Chip Sylverne
Final Approach
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2006
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Quit with the negative waves, man.
IPO
" Quasi-public property means any private street, highway, lane, alley or other roadway which is open to the public or to which the public is invited, and shall in this context include any and all parking yards, parking lots, causeways, alleys or malls generally open to the public."
If it is determined to be quasi-public, regulating speed and installing such equipment to regulate speed and may fall under the jurisdiction of the state, county or city highway department, not necessarily the HOA. There was a case recently reported in the WAPO where a concerned neighborhood installed a sign and couple of boxes and flashing lights to look like a speed camera, and the real authorities forced them to remove it.
In our little town, people routinely sped down Main Street, but the town council refused to install cameras knowing there would be a backlash. Instead, they put a radar that gave "your speed" mounted below the speed limit sign. Seems to have worked pretty well.
I'm not so certain of that. There's the concept of Quasi-public.Private roads are HOA common land and the HOA definitely has authority to regulate common lands, including a fine.
if you and your neighbors don’t like the cameras, there are many actions you can take. Run for the board yourselves. Petition the board. Show up at meetings and constantly ask for changes. Take them to court over procedural issue like company selection, proving when the signs were installed, visibility, notification periods, hazards of machine placement, etc. Sue the HOA board members personally for breach of office. You might not win any of them, but the annoyance of having to defend themselves against so many people constantly may convince them to change. Do things which are annoying but not outside the rules. Sell your house under market value and destroy their comps. How strongly do you feel about it?
" Quasi-public property means any private street, highway, lane, alley or other roadway which is open to the public or to which the public is invited, and shall in this context include any and all parking yards, parking lots, causeways, alleys or malls generally open to the public."
If it is determined to be quasi-public, regulating speed and installing such equipment to regulate speed and may fall under the jurisdiction of the state, county or city highway department, not necessarily the HOA. There was a case recently reported in the WAPO where a concerned neighborhood installed a sign and couple of boxes and flashing lights to look like a speed camera, and the real authorities forced them to remove it.
In our little town, people routinely sped down Main Street, but the town council refused to install cameras knowing there would be a backlash. Instead, they put a radar that gave "your speed" mounted below the speed limit sign. Seems to have worked pretty well.