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{{Short description|Type of private association in the United States}}
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A '''homeowners' association''' (abbrev. '''HOA''') is the legal entity created by a real estate developer for the purpose of developing, managing and selling a community of homes. It is given the authority to enforce the [[Restrictive covenant|covenants, conditions, and restrictions]] (CC&Rs) and to manage the common amenities of the development. It allows the developer to legaly exit responsibility of the community typicaly by transfering ownership of the association to the homeowners after selling off a predetermined number of lots. Most homeowners' associations are [[non-profit corporations]], and are subject to state statutes that govern non-profit corporations and homeowners' associations.
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A '''homeowner association''' (or '''homeowners' association''' ['''HOA'''], sometimes referred to as a '''property owners' association''' ['''POA'''], '''common interest development''' ['''CID'''], or '''homeowner community''') is a private, [[Incorporation (business)|legally-incorporated organization]] that governs a housing community, collects dues, and sets rules for its residents. HOAs are found principally in the [[United States]], [[Canada]], the [[Philippines]], as well as some other countries. They are formed either ''[[ipso jure]]'' (such as in a building with multiple [[Owner-occupancy|owner-occupancies]]), or by a [[real estate]] developer for the purpose of [[marketing]], [[Management|managing]], and selling homes and lots in a [[residential subdivision]].{{sfn|Tabarrok|2002|p=415}}The developer may transfer control of an HOA after selling a predetermined number of lots.{{sfn|Tabarrok|2002|p=415}}
The fastest growing form of housing in the United States today is <span id="CIDs"></span>common-interest developments, a category that includes [[Planned Unit Development|planned-unit developments]] of [[single-family home]]s, [[condominium]]s, and [[Housing cooperative|cooperative apartments]].<ref>{{cite book| first=Evan| last= McKenzie| title=Privatopia: Homeowner Associations and the Rise of Residential Private Governments| publisher= Yale University Press| id= ISBN 0-300-06638-4| pages= 7}}</ref>


In most cases, a person who wants to buy a residence within the area of a HOA must become a member, and therefore must obey the governing documents including articles of incorporation, CC&Rs ([[Covenant (law)|covenants]], conditions and restrictions) and by-laws—which may limit the owner's choices, for example, exterior design modifications (e.g., paint colors). HOAs are especially active in [[urban planning]], zoning, and land use—decisions that affect the pace of growth, the quality of life, the level of [[tax]]ation, and the value of land in the community.{{sfn|Caves|2004|p= }}{{rp|page?}}
Since 1914, builders of common interest developments and firms that sell services to homeowners' associations have said that deed restrictions protect property values. A report published by Harvard University disputes this claim, stating: “Although HOA foreclosures are ostensibly motivated by efforts to improve property values, neither foreclosure activity nor HOAs appear linked with the above average home price growth.”<ref>{{cite web|last=Adolph|first=Christopher|title=Homeowner Association Foreclosures and Property Values in Harris County, 1985–2001|url=http://faculty.washington.edu/cadolph/homepage/Adolph_hoas.pdf|date=21 October 2002}}</ref>


Since 1964, homeowners' associations have become increasingly common in the USA. The [[Community Associations Institute]] trade association estimated that HOAs governed 23 million American homes and 57 million residents in 2006.<ref>{{cite web|title=Industry Data - National Statistics|publisher=Community Associations Institute|url=http://www.caionline.org/about/facts.cfm}}</ref>


Most HOAs are [[Incorporation (business)|incorporated]], and are subject to state statutes that govern [[non-profit corporations]] and HOAs. State oversight of HOAs varies from state to state; some states, such as [[Florida]] and [[California]],<ref name="FloridaLegislature">{{cite web |title=Title XL REAL AND PERSONAL PROPERTY, Chapter 720: HOMEOWNERS' ASSOCIATIONS |url=http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0700-0799/0720/0720.html |website=The Florida Legislature |access-date=20 September 2024}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displayexpandedbranch.xhtml?tocCode=CIV&division=4.&title=&part=5.&chapter=&article=|title=Common Interest Developments|website=leginfo.legi.ca.gov|access-date=2017-10-09}}</ref> have a large body of HOA law. Other states, such as [[Massachusetts]],<ref>{{Cite web|title=Massachusetts HOA Laws, Regulations & Resources|url=https://www.hopb.co/massachusetts|access-date=2021-11-30|website=Homeowners Protection Bureau, LLC|language=en-US}}</ref> have limited HOA law. HOAs are commonly found in residential developments since the passage of the [[Davis–Stirling Common Interest Development Act]] in 1985. In Canada, HOAs are subject to stringent provincial regulations and are thus quite rare compared to the United States. However in recent decades, HOAs have infrequently been created in new subdivision developments in [[Alberta]] and [[Ontario]].
==Authority==

