs??? Max then adds" "And you want to be a board member?" Why, Max, are you compelled to ask James that question??

THEN Max accuses Jame's HOA's attorney of "violating the law," when there is zero evidence that the attorney did any such thing. And here's one good sign, James: since the HOA attorney vetted the proposed rule changes, you can be pretty confident that none contradict your CC&Rs. So, that's a good thing.

Based on Max's unhelpful remarks here, It appears he has no experience, despite being a CA property manager in CA, who claims he sometimes chairs board meetings, of adhering to the clearly stated statutes about what must be in letters to Owners before a board can approve proposed rule changes. To be sure this statute's only a few years old, so perhaps Max simply hasn't caught up with it yet?

Meanwhile, James, do notice that the cover letter that was sent with the 20 page doc containing some proposed rule changes was incorrect in its wording: "The Board of directors HAS MADE changes to the current Architectural Guidelines. The updated guidelines are attached for your review. Please review the changes and send any comments to ..." What's wrong is that the Board may not approve the proposed changes until after they've seen Owners comments AND provided Owners a chance to comment on the proposed changes at a subsequent open board meeting. That latter also is a part of the statute that also should have been in the cover letter. That the PMC cut you off during open forum was also very wrong.

SheliaH (Indiana)
Posts: 6,964
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 11:21 AM
Max

There is a cover sheet that indicates:

"the Board of directors has made changes to the current Architectural Guidelines. The updated guidelines are attached for your review. Please review the changes and send any comments to ..."

Then on the second page, which is the table of contents, there is a notation "Redline changes recommended by (HOA's Attorney's Name). So yes, the HOA attorney apparently made redline changes.

To me, this is an example of a "redline change", compliments of OpenAI:

"The redline version of a legal draft typically displays the original text with strikeouts or deletions marked in red and insertions or additions shown in red and underlined or highlighted. This format allows the reader to easily identify the specific modifications made to the document, aiding in the review and comparison of different versions."

Again, there were no redline changes included, or any other type of notations. They simply sent out their new version of our Architectural Guidelines. The only way to discern a change, good or bad, would be to go through them, paragraph by paragraph, and compare them to our old rules. No one is going to do that, not even me. Which is probably the reason why they made a law about it...




If you weren't going to read the thing anyway because it was too long, what are you yelling about? This is why my mother says the easiest way to keep people ignorant is to write something down and hand it to them because they'll never read it. If you want to be a board member, you'd better start getting used to reading lots of stuff, even if it doesn't have pictures and contains words with more than two syllables. If you can't or refuse to, only looking at whatever interests you, volunteer for an advisory committee and serve your community that way because you may not have the discipline required to be an effective board member.

If this was sent out in December and we'll be into May in the next week and a half, it's possible that enough of your neighbors read it in a timely manner, sent in their comments and that's how the guidelines passed. That said, it does make sense to say something like "Sections this and that of the current guidelines address A-F. Enclosed are the proposed changes to those sections, so we encourage you to review them against the current guidelines and let us know if you have any questions, suggestions, or concerns."

If it is not right do not do it; if it is not true do not say it. Marcus Aurelius
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
ONLY the proposed rule changes should have been sent to owners, Shelia. OR, they should have been clearly highlighted in the entire doc. Please read James' remarks again. please note that in CA, the statute clearly says that the proposed rules be stated in the letter to Owners. Not an entire governing doc with proposed rule bits & pieces hidden in it. Your remarks almost always are on target, but this is a "miss."

In addition, James has been diligently reading lotsa CA statutes for a few months now without pictures or drawings. Jeez, Max's echo?
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/18/2023 2:18 PM
ONLY the proposed rule changes should have been sent to owners, Shelia. OR, they should have been clearly highlighted in the entire doc. Please read James' remarks again. please note that in CA, the statute clearly says that the proposed rules be stated in the letter to Owners. Not an entire governing doc with proposed rule bits & pieces hidden in it. Your remarks almost always are on target, but this is a "miss."

In addition, James has been diligently reading lotsa CA statutes for a few months now without pictures or drawings. Jeez, Max's echo?

Great that James is reading lots of CA statutes, but first, you have to be willing the ones sent to you.
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
Max wrote: "Great that James is reading lots of CA statutes, but first, you [sic] have to be willing [sic] the ones sent to you [sic]."

