AZ group making waves on HOA issues

By Deborah Goonan, Independent American Communities

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Arizona Senator David Farnsworth (R) has been meeting with a group of concerned citizens to discuss regulation of Association Governed Housing (Homeowners’, Condominium, and Cooperative Associations) in the state. The group includes several professionals seeking to rein what they call excessive power of HOAs, among them Attorney Steve Cheifetz (Iannitelli & Marcolinni) and Scottsdale resident and Realtor Jill Schweitzer.

Two of the dozen or so proposals being discussed:

  • Restoration of Homestead Protection of up to $150,000 in home equity in the event of HOA foreclosure or financial judgment
  • Legal requirement for Community Association Management companies to disclose gifts or monetary compensation from vendors it refers to HOA Boards

In the past, the HOA “mastermind” group has struggled to find consensus on legislative reform measures. Farnsworth says this is because special interest groups tend to infiltrate the meetings, advocating for their own political agendas.

One obstacle to change is resistance from those who lead what they claim are trouble-free HOAs.

For example, HOA Board member and Vice Mayor of Paradise Valley, David Sherf, does not seem to think legislative change is necessary. He claims his Association has experienced little conflict and operates without difficulty.

Sherf is quoted in the following article.

Arizona citizens band together to address legislative powers of HOAs 

By Terence Thornton

Excerpt:

Vice Mayor Sherf says in his four years serving on his HOA board he hasn’t seen much in the way of dissent from the local homeowners.

“A validation of this statement is that our annual meeting only attracts about seven to 10 residents at most and our four to five meetings each year typically attract less people than that,” he said. “As a board, we think we must be doing the right things as we have such few people attend the meetings.”

Read more here: http://www.scottsdaleindependent.com/news/arizona-citizens-band-together-address-legislative-powers-hoas/?fb_comment_id=1434040416612217_1436306779718914&comment_id=1436306779718914

In other words, according to Sherf, non-participation of residents in their HOA meetings is a sign of success. The insinuation is that, if members were to attend, it would only be to complain or present their problems to the HOA Board.

Unfortunately, this stance is typical of politicians and corporate business leaders such as Sherf, a CPA and former Senior VP of Hilton Hotels Corporation, who has led a highly successful career in hotel development and asset management.

But let’s face it. The vast majority of HOAs do not have residents with David Sherf’s depth and breadth of financial and business management experience. And only a fortunate few have a political “in” with their municipality.

The fact is, a great many HOA Boards are led by members with no financial or management experience – the kind who might not even manage their personal finances effectively. In reality, many thousands of HOAs are handing over control of  5- or 6-figure annual budgets to volunteers who don’t even know how to balance their checkbooks.

Other HOAs may remain under the control of a developer or investor group for many years while a community is still under construction. Quite often, developer interests do not coincide with consumer (homeowner) interests.

And regardless of the quality of leadership, owners and residents of Association Governed Housing are entitled to equal protection of their rights, including the right to transparent and democratic governance. Those are two qualities many residents find lacking in their HOAs.

These are all very good reasons to rein in the power of HOA Boards and to regulate community association developers and management companies – regardless of the fact that some prominent HOAs appear to function as intended.

For more information, click here:

Grassroots group meets monthly to discuss HOA issues

http://www.azfamily.com/story/32724385/grassroots-groups-meets-monthly-to-discuss-hoa-issues?autostart=true

5 thoughts on “AZ group making waves on HOA issues

  1. Nearly all owners are apathetic and ignorant about HOA matters. The board refuses to receive owner input or have an impartial third party conduct elections. The bad board and property manager control all touchpoints of election processes. A willing volunteer replacement is not enough. This is a big responsibility requiring education, experience, and business and people management skills amongst others. Communities—especially smaller ones like mine—cannot supply enough qualified volunteers to fill rotating board seats. HOAs are conceptually flawed.

  2. Yes, I know what tainted means and I also know how hard it is to remove Board Members, but I can not accept that if it is so bad then why you and your fellow owners don’t buckle down and get the necessary support for replacing the Board with volunteers with similar values as you. Would you have volunteers willing to step up the plate?

  3. I’m glad to be part of Senator Farnswoth’s work group. It is comprised of diverse, intelligent professionals who are committed to affecting much needed change.

  4. Tom, thanks for your insight and suggestion. Do you know what tainted means? I exposed election cheating. Let’s discuss further when you aren’t on the payroll and have unqualified busybodies misspending about a half million dollars annually.

  5. Owners in my community have been trained all right, that attending meetings is a waste of our time. Board “representatives” and the property manager are disingenuous. Tainted elections run by them, pass. There are plenty of reasons to miss the annual meeting.

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