A homeowners' association is incorporated by the developer prior to the initial sale of homes, and the Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) are recorded when the property is [[subdivision (land)|subdivided]]. When a homeowner purchases a home governed by an HOA, the CC&Rs are included with the deed.
The fastest-growing form of [[housing]] in the United States today are [[common-interest development]]s (CIDs), a category that includes [[planned unit development]]s of [[single-family home]]s, [[condominium]]s, and [[housing cooperative]]s.{{relevance inline |date=July 2016|sentence|reason=While CIDs are often involve HOAs, that is not explained here. Even if it was, should this be in the lead?}}{{sfn|McKenzie|1994|p=7}} Since 1964, HOAs have become increasingly common in the United States. The [[Community Associations Institute]] [[trade association]] estimated that in 2010, HOAs governed 24.8 million American homes and 62 million residents.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Industry Data – National Statistics |publisher=[[Community Associations Institute]] |url=http://www.caionline.org/info/research/Pages/default.aspx |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111101152140/http://www.caionline.org/info/research/Pages/default.aspx |archive-date=2011-11-01 }}</ref> Throughout the rest of the world, HOAs—though they do exist in some neighborhoods—are uncommon.

==History==
For centuries, communities have, informally or formally, combined resources to maintain common areas, like wells or roads. However, modern HOAs established covenants and deed restrictions to dictate who could buy a home in a development. These were the children of deed restrictions in a new kind of planned subdivision, and they established the national legal precedent for zoning districts exclusively for upscale, single-family residences. Private restrictions normally included provisions such as minimum required costs for home construction and the exclusion of all non-Caucasians, and sometimes non-Christians as well, from occupancy, except domestic servants.{{sfn|Davis|2006|p=161}}{{sfn|Weiss|2002|pp=3–4, 11–12}}

In the early postwar period after World War II, many were defined to exclude African Americans and, in some cases, Jews, with Asians also excluded on the West Coast.{{sfn|Plotkin|2001|pp=39–69}} Some of the first HOAs were formed early in the 20th century in [[Los Angeles County]].{{sfn|Hudson|2020|p=}}{{page needed|date=September 2024}} The Arroyo Seco Improvement Association in [[Pasadena]] was founded around 1905 by [[Henry E. Huntington|Henry Huntington]], a transit magnate who developed several whites-only housing divisions.{{sfn|Hudson|2020|p=}}{{page needed|date=September 2024}} The [[Los Feliz Improvement Association]] (still in operation today) in [[Los Angeles]] was founded in 1916.{{citation needed|date=September 2024}} A racial covenant in a [[Seattle, Washington]], neighborhood stated, "No part of said property hereby conveyed shall ever be used or occupied by any Hebrew or by any person of the Ethiopian, Malay or any Asiatic race."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://depts.washington.edu/civilr/covenants.htm|title=Racial Restrictive Covenants| publisher = [[University of Washington]]}}</ref> In 1948, the [[United States Supreme Court]] ruled such covenants unenforceable in ''[[Shelley v. Kraemer]]''. However, private contracts effectively kept them alive until the [[Fair Housing Act]] of 1968 prohibited such discrimination.<ref>{{cite web|title=How The Fair Housing Act Protects Homeowners From Discrimination|url=https://www.hopb.co/blog/how-the-fair-housing-act-protects-homeowners-from-discrimination|website=hopb.co|date=6 February 2018 |publisher=Homeowners Protection Bureau, LLC}}</ref> However, by requiring approval of tenants and new owners, HOAs still have the potential to permit less formalized discrimination.

In 1963, the FHA had approved federal home mortgage insurance exclusively for [[Condominium (living space)|condominium]]s or for homes in subdivisions that had a qualifying HOA. The rationale was that developers wanted to get around density laws. The effect, however, was to divert investment from multi-family housing and home construction or renovation in the inner cities. This accelerated the middle-class exodus to the suburbs and into common-interest housing. The rapid expansion of federally subsidized highways under federal programs made access to new areas easy.