I'm sure you think it's cute to ignore CA statues that protect CA HOA owners, Max, but James and his fellow owners did not receive the correct materials from the board/PMC to read. Not sure why you cannot grasp that truth. I rendered the statute briefer to help you comprehend it. Civil Code § 4360. Notice and Approval of Rule Change by Board...The board shall provide general notice .... The notice shall include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the purpose and effect of the proposed rule change..."

James & his fellow owners received no description of the "purpose and effect of the proposed changes." Why do you think that's OK, Max???
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
So, according to James, they didn't bother to read the "proposed" changes because they were not "redlined" for his convenience. James says that the attorney provided a "redlined" version and that the PM must have changed it. How do you know WHAT James and his fellow owners received? James complained the Board didn't follow the 28 days rule and the Board doesn't know how to count, but to the best of my knowledge, 5 months is GREATER than 27 or 28 days.

I have done plenty of rule changes over 14 plus years, a few more than you have. I also don't waste 5 years getting CCRs and Bylaws passed and then have to whimper to a judge because you couldn't get the required vote to pass the CCRs.

You or I haven't seen the document, what's in it, where it came from, and is it replacing an old set or was a new set created?

It appears that James would rather be a board member who can criticize others while not offering to provide solutions. For a large HOA that James says he belongs to, I would rather have a leader than a follower.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
James,

I read some of your past comments. You have 800 single-family homes in your community. I don't know what your quorum number is, but let's say for argument's sake it's a majority or 50% plus 1. You need 401 to make a quorum or just open the ballots if you get that many. Maybe your Bylaws allow the meeting to adjourn to a 25% number, that's still 202 ballots. With a community that size, you need at least 20 neighbors willing to help out, going door-to-door, soliciting support. Two people ain't going to cut it. Getting on a board of that size is like running a political campaign and two people ain't going to work. I know this from first-hand experience.

Coming to this site, asking these types of questions is not going to get you a seat on your board. If you have a board of 5, you need a slate of all 5. If in the case of the ARC proposals, you had an issue, you could have conducted a town hall meeting of your own, and if the association didn't provide the content you wanted, it would be time for you to put in the time to do it and then explain to your fellow neighbors.
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
Trying again. The statute states that "The notice SHALL include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the PURPOSE AND EFFECT of the proposed rule change..." Owners in James' HOA did not receive that verbiage, which is needed for every proposed rule change.

To send only a 20 page doc, which may have a total of several proposed rules changes scattered all over it, with no indication of what is proposed, requires an owner to sit with that version & the current version side by side to learn WHAT is proposed. WHY would a board want owners to have to deal with that??? The only reason I can think of is sloppiness, laziness, ignorance or a desire to bury proposed changes that are unreasonable so that owners won't notice them. Why do you think that's OK, Max?

Max, Max. The above statue has not been in force for 14 years. Only a few. Say, can you even write an example of a couple of ARC proposed rule changes and their purpose?

You must have my HOA mixed up with someone else. From the day our Board sent out the proposed CC&R revisions to voters until the inspectors of election tallied the votes was maybe 5 months. That our 63+% approval rate did not meet the 67% needed, is hardly a negative sign and is common in CA HOAs as you very well know.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/18/2023 3:30 PM
Trying again. The statute states that "The notice SHALL include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the PURPOSE AND EFFECT of the proposed rule change..." Owners in James' HOA did not receive that verbiage, which is needed for every proposed rule change.

To send only a 20 page doc, which may have a total of several proposed rules changes scattered all over it, with no indication of what is proposed, requires an owner to sit with that version & the current version side by side to learn WHAT is proposed. WHY would a board want owners to have to deal with that??? The only reason I can think of is sloppiness, laziness, ignorance or a desire to bury proposed changes that are unreasonable so that owners won't notice them. Why do you think that's OK, Max?

Max, Max. The above statue has not been in force for 14 years. Only a few. Say, can you even write an example of a couple of ARC proposed rule changes and their purpose?

You must have my HOA mixed up with someone else. From the day our Board sent out the proposed CC&R revisions to voters until the inspectors of election tallied the votes was maybe 5 months. That our 63+% approval rate did not meet the 67% needed, is hardly a negative sign and is common in CA HOAs as you very well know.

