Colorado has a State HOA Office but you would never know it. The Office was created over two years ago with little fanfare and notice to the public. The original efforts in creating the Office were to provide oversight of HOA communities, some enforcement of HOA laws, and to provide a comprehensive repository of State HOA information. Unfortunately, the Office was never granted any oversight or enforcement authority thus only serving as an administrative entity. To date the Office has provided a valuable service to home owners (those who know about it) by posting on its' web site a very comprehensive library of HOA laws and guidelines and educational sources; conducting community HOA informational meetings; collecting, compiling, and reporting on the status of HOA housing in the State; administering an HOA registration program; and developing an HOA complaint filing system that has catalogued thousands of complaints/inquiries and surfaced major problems in HOA governance and in enforcement of HOA home owner's rights. Note, the Office can't advise home owners on legal rights, provide legal opinions on the validity of any complaint, get involved in problem resolution, or provide any referrals to legal counsel.
The importance of this Office can be greatly enhanced and justified by granting it enforcement authority through implementing an out of court binding dispute resolution process. This would allow home owner's complaints currently filed with the Office to be acted upon: vetted for referral to an out of court entity that would hear disputes and render an enforceable decision. This process would be accessible to all home owners, affordable, efficient, and not require a lawyer on the most simple HOA issues related to non-compliance with the law. Home owners could still choose to go to court vs using this process. Currently, HOA laws and HOA governing documents lack enforcement provisions from the home owner's perspective other than our costly, time consuming, and litigious court system. This process could be managed by the State HOA Office with no cost to taxpayers: paid for with HOA registration fees and/or complaint filing fees. Note, much of the infrastructure such as staffing, a web site, complaint filing and review are already in place and paid for via HOA registration fees. DORA, the State Agency that would implement this system, already has similar systems in place for HOA property manager complaints and other regulated professions making implementation familiar territory for DORA. A State Study has been completed and supports the implementation of an out of court binding dispute resolution process and only awaits legislative sponsorship of a Bill to implement. Empowering the Office with enforcement authority would immediately make our current HOA laws and HOA governing documents that are ineffective from the home owner's perspective highly effective.
Showing posts with label hoa complaints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoa complaints. Show all posts
Monday, December 21, 2015
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
HOA Property Manager Implementation: Problematic
Colorado fully implemented its' Community Association Manager (CAM) Licensing Program (aka HOA Property Manager) July 1, 2015. DORA, the state Agency responsible for implementation and management of the program, had over one year to analyze, plan, design, develop, test, and implement the program. The scope and complexity of the program are very similar to other regulated professions in the State thus making implementation neither new territory or requiring a host of new on-line applications. Our organization, Colorado HOA Forum, offers the following status report on this program and it is not good:
- The rules developed by DORA to ensure CAM compliance with the law and bring accountability to the profession are ambiguous and require change. Specifically, (1) rules need to definitively and comprehensively state CAMs must comply with all State HOA laws and HOAs governing documents; (2) require CAMs to notify HOA Boards if any of their activities are in non-compliance with State HOA laws and/or HOA governing documents and recommend corrective action and if violations continue the CAM must report the event to DORA and the State's HOA Office;
- DORA requirements for full disclosure of CAM fees assessed HOAs and home owners are severely lacking and avoid accountability. In particular, DORA requires nothing more than a one liner in an HOA contract or on home closing documents to represent full disclosure which is simply conceding to CAM industry demands to allow things to remain as is. DORA full-disclosure requires no detailed explanation of a fee or why it is charged, who determines the amount of the fee and retains it, confirming and explaining that any fee doesn't overlap or duplicate any charge already paid for through HOA dues or by a Title Company ( (such as the HOA Transfer Fee), requires no receipt to the payee identifying charges by line item, and no requirement to justify the authority to charge the fee and a statement how any Transfer Fee is in compliance with State law HB 11-234 that defines and restricts this fee.
