FL HOA committee no-nonsense hearings

I just returned from making a statement before the FL committee chaired by Rep. Robaina. A 10 minute video excerpt will show all legislators in all states that a truly investigative committee is sorely needed in every state.  This committee, with subpoena power, issued only after informal invitations were made to HOA attorneys and directs were NOT answered, got to understand just what is going on in these associations. No more propaganda from the special interests on what a great thing HOAs are to the country and to the state. 
Reformers first and foremost need an aggressive, no nonsense legislator bent on getting to the truth rather than expressing the special interest propaganda.  Rep. Robaina is such a legislator. BUT, in order for this to occur we need the same type of aggressive, activist oriented homeowners to educate and inform the legislators about the unspoken side of things, and to back this information with supporting documents.
You can view this video “trailer” at  StarPub by clicking on the camera icon next to FL Select, under PVTGOV News Video.
“If you are to succeed, you must accept the world as it as and rise above it.
The “system” is opposed to HOA reforms and all advocates and activists must rally around the tactics contained in my Rules of Engagement, which calls for the same tough attitude as exhibited by Rep. Robaina.

Another ‘they love us’ study: AZ association managers

Once again we see an industry study showing that homeowners “love us”, either the board or the community managers.  I’m waiting for one that also praises those HOA attorneys next.  This time the Arizona Association of Community Managers reports an “independent” study praising community management performance.  Sadly, instead of meaningful research, its “study” report has the taste and smell of just another promotional and marketing brochure.

The reader of the press release is told he can obtain the details of the study from AACM’s web site, but the details are not there.  Instead of an appendix of the questions asked and response breakdown, we get AACM’s conclusions.  For example, the study reports that 93% of purchasers were aware that an HOA existed, and that 90% “were familiar” with the CC&RS.   That’s fine, but what does “familiar with” mean?  Do homeowners understand and agree with the provisions that permit the surrender and loss of their rights?  Or, do they compromise under the practicality that, “I have to agree otherwise I can’t move here, and I can’t move anywhere else and find a comparable home.” 

This is not freely consented.  And if they have not read or had the meaning of, the consequences of, or the impact on their private property and fundamental rights fully explained to them in order that they understood the general impact of the CC&Rs, then there is no full consent. These questions, “getting to the root of things”, were not asked.

Only 15% of the homeowners filed a complaint”, they state, and then add that, “Overall, more homeowners were satisfied than dissatisfied with the resolution of their complaint against another homeowner” (emphasis added). AACM goes on to present “facts” on manager communications with homeowners. Real, substantial question aimed at getting to the heart of the matter were not asked.  Like, “How satisfied were you with your communication with the managers?”  Or, how many complaints were filed against the board?  Against the manager?  How satisfied were homeowners with the resolution of complaints?

Or, how about those questions designed to elicit sympathy for those “poor volunteers”?  Homeowners believe their board tries to do their best for the community (emphasis added), reports AACM, yet avoid any discussion of the effectiveness or adequacy of their attempts to do just what is “best” for the community.  “Best” is not defined.  Is it similar to insuring domestic tranquility, promoting the general welfare, establishing justice? Or is it simply enforcing the CC&Rs to maintain property values?

The general impression of this “study” is, as I said at the start, just another promotional piece released at the time legislation has been introduced to regulate managers under the real estate department.  Until these hard questions raised above, and those similar or based on my “10 Myths About HOAs”  (http://pvtgov.org/pvtgov/10_myths.htm), are addressed simple fixes will continue to be inadequate, and homeowners will continue to be back before the their legislatures next year, and the next, and the next.

The AACM study:  http://www.aacmonline.org/doc/AdobeViewer.asp?doc_filename=/hoa/assn10622/documents/aacm%20impact%20study%20executive%20summary.pdf&sfind=&print=0&docid=166975

   

Another 'they love us' study: AZ association managers

Once again we see an industry study showing that homeowners “love us”, either the board or the community managers.  I’m waiting for one that also praises those HOA attorneys next.  This time the Arizona Association of Community Managers reports an “independent” study praising community management performance.  Sadly, instead of meaningful research, its “study” report has the taste and smell of just another promotional and marketing brochure.

The reader of the press release is told he can obtain the details of the study from AACM’s web site, but the details are not there.  Instead of an appendix of the questions asked and response breakdown, we get AACM’s conclusions.  For example, the study reports that 93% of purchasers were aware that an HOA existed, and that 90% “were familiar” with the CC&RS.   That’s fine, but what does “familiar with” mean?  Do homeowners understand and agree with the provisions that permit the surrender and loss of their rights?  Or, do they compromise under the practicality that, “I have to agree otherwise I can’t move here, and I can’t move anywhere else and find a comparable home.” 

This is not freely consented.  And if they have not read or had the meaning of, the consequences of, or the impact on their private property and fundamental rights fully explained to them in order that they understood the general impact of the CC&Rs, then there is no full consent. These questions, “getting to the root of things”, were not asked.

Only 15% of the homeowners filed a complaint”, they state, and then add that, “Overall, more homeowners were satisfied than dissatisfied with the resolution of their complaint against another homeowner” (emphasis added). AACM goes on to present “facts” on manager communications with homeowners. Real, substantial question aimed at getting to the heart of the matter were not asked.  Like, “How satisfied were you with your communication with the managers?”  Or, how many complaints were filed against the board?  Against the manager?  How satisfied were homeowners with the resolution of complaints?