We expect owners purchasing into an HOA to read the possible 200 pages of governing docs BEFORE they move in. What's 20 pages?

You stated it took you 5 years to finalize the proposed governing docs. There is a difference between working on the docs and having a finished product to finally send to the owners. No, I don't have you confused with another HOA.
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
You still don't seem to grasp the problem. The HOA did not follow the laws and provide the exact proposed changes's wording individually and the purpose of effect of each change. WHY is that OK with you? I suggested that you, Max, do not know how to write such requirements in the notice. You don't, right?

You also still don't get another aspect of James' board's sloppiness. They sent a 20 page doc with proposed rules hidden in it. Owners would also have to read the current 20 or so page doc to compare the two so they could learn WHAT was changed. That's 40 pages, which might even be in different sequences, when the only purpose a board could have for making owners do this is to hide unreasonable proposed rules.

Really, the HOAs you manage have 200 pages of governing docs? Ha Ha. In any case, a prospective protecting oneself by reading such docs before purchasing (not before "moving in" as Max wrote) is advised, of course. Often it involves folks' life savings. A lazy or slimy board board failing to follow the law is an entirely different story. Your attempt here, Max, might be known as a false equivalency.

Ah, yes, several boards in my HOA stopped and re-started CC&Rs revision work. One board was even voted out doing that period--well 3 of the 4 were NOT reelected, and the 4th (of) 7 resigned. I was off the Board for a year during that period. Why does it matter one bit to you, Max, about these off again, on again attempts in my HOA? So what? Who cares? And why, again, stray from James' topic? Try to focus. Maybe if you squint.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/18/2023 4:23 PM
You still don't seem to grasp the problem. The HOA did not follow the laws and provide the exact proposed changes's wording individually and the purpose of effect of each change. WHY is that OK with you? I suggested that you, Max, do not know how to write such requirements in the notice. You don't, right?

You also still don't get another aspect of James' board's sloppiness. They sent a 20 page doc with proposed rules hidden in it. Owners would also have to read the current 20 or so page doc to compare the two so they could learn WHAT was changed. That's 40 pages, which might even be in different sequences, when the only purpose a board could have for making owners do this is to hide unreasonable proposed rules.

Really, the HOAs you manage have 200 pages of governing docs? Ha Ha. In any case, a prospective protecting oneself by reading such docs before purchasing (not before "moving in" as Max wrote) is advised, of course. Often it involves folks' life savings. A lazy or slimy board board failing to follow the law is an entirely different story. Your attempt here, Max, might be known as a false equivalency.

Ah, yes, several boards in my HOA stopped and re-started CC&Rs revision work. One board was even voted out doing that period--well 3 of the 4 were NOT reelected, and the 4th (of) 7 resigned. I was off the Board for a year during that period. Why does it matter one bit to you, Max, about these off again, on again attempts in my HOA? So what? Who cares? And why, again, stray from James' topic? Try to focus. Maybe if you squint.

GET OFF YOUR HIGH HORSE, you haven't got the foggiest idea what was sent to James.

I understand you were the Secretary of your HOA. Did you actually perform the duties as outlined in your governing docs? Below is from your Bylaws, how many of these duties did you actually perform, or did you pawn them off to your high-price management company?

The secretary shall keep or cause to be kept at the principal office or such other place as the Board may order, a book of minutes of all meetings of Directors, with the time and place of holding the same, whether regular or special, and if special, how authorized, the notice thereof given, the names of those present at Board meetings, and the proceedings thereof. The secretary shall keep, or cause to be kept, appropriate current records showing the members, together with their addresses. The secretary shall give, or cause to be given, a notice of all meetings of the Board and elections required by the Governing Documents or by law to be given, and shall have such other powers and perform such other duties as may be prescribed by the Board or by the Bylaws.

200 pages, you have a min of 149 pages and that doesn't count ARC guidelines, whereas a couple of my HOAs are 50 pages long.

JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Sheila
I tried comparing the old rules with new. It's not as easy as it sounds. When I brought this up in January, I *thought* they would acknowledge their mistake and send out another mailing that complied with the law and showed not only what was changed by also the reason for the change. We pay our PMC almost $14k a month - is it too much to ask that they actually follow the law and do what they are paid to do?