According to Donald R. Stabile, the explosion in the number of CIDs (many of which were based on homeowners' associations) was strongly influenced by a 1964 publication (TB 50) by the [[Urban Land Institute]].{{sfn|Stabile|2000|p=}}{{page needed|date=September 2024}} This technical bulletin was funded by the [[National Association of Home Builders]] and by certain federal agencies: the [[Federal Housing Administration|FHA]], the [[United States Public Health Service]], the [[Office of Civil Defense]], the [[United States Department of Veterans Affairs|Veterans Administration]], and the [[Urban Renewal Administration]].{{sfn|Hanke|Krasnowieki|Loring|Tweraser|1970|loc=Title page}}

In order to do this while still retaining a suburban look, they clustered homes around green open areas maintained by associations. These associations provided services that formerly had been provided by municipal agencies funded by property taxes. Residents of such development also had to pay their local taxes. Accordingly, local governments began promoting subdivision development as a means of improving their cash flow.{{sfn|MacCallum|2002|pp=373–374}}

In an effort to control water pollution, the U.S. [[Clean Water Act]] of 1977 required that all new real estate developments had to detain storm water so that flow to adjoining properties was not greater than the pre-development runoff. As a result, nearly all residential developments had to construct detention or retention areas to hold excess storm water until it could be released at the pre-development flow level. Since these detention areas serve multiple residences, they are almost always designated as "common" areas. This requirement was a reason for developers to establish an HOA. Although these areas can be placed on an individual homeowner's lot, eliminating the need for an association, some U.S. municipalities now require these areas to be part of a common area to ensure an entity, rather than an individual or the municipality itself, has maintenance responsibility.{{Citation needed|date=August 2015}} Real estate developers have frequently established HOAs to maintain such common areas. Having established the HOA, the developers have expanded their scope, giving them authority to regulate changes to residences, landscaping and maintenance requirements, color of houses, etc., a variety of other requirements and amenities that the developers believe will make their project more desirable to the market.{{vague|date=August 2015}}{{Citation needed|date=August 2015}}

==Industry==

The [[Community Associations Institute]] (CAI) is a trade association of individuals and businesses that sell supplies or services to HOAs, and is dominated by lawyers and [[community association manager|HOA manager]]s.{{sfn|McKenzie|1994|p=}}{{page needed|date=September 2024}} The CAI does not represent HOAs. It lobbies the legislatures of states that have HOAs in order to promote legislation beneficial to its interests.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ccfj.net/HOAbillCAslaughtered.html|title=CAI Lawyers Slaughter Homeowner Protection Bill|work=ccfj.net}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=August 4, 2010 |first=Nancy |last=Hentschel |url=http://www.fortbendnow.com/2010/08/04/47120 |title=Home Owner Associations Growing in Power While with Little Oversight or Transparency |website=Fort Bend Now |access-date=2011-01-04 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501205647/http://www.fortbendnow.com/2010/08/04/47120 |archive-date=2011-05-01 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thehoaprimer.org/cai.htm|title=The CAI|work=thehoaprimer.org}}</ref>

==Operation==
Although in some cases membership in an HOA may be voluntary for a property owner, in the majority of cases membership in an HOA is mandatory. Once an owner purchases property within the subdivision, that owner becomes a mandatory member of the HOA, and must pay assessments to, and abide by the rules of, the HOA.

In return, the owner/member is permitted to participate in the HOA's governance and use the amenities offered by the HOA, provided that they are current on assessments (or on a payment plan to become current). Once an owner sells or otherwise transfers interest in all the property owned within the HOA, the owner ceases to be a member of the HOA and loses all rights previously held.