Or, how about those questions designed to elicit sympathy for those “poor volunteers”?  Homeowners believe their board tries to do their best for the community (emphasis added), reports AACM, yet avoid any discussion of the effectiveness or adequacy of their attempts to do just what is “best” for the community.  “Best” is not defined.  Is it similar to insuring domestic tranquility, promoting the general welfare, establishing justice? Or is it simply enforcing the CC&Rs to maintain property values?

The general impression of this “study” is, as I said at the start, just another promotional piece released at the time legislation has been introduced to regulate managers under the real estate department.  Until these hard questions raised above, and those similar or based on my “10 Myths About HOAs”  (http://pvtgov.org/pvtgov/10_myths.htm), are addressed simple fixes will continue to be inadequate, and homeowners will continue to be back before the their legislatures next year, and the next, and the next.

The AACM study:  http://www.aacmonline.org/doc/AdobeViewer.asp?doc_filename=/hoa/assn10622/documents/aacm%20impact%20study%20executive%20summary.pdf&sfind=&print=0&docid=166975

   

Cries of anguish from CAI president

Rebuttal of CEO President Tom Skiba’s Ungated, “Build vs. Destroy”, blog entry. The tone of Mr. Skib’as lament is shown by the following excerpt:

On the one hand we have literally millions of homeowners who are working to make their communities better places to live, serving on their boards, volunteering to staff events and activities, and building community each and every day. 

On the other hand, we have the folks bent on making a lot of noise and tearing down the work of others, the individuals who believe that there is no good community association, that all boards are corrupt, and that if you are happy in your community you are at best a dupe and at worst an unindicted co-conspirator in the great community association conspiracy, a conspiracy that exists only in their minds. 

Read the full blog and rebuttal at Destroy.

God is dead, and so, too, are our unalienable rights

1-coin-front.jpg1-coin-front.jpg1-coin-front.jpg Scientists have long held that there I no proof that God exists.  The acceptance of this statement by many has had profound affects on our ethical, moral and legal conduct.  His Holiness The Dalai Lama wrote(1), 

 

Now, many people, believing that science has ‘disproven’ religion, make the further assumption that because there appears to be no final evidence for any spiritual authority, morality itself must be a matter of individual preference
And whereas in the past, scientists and philosophers felt a pressing need to find solid foundations on which to establish immutable laws and absolute truths, nowadays this kind of search is held to be futile.

 

With this view as their real basis, the 9 Supremes in black have further pursued the separation of church and state to the point that God is an unmentionable within government. However, this position is contrary to the strong beliefs of our Founding Fathers who had deep religious convictions and beliefs with respect to God and the importance of religious values.  The foundation of our Declaration of Independence is based on the higher authority of a God: 

 

When in the course of human events it becomes necessary . . . to assume . . . the separate and equal station that Nature and Nature’s God entitle them . . . We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness – That to secure these rights governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.

 

With the banishment of God from government, the Supremes have struck a mortal blow to the very foundations of American political philosophy, beliefs and values. These rights that were held by the Founding Fathers, and other political philosophers at that time, superior to any rights granted by any government, and expressed in the US Constitution and Bill of Rights, have been declared null and void by the Supremes.  With no substitute standard being announced by the Supremes to guide the people, they are left to flounder. And we have floundered.   

In place of these higher standards and ideals, we have the decisions of 9 people in black that are subject to the ebb and flow of the times.  These Supremes have decided just which enumerated rights will and which will not be protected, have added additional rights not enumerated, and outright denied the validity and intent of the Ninth Amendment(3): The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. 

A poor substitute for a higher authority that has surfaced in recent years is the lame “politically correct” standard.  It’s not even a morally or ethically correct standard, but a politically correct standard that spews forth from who knows where and why.  But, obviously, it’s a political standard designed to advance the positions of those currently in power. 

We are no longer a nation of laws, but a nation of men. We have no moral, ethical or legal compass.  Anything the Supremes decides goes. The people have been rendered powerless when the burden of proving unconstitutionality falls to them, and not to the learned scholars; and when legal scholars for the real estate business interests declare the laws of equitable servitudes superior to the Constitution(2).  

In regard to planned communities, we witness this deviation from the Constitution quite clearly when legislatures encourage, support and protect private local governments that, unlike our municipal entities, operate outside Constitutional protections and deny their members the rights and freedoms enjoyed by others outside the planned community. Within the homeowners association authoritarian, pseudo-democratic governments, the people do not come first. 

We are living in a New America where the America of our Founding Fathers is rapidly becoming a myth.   

NOTE:  The new $1 Presendential Coin series does not show “In God We Trust” on either the front or back.  It is inscribed on the edge of the coin and cannot be read by the naked eye.

 

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1 1..Ethics for the New Millennium, His Holiness The Dalai Lama, p. 10, Riverhead Books, 1999.

 2 2. Restatement Third, Property: Servitudes, § 3.1, comment h.

3.  US v. Carolene, 304 US 144 (1938) (Footnote Four); Planned Parenthood v. Casey 505 US 833 (1992) (Footnote Four Plus).