Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
Well, ok - my neighborhood has ~1,100 homes.
Dang, where I live that is a city...
Well, ok - my neighborhood has ~1,100 homes.
The number of homes is irrelevant. You just have to talk to enough neighbors to get an idea. And the way I did was drive around and when I see someone outside I would start talking to them. I also knocked on the future neighbors doors that were close to the house I was looking at and introduced myself. Not everyone wants to talk but I determined pretty quick that the HOA wasn't a problem.Well, ok - my neighborhood has ~1,100 homes. Not sure how I decide who to talk with. In my case it was fine when I moved in, 13 years later, every meeting is a screaming match. There's a few big issues that need to be resolved and I have zero confidence they can work through those issues. I suspect most HOA's are fine. My old neighborhood had one and the only issues were them not doing a lot when someone let their exterior get a bit ragged e.g. landscaping or paint. The new one has 4+ hour meetings where nothing gets resolved and everyone screams at everyone else. No one with a brain has any interest in getting on the board so it will likely continue for the foreseeable future.
Some folks would blame citizens living under totalitarian regimes fire bringing it upon themselves. After all, they choose to live in countries where dictators could be elected or military coups could happen.The folks who say you should just suck it up because you looked at some paper haven't lived in an HOA where the board is completely dysfunctional. They do stupid stuff, people start to object, the board circles the wagons and it spirals downward. Someone gets elected who is going to "fix it" and last about 6 months before getting kicked off or just quitting in frustration. Eventually no one wants to be on the board and the only ones on it are the little napoleons who got picked last in elementary school and are getting their payback now. NONE of this has anything to do with the bylaws or the documents you read when you buy nor can you figure this out ahead of time.
The speeding thing is good example. How was it decided there was a speeding issue in the first place? Were notes sent to residents asking them to slow down as a first step? Is there a posted speed limit? Could they have put up more signs? Is it residents or non-residents doing the speeding? Since they can't fine non-residents, how will they control those speeders (assuming there are any).
While I believe in Caveat Emptor, it's nearly impossible to do the due diligence on the board itself vs what's written in the bylaws.
Well, ok - my neighborhood has ~1,100 homes. Not sure how I decide who to talk with. In my case it was fine when I moved in, 13 years later, every meeting is a screaming match. There's a few big issues that need to be resolved and I have zero confidence they can work through those issues. I suspect most HOA's are fine. My old neighborhood had one and the only issues were them not doing a lot when someone let their exterior get a bit ragged e.g. landscaping or paint. The new one has 4+ hour meetings where nothing gets resolved and everyone screams at everyone else. No one with a brain has any interest in getting on the board so it will likely continue for the foreseeable future.
Attending a meeting would be really good. Problem is sometimes the meetings are every quarter and your timing may not permit waiting that long.Something that is probably essential for getting an idea about the HOA is to attend a few meeting and look at past minutes.
Took me less than an hour to talk with enough neighbors to find out what the HOA was like.In my neighborhood homes sold in less than 24 hours for the last two years. No way to saunter around and attend meetings or talk to neighbors. Minutes don’t reflect the screaming matches either.
If your realtor is worth a damn, they can advise you on which neighborhoods have reputations for good management and which ones are dumpster fires. The eye test usually works too. If the common areas are well maintained, that is a pretty good indicator that the HOA is functional.In my neighborhood homes sold in less than 24 hours for the last two years. No way to saunter around and attend meetings or talk to neighbors. Minutes don’t reflect the screaming matches either.
If every house looks exactly the same and there is no evidence from the outside that anyone has ever lived there, that is a pretty good indicator that the HOA is functional.If your realtor is worth a damn, they can advise you on which neighborhoods have reputations for good management and which ones are dumpster fires. The eye test usually works too. If the common areas are well maintained, that is a pretty good indicator that the HOA is functional.
How was it decided there was a speeding issue? Maybe someone’s idiot teenage lost control and ran over a street lamp pole. Maybe some one walking their dog got run over. Maybe it was from simple owner complaints about a few idiots.The folks who say you should just suck it up because you looked at some paper haven't lived in an HOA where the board is completely dysfunctional. They do stupid stuff, people start to object, the board circles the wagons and it spirals downward. Someone gets elected who is going to "fix it" and last about 6 months before getting kicked off or just quitting in frustration. Eventually no one wants to be on the board and the only ones on it are the little napoleons who got picked last in elementary school and are getting their payback now. NONE of this has anything to do with the bylaws or the documents you read when you buy nor can you figure this out ahead of time.
The speeding thing is good example. How was it decided there was a speeding issue in the first place? Were notes sent to residents asking them to slow down as a first step? Is there a posted speed limit? Could they have put up more signs? Is it residents or non-residents doing the speeding? Since they can't fine non-residents, how will they control those speeders (assuming there are any).