Max
I thought when I brought this to their attention that they would realize their mistake and take corrective action and resend the mailer again. I am a little confused why you would indicate that "James would rather be a board member who can criticize others while not offering to provide solutions" I provided the solution, send out a new notice with changes and the reason for the change, per California Law. What else should I have done in your opinion? (and no offense, are you having a bad day?)

I came to this site and asked the question because people don't know, what they don't know. I need to get the message across that our current board and property management company are incompetent and we as a community can do a lot better. I would imagine as Kerry pointed out that moss of our homeowners read the mailer and thought these are a new guidelines and basically it is a done deal. That is not the case.

I did find some items that I had concerns over, but I thought since the PMC needed to resend the mailer, I would be able to go over all the changes and present my concerns at once.

And, I don't think we need a slate of 5, we just need 3 like-minded individual and I think at this point we have that. I am pretty sure the current board was not counting on even having to hold an election this year and I do not know how many of the 5 actually are going to run for re-election, but I would bet that one or two will not. As you noted, the biggest challenge will be to meet quorum and we are working on getting people to volunteer to go door to door to leave flyers. I also have email addresses that I have started using to send out generic, info type emails at this point.

Lastly
Kerry and Max
I have only been a member here for several months and I enjoy reading comments from both of you. With that being said, is it possible that the two of you put your differences aside or at least scale it down a little.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Kerry

Talking about governing docs, I got a kick out of your "emergency" procedures and section "Bomb Threat Form"

1. When is the bomb going to explode?
2. Where is the bomb right now?
3. What kind of bomb is it?
4. What does it look like?
and the best
5. Why did you place the bomb?

I would be high tailing it out of Dodge before I thought about filling out that form!
DavidG45 (Delaware)
Posts: 994
Posted:
If it were me, I would take the time to read the 20 pages - which is not much - compare them to the current rules, and create your own document that highlights the changes. That might take an evening or two. The. I would circulate it among the homeowners as a helpful gesture; which might demonstrate to them your commitment to the good of the community and perhaps help you in a future election.

I would the. Send a letter to the board and, for each change, ask them for their rationale.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/18/2023 4:51 PM
We pay our PMC almost $14k a month - is it too much to ask that they actually follow the law and do what they are paid to do?

First, I think you're paying the PMC too much, based on experience. Second, if your association has legal counsel, it isn't the job of the PMC to do what you are asking. Have you seen the PMC contract and the services they are contracted for?

Contrary to what Kerry thinks, I do things differently than what you apparently think happened. But, it is only one side of the story. As DavidG45 pointed out, you could have knocked the project off in a hour or so, or that is what it would have taken me.

Can you give us a few examples of what was changed in the ARC guidelines?
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
Well, Max just jumped off the deep end with some sort of citation that, again has zero to do with JamesB's topic. Zzzzzzzz.

David has a fine idea, JamesB. I do know that it will take some time to compare the two 20 page docs to dig out the proposed rule changes. But it make sense to do just that and send it to the Board asking them for the "purpose" of each change. As you. know, some probably will be obvious. Now, if they seem perfectly reasonable, don't bother sending int to the board

But this would be a nice service for your fellow owners if you'd send just the list of proposed changes to them saying that further rules changes, with a new board will show the changes in the Notice so that all Owners can see them and provide their comments to the Board.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Max
I have a copy of both the PMC contract and the Attorney Retainer agreement. I don't know who is responsible for what. The Mailer came from the PMC. I have found a copy of a CCR amendment that was filed in 2022 with the County by the HOA Attorney. That amendment clearly contains the redline changes (strikeouts) as well as the appropriate legalese:

"That notice included the text of the amendment and a description of the
purpose and effect of the amendment. Following said notice, the
amendment was, in fact, duly approved by the Board of Directors at a duly
noticed open meeting following its consideration of any comments made
by Association members."