===Governance===
Usually HOAs are structured as private corporations or private unincorporated associations (commonly as non-profit ones). HOAs are governed by federal and state statutes applicable to corporations (or unincorporated associations if so structured), as well as the HOA's own "governing documents".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ccfj.net/HOAFLleadersCAI.html|title=Civic Leaders – Or More Community Association Institute?|work=ccfj.net}}</ref>

The HOA's governing documents generally [[Covenant (law)#In planned communities|"run with the land"]], which means that all current and future owners of property within the HOA will be bound by them as a condition of property ownership. They usually include:

*The covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs) of the [[subdivision (land)|subdivision]]. These are likely the most important documents affecting the subdivision and are usually created when the subdivision is initially formed, and as such are often recorded in the official property records of the county or other jurisdiction where the subdivision is located. Commonly the CC&Rs specify what types of structures can be placed on a lot (e.g. an upscale community may prohibit mobile homes or travel trailers and require minimum sizes on dwellings, along with offsets from the property line where building is prohibited) and other property restrictions (e.g. no animals except for traditional household pets, no operation of commercial business).
*The HOA's Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws.
*In some cases the documents may include board-enacted rules as authorized (expressly or implicitly) by the CC&Rs.

Generally CC&Rs are enforceable as legal documents. However, there are instances where a CC&R is rendered illegal by later enacted state or federal law and therefore is no longer enforceable. For example, a developer-drafted covenant giving the developer sole rights to amend the CC&Rs was declared unenforceable as a matter of public policy in at least one state, where the developer attempted to amend years after he had sold all the property. That state's legislature later codified that public policy.<ref>{{cite web|title=RCW 64.38.028 - Removal of discriminatory provisions in governing documents—Procedure, see footnote on intent.|url=http://app.leg.wa.gov/RCW/default.aspx?cite=64.38.028|website=Washington State Legislature|publisher=Washington State|access-date=14 November 2016}}</ref> Other examples include CC&Rs which prohibited sales of property to certain racial groups; the Fair Housing Act rendered all of these also to be unconstitutional and unenforceable.

===Board of directors===
The HOA will be governed by a [[board of directors]].

Initially, the board is composed of developer-appointed members, in order to maintain the character of the community that the developer has for it. As the percentage of ownership shifts from the developer toward owners, the corresponding percentage changes from developer-appointed members to homeowners elected at an annual meeting, and ultimately the board will consist solely of homeowner-elected members.

Usually, the board (or parts of it) will be elected at an annual meeting of the homeowners, as specified in the Bylaws. In order to avoid an owner of multiple lots (who likely own the lots for resale or rental property) controlling the HOA's operation (to the detriment of those owners who only own a single lot or two contiguous lots as a current or future residence or vacation home), the Bylaws may limit all owners (regardless of the number of lots owned) to one or two votes per owner.

Depending on the state, board meetings may be required to be open to the public, except in instances where a board may enter into an "executive session" for discussion on confidential matters (e.g. discussions with its attorney on an upcoming lawsuit).

The board of directors makes decisions regarding the HOA, including management of the HOA's finances, protecting the HOA's real and intangible assets (generally the amenities provided which were the basis for inducing people to purchase lots), and enforcing the governing documents.<ref name="ECHO ethics">{{cite web |title=Ethics Code for HOA Board Members |date=12 November 2013 |publisher=Educational Community for Homeowners |access-date= October 22, 2014 |url=http://www.echo-ca.org/article/ethics-code-hoa-board-members}}</ref> Boards of directors have a [[Fiduciary|fiduciary duty]] to the property owners; violation of that duty may result in liability for individual directors, and as such the HOA will often adopt an ethics code for the board members to ensure they act ethically and in accordance with their responsibilities.<ref name="ECHO ethics" /> To gain a clear understanding of the responsibilities of the HOA board, community members need to read their association's CC&Rs, Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws, and other rules.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Fiduciary Duties of An HOA: Know Your Rights As A Homeowner|url=https://www.hopb.co/blog/the-fiduciary-duties-of-an-hoa-know-your-rights-as-a-homeowner|website=hopb.co|date=12 March 2018 }}</ref>

===Association management===
Many HOAs (especially larger ones with more upscale amenities) hire management companies to handle the governing duties of the association.

Management services are typically divided into three categories: financial only, full management, and on-site management. Financial services typically cover administration of bank accounts, bookkeeping, assessment collection, and the HOAs budget. Full management typically includes the financial services plus help with board meetings (keeping minutes, agendas, etc.), board elections, and maintenance duties (obtaining contractor bids, etc.). On-site management typically includes all of the full management services plus direct assistance to homeowners with an assigned manager to the HOA.