- The DORA web site complaint application requires changes to make it easier to use: develop an on-line complaint status process; assign a tracking number upon completion of complaint for users to inquire/determine the status of their complaint; allow users to mail in documentation that is not conducive to e-mailing; immediate on-screen confirmation when completed with complaint that indicates a successful filing; the license lookup system doesn't list provisional/temporary licenses and only lists one licensed CAM for the largest of property management companies; one can't enter an HOA and find the CAM; search results for a CAM license lookup results in display of information from all DORA programs (clutter!); allow for display all HOAs serviced by a licensed CAM; and provide options to classify the type of CAM complaint to make review and justification of complaints easier to complete and review.
- The time frame in which CAM complaints are resolved is extremely slow to non-responsive. There are cases where DORA knows for months a CAM is not licensed and refuses to take action such as a cease and desist order and/or fine. Closing out/decisions on complaints is very slow and too often complaints seem lost in a bureaucratic maze.
- DORA licensing, fees, and educational structure is burdensome to the smallest of CAMs and relief to these small businesses should be implemented similar to relief given small HOAs in registration fees.
- The licensing program to date is more of a fees imposition and collection system and sales promotion tool for educational courses for a private firm (Community Association Institute (CAI) than a program for bringing integrity and accountability to profession.
Saturday, November 28, 2015
HOA and Property Manager (CAM) Complaints: Speak Out
The HOA Property Manager (aka Community Association Manager
(CAM)) licensing law was fully implemented July 15, 2015. This law provides home owners a chance to
help clean-up abusive industry practices and provide a forum for home owners to
rein in violations of State law and HOA governing documents. HB 13-1277 is the licensing law.
The complaint process involves an on-line/web application
and is fully explained in our Complaint Guide and should not take more than
15-20 minutes. Since the State HOA
Office has no investigative or enforcement authority we suggest you direct all
your HOA problems that you want investigated to DORA under the licensing
law. The State HOA Office can also be
apprised.
Several CAM violations stand out and we ask you and your
fellow home owners to pursue via a complaint: 1) CAM is not licensed (simple
lookup on your part) 2) violations in conducting elections, meetings, extremely
poor property maintenance, records release(items a,b,and/or c below) and 3) charging HOA Transfer Fees (items “a”
and “c” below). All are applicable to
CAM complaints. Each one requires a
separate complaint.
The explanation of your CAM complaint involves: 1) a
description of your problem including how you understand it violates your
rights. Include one or more of the below
statements extracted from the licensing law to support your complaint. 2) Evidence such as you paid a Transfer Fee
documented on your home closing papers, your request for documents has been refused,
etc.
Supporting all complaints should be your documentation
including an email informing BOTH the HOA Board and CAM of your problem, allow
7-10 days for resolution and if not resolved file a complaint. If you need
guidance let us know. Complaints are
confidential with DORA.
Let’s all participate to surface problems and hold violators
accountable.
Extracts from CAM Licensing Law:
a. KNOWINGLY VIOLATING OR KNOWINGLY DIRECTING OTHERS TO
VIOLATE CCIOA (or your HOA governing documents)
b. HAVING DEMONSTRATED UNWORTHINESS OR INCOMPETENCY TO ACT AS
A COMMUNI-TY ASSOCIATION MANAGER BY CONDUCTING BUSINESS IN SUCH A MANNER AS TO
EN-DANGER THE INTEREST OF THE PUBLIC
c. ANY OTHER CONDUCT, WHETHER OF THE SAME OR A DIFFERENT
CHARACTER THAN SPECIFIED IN THIS SUBSECTION (1), THAT CONSTITUTES DISHONEST
DEALING.
Friday, November 20, 2015
Colorado HOA Forum's Winter Edition Newsletter Posted on Web Site
The Colorado HOA Forum, www.coloradohoaforum.com, Colorado's largest HOA home owner organization has posted its' Winter 2015 newsletter on its' web site. This edition focuses on the implementation of the new HOA Property Manager (aka Community Association Manager (CA)) licensing program, HOA Transfer Fees, HOA and CAM dispute resolution and complaint filing with the State, and a host of other HOA issues. An overview of the Forum's latest HOA Town Hall Meeting from November 12 in Aurora, CO is presented indicating what is of concern to HOA home owner's. Keep in touch with HOA current events, HOA legislation, and home owner's issues with this easily accessed newsletter. This is Colorado's only HOA periodical presenting HOA issues from the home owner's perspective. Those wishing to subscribe to this free newsletter can join on the Forum's web site.