The above is my understanding how it should be done. I wouldn't think the Law Firm screwed up the ARC Guidelines, I think it would be the PMC

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Even comparing the old versus new ARC Guidelines is difficult, there are several references to CC&R sections. I made it through the first 8 pages and there are at least a dozen changes. New sections added to address ADU's JrADU's, new section on outdoor fireplace and firepits, can't add an additional driveway (we have 2, one for RV Access), can't move any fence with a reference to the CC&r's but no section noted, etc etc.

The last thing I want to get into is a 'he said/she said' situation where someone reads something I wrote and misinterprets it. Again, that is what we pay the PMC to do.
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
I have recorded many amendments with various counties throughout California. What is recorded is NOT a redline copy, but a final clean copy.

You have to focus on the big picture and that is getting quorum and getting on the board. This stuff at this point in time means absolutely nothing.

I just got off the phone with a former client. Your situation pales in comparison to theirs. They are operating with an illegal board, sanctioned by the PMC.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
I hear you, I feel confident that we will definitely make quorum this year.

Regarding the recorded document, it's stamped in the top left corner that the recording was requested by the law firm and the body of the text definitely had redline type comments as you can see by the link below

https://imgur.com/a/JA9CWiJ

MargaretM5 (Hawaii)
Posts: 34
Posted:
I'm in WA and it looks like we do things a bit differently than in CA, but I have a similar story. Many years ago, our board adopted new bylaws. They didn't precisely follow the notice requirements, and they didn't highlight the changes they were making, they just sent out the proposed new document. I read it very carefully, looking for the changes myself, and sent them my comments as they asked. They ultimately adopted new bylaws and about a week later we had elections. A few months later, one of the new board members questioned whether the new bylaws were actually in effect, since the procedure had not been precisely followed, and the attorney advised that, since there hadn't been any motions to reject, courts would likely consider the new bylaws to be enforceable.

I took a look at the Davis Stirling website and found that in CA operational rules have to meet certain criteria to be enforceable:

(1) the rule is in writing--seems like this is met in your case

(2) the rule is within the authority of the board conferred by law or by the declaration, articles of incorporation or association, or bylaws of the association--no one here can possibly know if this is met without reading all of your governing documents, but since it appears your HOA attorney has been involved in the process, this is likely met

(3) the rule is not in conflict with governing law and the declaration, articles of incorporation or association, or bylaws of the association--same as (2) above, although, mistakes are sometimes made. In the story I told above, our HOA attorney was involved in the changes to our bylaws and they missed the fact that one of the proposed changes was in conflict with a state HOA law. I pointed it out in my comments and that change was removed in the final adopted document.

(4) the rule is adopted, amended, or repealed in good faith and in substantial compliance with the requirements of this article--27 instead of 28 days is likely seen as "substantial compliance", the text of the rule changes was included in the notice, the "purpose and effect" of the rule changes may have been included in an overall, general sense in the original cover letter, and may have been discussed in more detail at the board meeting(s?) at which the proposed changes were discussed.

(5) the rule is reasonable--do you have any concerns about the actual content of the adopted changes, or just the procedure?

It seems to me that the time for comment about the proposed changes was from December to May. Were open board meetings held during this time? Was there any feedback about the changes from the owners (other than your procedural concerns)? Did the board consider the feedback in good faith? Were any changes made? It looks like you missed your opportunity to impact this set of changes, but there may still be a way to petition to reject--check your governing documents.

It's frustrating when boards make mistakes--but they are volunteers (hopefully) doing the best they can. It's frustrating when the PM doesn't call out or correct those mistakes--but I imagine they need to pick their battles and walk a fine line to navigate "substantial compliance", "good faith", etc. in order to maintain a good working relationship.

I was in your place once--compiling a list of procedural mistakes and nitpicking everything the board was doing. I've grown a lot since then. Now, I do my best to realize we're all on the same team. Was your board trying to do something positive for the community by updating these rules? Look for ways they have succeeded first and then look for ways to help them make the changes even more positive--and to go more smoothly next time.