Education requirements for managers varies from state to state, with some requiring certification under all circumstances and others having a more lenient approach. For instance, while California does not require HOA managers to be certified, it does require that managers meet certain educational requirements to claim certification.<ref>{{cite web|title=Guide to Community Association Management Certifications|url=http://www.echo-ca.org/article/guide-community-association-manager-certifications|website=www.echo-ca.org|publisher=Educational Community of Homeowners|access-date=January 5, 2015|archive-date=January 25, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150125002504/http://www.echo-ca.org/article/guide-community-association-manager-certifications|url-status=dead}}</ref>


===Powers===
===Powers===
Through its board an HOA will provide some level of amenities (though differing greatly between HOAs), regulate activities within a development, levy assessments, and may (if authorized by CC&Rs or a state legislature) impose fines for noncompliance.
Like a city, associations provide services, regulate activities, levy assessments, and impose fines. Unlike a municipal government, homeowner association governance is subject to corporation law, and sometimes specific legislation governing homeowners' associations. As HOAs are considered private corporations, they are not subject to the Constitutional constraints that public government must abide by.<ref>Privatopia, p. 142</ref> A homeowners' association board carries out tasks which would otherwise be performed by [[local government]]s. A homeowners' association can only enforce its actions through private legal action under [[Civil law (common law)|civil law]]. Boards appoint corporate officers, and may create subcommittees, such as "architectural control committees," pool committees and neighborhood watch committees.


Depending on the governing documents, HOA boards may create committees, such as an "architectural control committee" (this is a very common one, and frequently this committee has the ultimate authority to approve or deny a building request), a pool committee, a neighborhood watch committee, etc.
Association boards are comprised of volunteers from the community who are elected by owners at the annual meeting to represent the association and make decisions for all homeowners.


Depending on the governing documents or state law, the HOA may have the authority to place liens on a property (for non-payment of assessments and/or noncompliance with CC&Rs, an example would be the costs to remove a non compliant structure such as a mobile home on a lot restricted to "site built" housing) and to, ultimately, foreclose on it.
===Assessments===
Homeowner associations can compel homeowners to pay a share, usually per-unit or based on square footage, of common expenses. These expenses generally arise from common property, which varies dramatically depending on the type of association. Some associations are, quite literally, towns, complete with private roads, services, utilities, amenities, community buildings, pools, and even schools. Others have no common property, but may charge for services or other matters.


Homeowners have the ability to defend against such actions, and are usually entitled to sue HOAs for contractual or statutory violations, or for a legal determination as to the enforceability of a provision in the governing documents. However, because HOAs are private associations, they are not considered "state actors" subject to constitutional constraints,{{sfn|McKenzie|1994|p=142}} and therefore homeowners cannot sue for civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. 1983.
Assessments paid to homeowner associations in the United States amount to billions of dollars a year.<ref>[http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/money/homepage/article_1351300.php ''Educating Homeowners'', Orange County Register, Nov. 12, 2006]</ref> Since these funds are spent on repairing, replacing, restoring, and maintaining property of the individual owners, Homeowners Associations are considered to be non-profit entities.


The major power of the HOA is the ability to compel property owners to pay a share of common expenses for the overall maintenance of the HOA and the amenities, usually proportionate to the ownership interests (either by unit or based on square footage). These expenses generally arise from the operation and maintenance of common property, which vary dramatically depending on the type of association. An HOA may have, in addition to a regular assessment, a "special" assessment for unexpected expenses (such as for road maintenance).
== Benefits ==
The purpose of a homeowners association is to maintain, enhance and protect the common areas and interests of an association (also called a subdivision or neighborhood). This can allow an individual homeowner access to an amenity (pond, pool, clubhouse, etc.) that he may not be able to afford on his own. Each member of a homeowners association pays assessments. The assessments are used to pay the expenses of community. Some examples are entrance monuments, landscaping for the common area, amenities like clubhouses, tennis courts, or walking trails, insurance for commonly-owned structures and areas, mailing costs for newsletters or other correspondence, a management company or on-site manager, or any other item delineated in the governing documents or agreed to by the Board of Directors.


