Disciplined Democracy: The Survivability of HOA governments

If you had the opportunity to read the 1964 ULI ‘bible”, TB#50, The Homes Association Handbook, (see eEditorial post of August 31, 2006) on how to mass market HOAs, it becomes quite plain that the HOA model was subject to failure if certain requirements were not specifically stated in the CC&Rs.

The survivability of HOAs required mandatory membership and compulsory dues, plus the need for the draconian coercive measure of foreclosure, backed by statutes agreeing to this excessive punishment of homeowners. The survivability also required the loss of fundamental rights and freedoms, and this required the insistence that HOAs were not governments but private organizations allowed to operate outside the 14th Amendment protections, to which all other governmental entites are subject.

And finally, there was the need to conceal the loss of rights and authoritarian nature of HOA government when promoting HOAs to legislators, the media and the public.

See my comments: http://pvtgov.org/pvtgov/downloads/hoa_truth.pdf

Note: The term “disciplined democracy” was used to describe the government of the prior Cuban dictator, Fulginio Baptista, in a History Channel program. His government was notorious for rigged “democratic” elections and compliance by goon squads.

Homeowner Advocate author of Westlaw legal text

Exciting news!!!!! HOA law book written by an advocate and not by an industry supporter!!! Acknowledging Shu Bartholomew, AHRC (Elizabeth McMahon) and yours truly, George K. Staropoli.

New Book:
Title: California Common Interest Development — Homeowner’s Guide
Publisher: Thomson-West Legal Publishers (leading publisher of legal materials)
Author: D. Vanitzian
Series: The Expert Series
Cost: $120

Call Mike Belz at Thomson West Inside Sales
800-328-9352 X76432
*Price subject to change without notice or check its web site.

Forward in the book is written by: Justice Armand Arabian, (Ret. California Supreme Court)

Congratulations Donie !!!!

HOAs, Local Governance & the Constitution

Please visit the Collected Papers web site for several writings on planned communities, homeowners associations, local community governance and constitutional rights and freedoms.

See Collected Papers.

TB#50: The Mass Merchandising of HOAs by ULI

SUMMARY

The Urban Land Institute Technical Bulletin #50, The Homes Association Handbook, was the vehicle for this mass merchandising of planned communities with influence today on events and attitudes.

The model and concept of planned communities with their mandated homeowners associations has been presented and sold to the legislatures, government agencies, commissions and officials, and to the media and public in general as the unquestionable means to better, healthier, vibrant and desirable communities. And the means to this noble end was the HOA governing body supported by unconscionable adhesion contracts in the form of covenants, conditions, and restrictions, including the HOA bylaws, that would maintain property values for the benefit of all — the local municipalities, the homeowners, and the real estate special interests.

Sadly, in their effort to sell this concept to Americans, the promoters found it necessary to cast a scant eye on the constitutional protections of homeowner rights. This intentional disregard in the presentation, explanation, selling and mass merchandising of this new order of society — communal living under authoritarian HOA regimes — amounts to a con on Americans. The emergence and quiet acceptance of this innovation in housing — as ULI and Community Associations Institute proudly announced in the subtitle of Community Associations, a book that they partially funded in 2000 — was accomplished with subterfuge and a disregard for the values and beliefs in the democratic institutions upon which this country was founded.

Read the complete report paper on TB#50.

Analysis of The Homes Association Handbook

Urban Land Institute Technical Bulletin #50 (1964)

OVERVIEW

The reader of this publication cannot but come away with the distinct realization that the authors promoted certain aspects of planned communities while deliberately avoiding a solid presentation of a number of serious concerns. It is a comprehensive manual, except for any discussion of the form of democratic governance of the community, for the mass merchandising of a profit-making business enterprise. Not only does this 422 page publication promote the selling of planned communities to the public, the federal government agencies, local governments, the mortgage companies and to the Realtors, it provides sample Declarations, Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws for use by the attorneys for developers(1). This use of sample forms(2) (similar to the legal forms that can be found in any legal research library) serve as guidelines and is a common practice used by the attorneys, which explains the commonality of many of the most oppressive and harsh terms and conditions imposed on homebuyers.

Yet, the word “democracy” is mentioned only a handful of times, and in the context of democratic form of leadership as with,

The other [as opposed to a bureaucratic style of leadership] requires more participation in order to give members a feeling of satisfaction with association operations; it may be called the ‘democratic style’. (3) [emphasis added].

And, when the Handbook addresses specific covenants for inclusion in the Declaration for the developer turnover of the association to the homeowners,

It is our conclusion, however, that generally it is unwise to plan for the selection of the management of a homes association by something less than a fully democratic process (See Chapter 15).

However, Chapter 15, “Creating the Association and its Facilities”, simply deals with a variety of non-governing topics, and includes marketing techniques as well as weighted voting in favor of the developer and benevolent paternalism by the developer controlled board.

Another example of the complete disregard for the constitutional and property rights of the homebuyers are the guidelines for handling the priority of liens that the authors felt was needed to protect the interests of the developer and the mortgagor, and to insure the continued existence of the corporate entity proposed to manage the planned community, the “automatic homes association”(4) . While this Handbook recognizes the problem with the timing of when the covenants running with the land become binding, at the time the developer sells the first lot, it advises that the states will protect the HOA from any homestead exemption because of this priority of liens(5), but urges the need to insert wording to grant the mortgagor a priority lien before this “developer” lien(6). The home-buying public protections, as was the intention of the various state legislatures when creating the homestead protection, was intentional disregarded by the advertising of this technical oversight.

Over the 42 years since the publication of The Homes Association Handbook, it has become the “bible” for the mass merchandising of planned communities with the accompanying affect on American society, its values and the loss of individual property rights, and the loss of fundamental rights and freedoms upon which this country was founded. The Handbook was supported by several federal agencies and real estate interests(7), and continues to be supported by these same entities along with state legislatures and local municipalities, with the same apparent disdain for the protection of American liberties and freedoms.

The mantra of “less government intervention”, this call for a laissez-faire policy by reputable libertarian public interest firms, masks the prevalent protectionism of planned communities by the states and their failure to protect a segment of society from the predator marketing tactics of the real estate industry.

Notes
1. Appendices F, G, H.
2. Appendices K, L.
3. In Chapter 16, Leadership Style, Skill and Sources, § 16.2, Bureaucratic of Democratic? It May Depend on Common Facilities.
4. Term used for today’s mandatory membership association.
5. “We believe that the lien of assessments will, in all states, be recognized as superior to and unaffected by the homestead exemption”. P. 322.
6. “In absence of an express provision altering priorities, the court held that the lien of the assessments was superior to the lien of the mortgagor . . . a suggested provision dealing with priorities may be found in Appendix F.” p. 321.
7. From the cover page: the Federal Housing Administration, US Public Health Service, Office of Civil Defense, Urban Renewal Administration, Veterans Administration, and the National Association of Home Builders. The Urban Land Institute was formed in 1936 as a research division of the National Association of Real Estate Boards (now the National Association of Realtors) under the name of the National Real Estate Foundation (see generally, Community Associations: The Emergence and Acceptance of a Quiet Innovation in Housing, Donald R. Stabile (Greenwood Press 2000).