Best of luck.
JohnC46 (South Carolina)
Posts: 14,265
Posted:
Margaret

James likes to build a list of what he believe his BOD has done wrong.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Margaret

I always have to chuckle when people point out when our 'elected representatives' (HOA, School Board, Local Government, etc) have been caught not following the rules and regulations that we elected them to follow, and others chime in to say your nitpicking (no offense intended to you)

First of all, you're looking at the wrong section on Davis-Stirling. Changing the Architectural Guidelines is considered an Operating Rule change and Civil Code Section 4360 applies. I am not going to recite the code, but here is a link:

https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOME/Statutes/Civil-Code-4360#axzz2CR2ljirY

Now do you think our legislators just sit around and then all of a sudden one of them jumps up and says "I know, let's make a law regarding the procedure to enact a rule change for HOA's in California?"

These rules and laws come about for a reason - usually something has been abused and legislatures enact a law to try to correct the problem. Why do we even have that Civil Code Section then?

I mean, where do you draw the line? In your mind, is it nitpicking to expect someone to come to a complete stop at a stop sign, even if there are no other cars in sight? If a traffic light tuns red before you enter an intersection and you don't stop - I mean, what's the big deal, right?

Here is the bottom line. Yes our Board members are volunteers and I don't expect them to know all the rules, laws etc, but I do expect them to act in the best interest of the HOA and apply a little common sense.

WE PAY A PROPERTY MANAGEMENT COMPANY ALMOST $14,000 A MONTH to know the rules and laws and to "advise" our Board of Directors. We also have an Attorney on retainer to give the Board legal advice.

So how did this update get mailed out with these errors? I mean, am I nitpicking to think that a PMC should actually be able to perform the duties that they were hired to perform?
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 05/18/2023 3:30 PM
Trying again. The statute states that "The notice SHALL include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the PURPOSE AND EFFECT of the proposed rule change..." Owners in James' HOA did not receive that verbiage, which is needed for every proposed rule change.

To send only a 20 page doc, which may have a total of several proposed rules changes scattered all over it, with no indication of what is proposed, requires an owner to sit with that version & the current version side by side to learn WHAT is proposed. WHY would a board want owners to have to deal with that??? The only reason I can think of is sloppiness, laziness, ignorance or a desire to bury proposed changes that are unreasonable so that owners won't notice them. Why do you think that's OK, Max?

Max, Max. The above statue has not been in force for 14 years. Only a few. Say, can you even write an example of a couple of ARC proposed rule changes and their purpose?

You must have my HOA mixed up with someone else. From the day our Board sent out the proposed CC&R revisions to voters until the inspectors of election tallied the votes was maybe 5 months. That our 63+% approval rate did not meet the 67% needed, is hardly a negative sign and is common in CA HOAs as you very well know.

Kerry, do you think the new rules would be unenforceable in that case? Or would there be a statute of limitations to challenge the changes?
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
All important since all rules must be consistent with the Declaration. How can you know unless the purpose and effect are explained?
MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
James

Here are some cold hard times for California. There are currently just under 60,000 HOAs in California, of which 30,000 or more are self-managed. Many have documents dated 30 and 40 years that have never been updated. Because Action Without a Meeting exists in their Bylaws, they feel that they can conduct association business by email or phone without it being an emergency. Who is going to tell them what the laws are, where to look, and when they may have been updated? Unless they find it on their own, no one.

I have worked on two Legislation Action Committees for two different CAI chapters. Yes, legislators do happen to just wake up one morning and just write legislation for the sake of writing legislation. Here is one example, Civil Code §5380 has to do with trust funds being in the state of California. I had an account that would go with our national bank because of the wording. Called the legislator who wrote the bill and a senior partner for the law firm we all reference here. Neither one could provide an answer. I had to tell the HOA that they needed to find another PMC. It is also the one that called me last night.

We are not perfect, but I have been doing this for over 14 years, and NEVER has any person brought any litigation against a single HOA I have managed or the management company itself. Are you knit-picking, IMHO, yes. You first accused the board or PMC of being a day short of the 28 days, yet action was taken after 4-plus months. Why did you even mention it? The 28-day period is from mailing to the board taking action, not when the next board meeting is held, or whether it was on the agenda.

ARC guidelines are "operational rules" and Margaret's example does apply. What she is applying is Civil Code §4350, Operating Rule Requirements For Enforceability.

DavidG45 (Delaware)
Posts: 994
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By TerriS6 on 05/19/2023 12:35 PM
All important since all rules must be consistent with the Declaration. How can you know unless the purpose and effect are explained?