The assessment may be paid monthly, quarterly, or annually; generally the more amenities provided the more frequent the assessment must be paid. Some associations operate little or no common property, and the expenses relate solely to enforcement of use restrictions or assumed services. Others are effectively private towns, with elaborate amenities including private roads, street lights, services, utilities, commonly owned buildings, pools, and even schools. Assessments paid to HOAs in the United States amount to billions of dollars a year, but are not classed as property taxes.<ref>[http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/money/homepage/article_1351300.php "Educating Homeowners"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090116040421/http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/money/homepage/article_1351300.php |date=2009-01-16 }}, ''[[Orange County Register]],'' 12 November 2006.</ref>
A study<ref>{{cite web|last=Cipriani|first=Christine|title=Homeownership and Association Living - HOA Members
and Homeowners Nationwide|date=September 2005|publisher=Zogby International|url=http://www.cairf.org/research/zogby.pdf|accessdate=2007-06-04}}</ref> by [[Zogby International]] reported widespread satisfaction by residents of homeowners' associations: 71% overall were pleased with their experience of the homeowner's association. The majority (63%) said that the existence of a homeowner's association did not affect their choice when buying or renting; of the remainder, an HOA was a positive influence 3 times as often as it was a negative influence (28% to 9%). The same study reported that while fewer than one in four residents had ever brought a complaint to their HOA board, three in four of those who did were satisfied with the resolution. Just over 3 in ten residents in homeowners' associations have served on an HOA board.


When determining what the assessment should be, it is important to consider what funds are required. There should always be a minimum of two funds: an operating fund and a reserve fund. The operating fund is used to pay for the operating expenses of the association. A reserve fund is used to pay for the infrequent and expensive common area assets maintenance, repair and replacement costs. The reserve fund is crucial for reducing the chances of a special assessment (mentioned in the risks below). Obtaining a [[reserve study]] is recommended to help determine and set the reserve contribution rate which is included in the regular monthly assessment.
There is pending legislation in several states to mandate licensure of community managers. Management companies are in favor of the legislation because it will narrow the field of potential management companies to those who are licensed.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}


== Criticisms ==
==Effects==
According to a 2019 study in the ''[[Journal of Labor Economics]]'', "houses in HOAs have prices that are on average at least 4%, or $13,500, greater than observably similar houses outside of HOAs. The HOA premium correlates with the stringency of local land use regulation, local government spending on public goods, and measures of social attitudes toward race."<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=Clarke|first1=Wyatt|last2=Freedman|first2=Matthew|date=2019-07-01|title=The rise and effects of homeowners associations|journal=Journal of Urban Economics|volume=112|pages=1–15|doi=10.1016/j.jue.2019.05.001| s2cid=164637435 |issn=0094-1190}}</ref> The study also found that people in HOA neighborhoods "are on average more affluent and racially segregated than those living in other nearby neighborhoods."<ref name=":0" />


===Undemocratic===
===For homeowners===
The perception of the benefits that an HOA provides to homeowners varies depending on the specific regulations and practices of the HOA.{{sfn|Goodwin||La Roche|Waller|2020|pp=238–253}} These benefits may include amenities (eg. a pool, tennis courts, clubhouse, and open areas).{{sfn|Goodwin||La Roche|Waller|2020|pp=238–253}} Individuals may also benefit more or less depending on their political standing in the association and the degree to which the community's decisions match their preferences. In the 1994 court case ''Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Assn.'', the [[California Supreme Court]] noted:
Some scholars and the [[AARP]] charge that in a variety of ways CIDs violate public policy by suppressing the rights of their residents <ref>{{Harvnb | Barton | Silverman | 1994 | p=xii| Ref=none}}.</ref>. Specifically, HOA boards of directors are not bound by constitutional restrictions on governments, although critics claim that they are a de-facto level of government.<ref>Professor McKenzie, Privatopia, 21</ref> A board of directors can be sued if it breaches its duties, but board members risk nothing financially in these suits. Association insurance provides not only for a board member's legal expense, but any judgment attained against them. Homeowners must pay out of pocket for any case they bring to court and risk being personally liable for any judgment and/or Association's legal fees as well as their own.
<blockquote>"...Owners associations 'can be a powerful force for good or for ill' in their members' lives. Therefore, anyone who buys a unit in a common interest development with knowledge of its owners association's discretionary power accepts 'the risk that the power may be used in a way that benefits the commonality but harms the individual.'"<ref>{{cite court |litigants=Natore A. Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Association, Inc.|vol=33 |reporter=Cal. Rptr.2d 63 |opinion= |pinpoint=37 |court=Supreme Court of California |date=September 2, 1994 |url=http://September%202,%201994 |access-date=May 10, 2016 |quote=...owners associations "can be a powerful force for good or for ill" in their members' lives. Therefore, anyone who buys a unit in a common interest development with knowledge of its owners association's discretionary power accepts "the risk that the power may be used in a way that benefits the commonality but harms the individual." }}</ref></blockquote>


