Getting your HOA reform bills accepted

I’m pleased to see many of you are using my Commentaries on HOA Constitutional Government as part of your efforts to bring about HOA reform legislation.  Allow me to recommend a procedure that should improve more success in getting your legislators’ attention. Justification for my arguments below can be found in the “Recommend texts” below; homeowners and advocates cannot neglect these works of mine and others.

  • Legislators are immerged in tons of emails by many persons and “robo emails” — the same email sent by many persons —  get slight attention;
  • There is some success that your district representative will sponsor your bill and your reforms;
  • Emails from state residents to bill sponsors and committee chairs and members are generally read, but outsiders receive less attention unless   strong credentials are provided to counter CAI’s credentials;
  • The main focus of your email should be your reforms with the inclusion of works from others being supportive.
  • Have no fear of show the ugly forest through the trees by addressing constitutional violations that support your reform legislation — over my 24 years CAI has ignored any such discussion and will fight like hell to avoid constitutionality issues (I challenged them back in 2006, no response);
  • CAI and the legislators  will not put themselves in a highly vulnerable position of having to defend the indefensible, a rejection of the Constitution; it is their Achilles heel;
  • Have no fear of raising the important issues of intentional misrepresentation in the claimed  “you agreed  to be bound” CAI defense, invalidating the legitimacy of the adhesion CC&Rs contract;
  • Don’t be penny wise and pound foolish – spend some small change and get copies of publications that will serve as textbooks on getting your issues heard before your legislature (see “Recommended texts” below).

Recommended texts

Privatopia, Evan McKenzie (seminal book on private HOA government)

HOA Common Sense: rejecting private government, George K. Staropoli (entry level constitutional violations)

Take Back Your Government, Morgan Carroll (out of stock at Amazon; eBay, Thriftbooks)

HOA Constitutional Government, George K. Staropoli (a one volume collection of 56 events and situations over 24 years)

CAI maintains HOAs are protected by and do not violate the Constitution — not so!

Much to my surprise and astonishment I stumbled upon CAI’s press release on its website.[1] It informs the reader that all is well with the HOA legal scheme and there are no waivers of constitutional rights or other constitutionality problems. In fact, CAI claims that the Constitution protects the CC&Rs’ contract.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, Americans do not waive their constitutional rights when they move into a community association. In fact, courts have found that community association residents, by enacting reasonable rules for their own communities, are actually exercising their constitutional rights of association, contract, expression and assembly. . . . By purchasing homes in association-governed communities, buyers enter into constitutionally protected agreements with their neighbors.

The U.S. Constitution gives community association residents the right to govern their own communities without the need to get government’s permission to adopt rules. This prerogative is at the core of individual property rights and is a tradition that dates to the very founding of our nation.

I am not surprised at CAI’s failure to mention yours truly by name, the only outspoken advocate on HOA constitutional violations[2] that emphatically objects to and challenges CAI’s simplified arguments that misrepresent the law.

 

First paragraph fallacies:

Apparently agreeing to  free speech restrictions on displaying signs or flying the flag and due process protections are not considered a waiver or surrender of rights by CAI. CAI’s position that the right to associate and to enter into private contracts is protected by the Constitution is a false and naïve argument. Can you and I privately agree to violate the Constitution, and to associate in community where its government is not subject to the same restrictions as public government?

There are conditions for a voluntary waiver and surrender of constitutional rights that the CC&Rs agreement fails to meet, especially when it comes to implied waivers — those not specifically stated. But somehow the courts enforce the CC&Rs as if they met the requirements for constitutional waivers, like the Twin Rivers[3] case that CAI is relying on. CAI doesn’t mention its amicus curiae that argued In the context of community associations, the unwise extension of constitutional rights to the use of private property by members (as opposed to the public) raises the likelihood that judicial intervention will become the norm . . . .” If no rights were waived, why then is CAI so concerned about restoring them?

I have raised the valid argument of misrepresentation in the selling process and that the buyer was misled and not fully informed as to the consequences of his entering HOA-Land. No one, who firmly believes that HOAs are good for America, has stepped forward and publically signed the Homeowner Association Consent to be Governed Agreement: A Model Act[4] that a sign-off of explicit waivers and surrenders of constitutional rights (in paragraph 3), including a waiver of the equal protection of the laws.

Second paragraph fallacies

I explain in “HOAs violate local home rule doctrine” (see note 2 below) that HOAs are allowed operate far beyond state laws relating to home rule statutes, granting HOAs independent political government powers are denied to legitimate home rule communities. Consequently, HOAs are being treated with special laws for special entities in violation of the Constitution, federal and state.

The question that I have raised, and ignored by CAI in its release and in other communications, is summed up in the following statement: “The policy makers have failed to understand that the HOA CC&Rs have crossed over the line between purely property restrictions to establishing unregulated and authoritarian private governments.” In essence, HOAs have been allowed to operate outside the Constitution as authoritarian independent principalities, violating the fundamental principles and values underlying our American way of life.

While CAI publicizes its claims to be working for productive, healthy and desirable communities, it is apparent that these communities are not part the American system of democratic government. It advertises that it is an educational organization, yet conducts surveys to promote its view of what is good for HOA-Land.

References

[1] https://www.caionline.org/PressReleases/_layouts/15/WopiFrame.aspx? sourcedoc=/PressReleases/Media%20Statements/Homeowners%20and%20Constitutional%20Rights.doc&action=default. October 7, 2015. (I don’t know how long this has been there, but CAI has revised its website recently.)

[2] See in general, CC&Rs are a devise for de facto HOA governments to escape constitutional government; Unconstitutional delegation of power to HOAs; HOAs violate local home rule doctrine and are outlaw governments.

[3] CBTW v. Twin Rivers, 929 A.2d 1060 (2007).

[4] An example: “d). I understand that the association, as a private entity and not an arm of the state, is not subject to the restrictions and prohibitions of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution that otherwise protects the rights of the people against actions by public government entities; (g) that there are no equivalent clean or fair elections procedures to protect the integrity of the HOA election process as found in public government elections.http://pvtgov.org/pvtgov/agree-disclose-license.pdf.