While I do believe the board should explain their reasoning, the letter of the rule should speak for itself in regards to whether or not it is consistent with the Declarations.

If nothing else, the board does itself a disservice by not explaining their reasons - because homeowners are then free to conject all kinds of devious purposes.

On the other hand, there are only two options for the OP:

* Sue the board
* Try to get a majority of like-minded people on the board for the future

Unless there are some egregious problems with the new rules, I don't see how suing would be a rational option. Perhaps use it as an argument to vote for you rather than the existing board.

MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By TerriS6 on 05/19/2023 12:35 PM
All important since all rules must be consistent with the Declaration. How can you know unless the purpose and effect are explained?

The community where I once lived had no ARC Guidelines and the CCRs only stated that there was to be an Architectural Committee. It did the Board the authority to create fair and reasonable rules. We started a committee that took about six months to gather information to create guidelines. We had to come up with a paint scheme working with a local paint company as our homes were single-family detached homes. What kinds of trees so as not to damage irrigation lines, asphalt, or sidewalks?

Once completed, we held a Town Hall Meeting to go over the guidelines. On the documents we sent out, we didn't go into the details that James is wanting. We also had an attorney sign off on the guidelines.

James believes his PMC must know the rules and laws. Sorry, as managers, we are not allowed to give advice. We can offer an opinion or point to references, but if they want guidance, they have an attorney on retainer.
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Board members have a fiduciary duty to know the law. If they don't care enough to read, they shouldn't be on the board. Our board not only doesn't read the law, they ignore anyone who tries to inform them.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MaxB4 on 05/19/2023 12:51 PM
James

Yes, legislators do happen to just wake up one morning and just write legislation for the sake of writing legislation. Here is one example, Civil Code §5380 has to do with trust funds being in the state of California. I had an account that would go with our national bank because of the wording. Called the legislator who wrote the bill and a senior partner for the law firm we all reference here. Neither one could provide an answer. I had to tell the HOA that they needed to find another PMC. It is also the one that called me last night.


Well you certainly have a different take on that section as compared to some others..
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"In California, an anti-fraud bill designed to protect HOA members sailed unopposed through the legislature becoming law January 1, 2019

The Community Associations Institute and the California Association of Community Managers sponsored the bill, which makes various changes to California’s Davis-Sterling Common Interest Development Act—the statutory scheme governing HOAs in the state. The purpose of the bill was ā€œto take important steps to protect [HOA members] from fraudulent activity by those entrusted with the management of the association’s finances.ā€

The bill changed California’s Civil Code related to homeowner association money management to require any transfer of $10,000 or 5% of total association combined reserve and operating deposits (whichever is smaller) have prior written approval from the association’s board. (Civ. Code, §§ 5380(b)(6) and 5502.)".

The new law prevents overly active board officers or HOA managers who pay bills or transfer funds without first getting explicit board approval. The intent of the new statute appears to require express permission for each individual transfer over $10,000 or 5% of the association’s deposits. Advance written authorization from a board is required not only for payments and withdrawals but also deposits and transfers between association accounts.
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And somehow you think that it is a bad thing that to transfer over $10k or 5% requires written approval from the Board? Are you serious?

Our last PMC before our current one had an employee that created a bank account that sounded like the name of our PMC but was spelled one letter off. He started depositing checks made out to the PMC in his bank and made off with over $100,000.

But ya, your story sounds better because no one would ever make off with HOA funds that weren't entitled to, right?
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
While we can appreciate Margaret's contributions, summarizing a section "...as he text of the rule changes was included in the notice, the 'purpose and effect' of the rule changes may have been included in an overall, general sense in the original cover letter, and may have been discussed in more detail at the board meeting(s?) at which the proposed changes were discussed." this isn't exactly what the statute says, Again, it states:

"The notice SHALL include the text of the proposed rule change and a description of the PURPOSE AND EFFECT of the proposed rule change..." Owners in James' HOA did not receive that verbiage, which is needed for every proposed rule change in CA. It's all well and good IF each change was discussed at an open meetings because then each would have been recorded in the meeting minutes. So, to James, were the proposed changes in the minutes of the Jan. meeting?

But even if they were, the law is the rationale for the proposed changes must be in the written notice. And they were not, right, James?