Benefits to homeowners may include maintenance and management services, provision of recreational amenities such as pools and parks, insurance coverage, enforcement of community appearance standards which may lead to higher property values, and the opportunity for members to plan development in accordance with community values.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.realtor.com/advice/buy/pros-and-cons-of-living-within-a-homeowners-association/ | title=Pros and Cons of Living Within a Homeowners Association | last=Lerner | first=Michele | date=December 23, 2013 | website=Realtor.com | access-date=May 10, 2016 }}</ref>{{unreliable source?|date=August 2017}}
Corporation and homeowner association laws provide a limited role for HOA homeowners.<ref name="Allocation of Authority within Associations 73">{{Harvard reference | Surname=Sproul | Given=Curtis | Year= 1994 | Chapter=The Many Faces of Community Associations under California Law | Editor=Stephen E. Barton & Carol J. Silverman | Title=Common Interest Communities: Private Governments and the Public Interest | Publisher=Institute of Governmental Studies | Place=Berkeley, CA |Pages=73 | ISBN=0-87772-359-1 | URL=http://www-dcrp.ced.berkeley.edu/bpj/pdf/bidl1009.pdf }}</ref>The structure of corporate governance fashioned by corporation laws is essentially a "top down," oligarchical structure. Unless either statutory law or the corporation's governing documents reserve a particular issue or action for approval by the members, corporation laws provide that the activities and affairs of a corporation shall be conducted and ''all corporate powers shall be exercised'' by or under the direction of the board of directors. Thus, unless member approval is specifically required either by some statute or by the association's governing documents, members who are not directors or officers have little or no role to play in the day-to-day management of their development, except, however that members have the ultimate authority to elect and/or remove officers and directors, often with a simple majority vote.


Disadvantages to homeowners may include the financial burden of association fees, punitive fines, and costs of maintaining appearance standards; restrictions on property use and personal autonomy; and the potential for mismanagement by the board, including the possibility of arbitrary or heavy-handed enforcement of rules.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.accordhoa.com/why-accord/education-i-hoa-news/benefits-drawbacks-of-homeowners-associations/ | title=Benefits & Drawbacks of Homeowners Associations | website=AccordHOA.com | publisher=Accord Property Management, LLC | access-date=May 10, 2016 | archive-date=January 2, 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210102195907/https://www.accordhoa.com/why-accord/education-i-hoa-news/benefits-drawbacks-of-homeowners-associations/ | url-status=dead }}</ref>{{unreliable source?|date=November 2017}}
===Voting===
Critics argue that homeowner associations establish a new community as a municipal corporation without ensuring that the residents governed will have a voice in the decision-making process.<ref>Hugh Mields, Jr., ''Federally Assisted New Communities: New Dimensions in Urban Development'' (Washington, D.C.: Urban Land Institute, 1973), 54.</ref> Voting in a homeowner association is based on property ownership, <ref>{{Harvnb | Barton | Silverman | 1994 | p=36| Ref=none}}</ref> per the by-laws and covenants of each association. Only property owners are eligible to vote in elections, and voting by renters is prohibited, since the association has contractual agreements solely with owners. Additionally, only one vote per unit may be cast, rather than one vote per adult occupant, so that voting representation is equal to the proportion of ownership, and cannot be influenced unfairly by packing a unit to or beyond capacity with multiple residents.<ref>{{Harvnb | McKenzie | 1994 | p=128| Ref=none}}.</ref> In the case of partially built out subdivisions in resort areas with a homeowners association, the majority of property owners may not live in the community, but they still bear the costs of running the association.


===Lack of checks and balances===
===For the municipality===


Many municipalities have welcomed HOAs in the belief that they may reduce operational costs for the local government. Since the homeowners sometimes pay for roads, parks, and other services within the development, the local government may believe it can gain revenue from property taxes from owners in a development that costs the municipality little or nothing.<ref name="Bannister">{{cite web |url=http://www.bankrate.com/finance/real-estate/homeowner-associations-devils-or-angels-1.aspx | title=Homeowner associations: Devils or angels? | last=Bannister | first=Paul | date=January 1, 2004 | website=Bankrate.com | access-date=May 10, 2016 }}</ref>
The US Bill of Rights guarantees its citizens certain protections against abusive or intrusive government; however, these protections do not extend to private contracts which have been entered into voluntarily. Homeowners' associations can function as governments, but structurally and operationally they are private corporations. Many state statutes now require HOAs to provide certain basic protections to its members.