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Enforceable, not more, HOA Laws Needed
The complaints about Homeowners Associations (HOAs) are not that State's lack HOA laws but that they lack enforceable HOA laws from the home owner's perspective. In Colorado there are numerous, comprehensive, and definitive laws governing HOA laws. The problem is that the authors and sponsors of these Bills left out the most important aspect of law: enforcement. This is like having speeding laws without fines for violations. In many cases this was absolutely deliberate to get support for passage from those legislators whose votes are influenced by well financed political machines such as HOA lawyers and the Community Association Institute (CAI). HOA law thus provides very good guidelines and principles but without an accessible and affordable means for home owners to pursue their rights HOA legislation becomes more ornamental and providing mostly the illusion of protection of homeowner's rights.
Home owners who don't comply with HOA governing documents can be readily fined and even have homes foreclosed upon. Violations by HOA Boards and property managers of State HOA law and HOA governing documents, however, leave home owners in a vulnerable and helpless mode. Home owners' only workable means for enforcing HOA law is our costly, litigious, and time consuming court system that matches the limited funds and time of the home owner against the unlimited financial and professional resources of the HOA. Even the most simple right of a home owner that is violated by an HOA Board such as gaining access to HOA financial records, challenging conflicts of interests or demanding full and accurate documentation on private Board meetings or minutes of home owner meetings requires the home owner to go to court: not hardly a fair or workable means for governing the HOA.
What is needed to make HOA governance and HOA laws effective from both the HOA and home owner's perspective is an out of court binding dispute resolution process. This process in Colorado has been endorsed in a State mandated study on dispute resolution and only awaits legislative sponsors. Implement this system and most HOA Board and property manager complaints related to non-compliance with HOA law will quickly be mitigated. The system will save taxpayer dollars as it takes case load out of the overloaded court system; disputes are paid for by the parties involved in the complaint (not taxpayers); it sets up a fair venue for dispute resolution (one based on facts and merits of a complaint and not based on an ability to pay); lawyers are not required; trained arbiters in HOA law are used ensuring knowledgeable people will conduct and make decisions on complaints; the system is low cost, timely, and provides for a guaranteed decision on any complaint; and no home owner is denied to use the court system if they choose.
So enough with more ineffective and mostly administrative HOA laws. What we need is an enforcement system to make the existing laws enforceable.
Home owners who don't comply with HOA governing documents can be readily fined and even have homes foreclosed upon. Violations by HOA Boards and property managers of State HOA law and HOA governing documents, however, leave home owners in a vulnerable and helpless mode. Home owners' only workable means for enforcing HOA law is our costly, litigious, and time consuming court system that matches the limited funds and time of the home owner against the unlimited financial and professional resources of the HOA. Even the most simple right of a home owner that is violated by an HOA Board such as gaining access to HOA financial records, challenging conflicts of interests or demanding full and accurate documentation on private Board meetings or minutes of home owner meetings requires the home owner to go to court: not hardly a fair or workable means for governing the HOA.
What is needed to make HOA governance and HOA laws effective from both the HOA and home owner's perspective is an out of court binding dispute resolution process. This process in Colorado has been endorsed in a State mandated study on dispute resolution and only awaits legislative sponsors. Implement this system and most HOA Board and property manager complaints related to non-compliance with HOA law will quickly be mitigated. The system will save taxpayer dollars as it takes case load out of the overloaded court system; disputes are paid for by the parties involved in the complaint (not taxpayers); it sets up a fair venue for dispute resolution (one based on facts and merits of a complaint and not based on an ability to pay); lawyers are not required; trained arbiters in HOA law are used ensuring knowledgeable people will conduct and make decisions on complaints; the system is low cost, timely, and provides for a guaranteed decision on any complaint; and no home owner is denied to use the court system if they choose.
So enough with more ineffective and mostly administrative HOA laws. What we need is an enforcement system to make the existing laws enforceable.
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