It's easy to understand how difficult it can be to compare two docs when there are a lot of changes, JamesB, and David's right, it could take a couple of evenings or even more.. it depends or whether they've been totally internally reorganized or not. The point is the Board is NOT supposed to make it difficult for Owners to see what the proposed changes are. I agree with JamesB that this statute is in place precisely because boards could make arbitrary unreasonable rule changes without any feedback whatsoever from Owners.

Couple of years ago, when I was a director, our Board proposed a rule change that seemed OK with us directors, We sent out the proposed change and the purpose & effect of it. But several Owners howled against it in writing and at the subsequent open meeting. And from their perspective, our proposed rule was unreasonable. We dumped it.

In CA, Terri, Owners can unify and overturn rules that they think are unreasonable. I think you can find the methods somewhere around CA Civil Code 4360. OR visit Davis-stirling.com, Index, Rules and read the headings.

In JamesB's case it's part of a long train of abuses that he perceives. I've been following his posts and it does seem like he's doing all one can do to get a quorum to vote in the election. JameB, my group that helped me campaign and throw out some badd directors used email liberally to send colorful flyers. With 25% of our owners living offsite and about 12-15% only here part-time, it was the best way to reach voters. Absentee voting in CA HOAs helps immensely.

Say, anyone who thinks Max's constant, creepy remarks bout my HOA,my job description as sec'y, etc. belong on this forum, please tell me why. Would anyone hazard a guess as to Max's motives for this odd behavior?

MaxB4
Posts: 3,513
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 05/19/2023 3:26 PM
Posted By MaxB4 on 05/19/2023 12:51 PM
James

Yes, legislators do happen to just wake up one morning and just write legislation for the sake of writing legislation. Here is one example, Civil Code §5380 has to do with trust funds being in the state of California. I had an account that would go with our national bank because of the wording. Called the legislator who wrote the bill and a senior partner for the law firm we all reference here. Neither one could provide an answer. I had to tell the HOA that they needed to find another PMC. It is also the one that called me last night.



Well you certainly have a different take on that section as compared to some others..
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"In California, an anti-fraud bill designed to protect HOA members sailed unopposed through the legislature becoming law January 1, 2019

The Community Associations Institute and the California Association of Community Managers sponsored the bill, which makes various changes to California’s Davis-Sterling Common Interest Development Act—the statutory scheme governing HOAs in the state. The purpose of the bill was ā€œto take important steps to protect [HOA members] from fraudulent activity by those entrusted with the management of the association’s finances.ā€

The bill changed California’s Civil Code related to homeowner association money management to require any transfer of $10,000 or 5% of total association combined reserve and operating deposits (whichever is smaller) have prior written approval from the association’s board. (Civ. Code, §§ 5380(b)(6) and 5502.)".

The new law prevents overly active board officers or HOA managers who pay bills or transfer funds without first getting explicit board approval. The intent of the new statute appears to require express permission for each individual transfer over $10,000 or 5% of the association’s deposits. Advance written authorization from a board is required not only for payments and withdrawals but also deposits and transfers between association accounts.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

And somehow you think that it is a bad thing that to transfer over $10k or 5% requires written approval from the Board? Are you serious?

Our last PMC before our current one had an employee that created a bank account that sounded like the name of our PMC but was spelled one letter off. He started depositing checks made out to the PMC in his bank and made off with over $100,000.

But ya, your story sounds better because no one would ever make off with HOA funds that weren't entitled to, right?

Actually, I worked on the beginning of that bill while a member of a Southern California CAI Chapter. Fraud doesn't happen at those levels, but at much lower levels to stay under the radar. Some of the text I worked on went into Civil Code §5500, which required Boards to review their financials on a monthly, not quarterly basis. While the law, Board do not adhere to that law before they only meet on a quarterly basis. I can't count on one hand the number of Board members that really review their financials.

I did not bring up any opposition on the transfer issue. I brought up one specific issue, that being the trust funds and that was not included in the original language. It wasn't added until the end.

Sorry, the bill was opposed by both the Center for California Homeowner Association Law and the Greater Sacramento Urban League because it didn't go far enough.

Finally, I know how funds get embezzled and this bill does absolutely nothing to correct that.

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