While I believe in Caveat Emptor, it's nearly impossible to do the due diligence on the board itself vs what's written in the bylaws.
How was it decided there was a speeding issue? Maybe someone’s idiot teenage lost control and ran over a street lamp pole. Maybe some one walking their dog got run over. Maybe it was from simple owner complaints about a few idiots.
Or maybe a speed camera company offered them a way to add a revenue stream.
Or maybe a relative of a board member has a new revenue stream. I honestly cannot see how this could ever pay for itself unless it’s horribly abused.Or maybe a speed camera company offered them a way to add a revenue stream.
I honestly cannot see how this could ever pay for itself unless it’s horribly abused.
No revenue if there is no speeders. Even if the speed limit wax 5 MPH, you can avoid the fines.Or maybe a speed camera company offered them a way to add a revenue stream.
Even if the speed limit wax 5 MPH, you can avoid the fines.
This is why I suggest someone has a piece of the camera company pie. In the best case scenario, nobody speeds and they are spending the money for nothing. Worst case, people still speed and they are spending the money for nothing.My argumeant would be how much money the system costs the HOA and how long they are obligated to have the system setup?
So if everyone follows the speed and no money is being collected, the company providing the system still has to be paid.
In NC, one doesn’t need a lawyer in small claims court.Most people can't afford that.
HOA has too much time on their hands.??
Inform them the drinking water contains dihydrogen oxide, which has been known to kill people...
You said it sounded like, "there should be no consequences for violating rules I agreed to in writing."
I agreed to nothing. My parents live in a restricted access community. They have plate readers at every entrance to the community. The community sends me a bill for “unauthorized trespass” if I enter to go to my parents house without notifying the office first.
Now I suppose you could argue that my parents agreed to it…although they were against its installation and implementation, and they’ve lived there well before such technology existed.
Either way, my parents are elderly and I need to check in on them, sometimes at hours when the office I am suppose to notify for permission is closed.
So tell me again how this sounds “anti-authority”…
The OP has decided to sell and move to some where else in the area. It is time to downsize anyway. I moved into the community originally for the waterfront but hope to have other cheaper options soon. Because of the wealthier refugees moving in, taxes have gone up. So has insurance. POA fees are at 1 AMU. I will miss the water view but it is time to downsize off of the water. Find a nearby property that the northern refugees are not interested in, no POA.
Funny though, I don’t follow the community social media, but my wife has said that the board has taken a lot of criticism. No surprise, apparently, was a lot of closed door shenanigans. No, community referendum or similar. And they lowered the posted limit from the original. Hopefully, humiliations galore.
FWIW, in my corner of NC, prior/active military are quite well received. Lot's of military presence in easteren NC. Everyone gets along fine. I would be happy to buy you a beer or two and show y'all around. Just mention my name and they'll let you in.Dang, that's discouraging to hear, we've been eyeballing NC for retirement (we're .mil grey/pink collar nomads originally from the Great Plains and Caribbean respectively, not Northern affluent half-backers). New Bern is not exactly the Triangle or CLT, so if people are getting gentrified all the way down there, we may have to revisit this question as we get closer (we'd be somewhat tethered to CLT, since the wife wants mountain-proximate and big city hospital networks for work).
In fairness to NC, I hear the same thing about TN though, so it appears there's nowhere to escape to, at least migration patterns wise. If I wasn't tethered to the wife's job's demands, we could totally go rural, which there is plenty in NC still, for very affordable living. Alas, wish in one hand and s%%t on the other, see which one fills up first Good luck on the downsizing move, it's brutal in this Country to move these days.
Oh you don't have to worry about me contributing to the congestion problem in FL. Though it would be logistically the easiest spot for me to transition into handling my aging parent issues back in SJU, the wife veto'd that state already. If I was a betting man we'd likely end up somewhere in the lower Piedmont. Time will tell.@hindsight2020 , you should take him up on his offer. I can personally attest to @Morgan3820 ’s gracious hospitality, and New Bern is a lovely town. I hear that his neighborhood is even a great place for street racing, as long as you have out-of-state tags.
Whatever you do, though, don’t move to Florida. Much too crowded with carpetbaggers. And the gators will kill your dog and the skeeters will kill your children.
Which of those you think is happening largely depends on which side of the issue you agree with.My statement may have needed either better writing or some parens. People allowing things to exist that they don't like is a requirement of freedom, or more accurately, liberty. As compared to systems that try to force common behavior. Now, there are of course extremes.
Some local high school students took a picture of their teachers license plate and taped it over their license plate and then did numberous runs through the local speed cameras. I thought it was funny at the time. Maybe do the same with the HOA board tag numbers.