A 2009 study of California HOAs suggested that this assumption was partially true, but that the overall effect of HOAs on municipalities was mixed. While HOAs did offset the costs of city governments to a small degree, they also reduced overall tax revenues because their members, insulated from the larger community, tended to vote down taxes that the city required to fund services. This led to an overall decrease in government expenditures that disproportionately affected those citizens who did not reside in an HOA.
The New Jersey Department of Community Affairs reported<ref name=aarp>http://www.ccfj.net/twinriversAARPAmicus.htm</ref> these observations of Association Board conduct:

<blockquote>“It is obvious from the complaints [to DCA] that that [home]owners did not realize the extent association rules could govern their lives.” </blockquote>
As the study noted,
<blockquote>"...critics of private governments claim that HOAs erode support for public institutions. Those who join can bypass the public system: homeowners who fear crime do not have to vote for tax dollars to attack the root of the problem; they can build a gate to keep the criminals out. Opponents maintain that the erosion of public support, reflected at the ballot box, leads to further deterioration of municipal services and reductions in local revenues. Nonmembers experience a reduction in public service levels and may be worse off. At the extreme, HOAs may contribute to sentiments of secession and withdrawal from the public sector."<ref>{{cite journal |last=Cheung |first=Ron |date=2009 |title=Homeowners Associations and Their Impact on the Local Public Budget |url=http://www.oberlin.edu/faculty/rcheung/cheung_hoa_budget_impact.pdf |journal=Proceedings of the 2009 Land Policy Conference: Municipal Revenues and Land Policies |publisher=Lincoln Institute of Land Policy |pages=338–366 |access-date=May 7, 2016}}</ref></blockquote>

===For real estate developers===
Real estate developers establish HOAs in the belief that they can contribute to the developer's ability to build and sell units profitably. Providing common amenities may enable developers to build at a higher density, if the local government has encouraged such results. In addition, by relieving municipalities of the costs of road and utility maintenance, developers may obtain more favorable terms.<ref name="Bannister"/> Ordinarily, the developer retains some control over the HOA until a specified number of units are sold, and the covenants, conditions, and restrictions of the HOA are put in place to further this goal.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://real-estate.lawyers.com/homeowners-association-law/hoas-and-real-estate-developers.html | title=HOAs and Real Estate Developers | website=Lawyers.com | access-date=May 10, 2016 }}</ref>

The potential disadvantage to a developer is that they may be exposed to liability to the HOA for poor construction, misleading marketing, or other problems. In these cases, the HOA may sue the developer.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.becker-poliakoff.com/Files/1408_dehaan_litigation_062904.pdf | title=Litigation Involving The Developer, Homeowners Associations, and Lenders | last1=Kennedy | first1=E. Richard | last2=de Haan | first2=Ellen Hirsch | website=Becker-Poliakoff.com | access-date=May 10, 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170117020832/http://www.becker-poliakoff.com/Files/1408_dehaan_litigation_062904.pdf | archive-date=2017-01-17 | url-status=dead }}</ref>

===Regulations===

In ''[[The Voluntary City]]'', published by the [[Libertarianism|libertarian]] [[The Independent Institute|Independent Institute]], [[Donald J. Boudreaux]] and [[Randall G. Holcombe]] note that the association's creator (e.g. a developer) has an incentive to set up a government structured in such a way as to maximize profits and thus increase the selling price of the property.{{sfn|Tabarrok|2002|p=415}} If a certain decision would increase the selling price of certain parcels and decrease the selling price of others, the developer will choose the option that yields his project the highest net income. This may result in sub-optimal outcomes for the homeowners.

==Criticisms==

=== Voting ===
HOAs established a new community as a municipal corporation.{{sfn|Mields|1973|p=54}} Voting in an HOA is based on property ownership,{{sfn|Barton|Silverman b|1994|p=36}} By the 1970s, only property owners were eligible to vote, while renters are prohibited from directly [[proxy vote|voting]] for the unit.{{sfn|Mields|1973|p=54}} They could, however, deal directly with their [[landlord]]s under their lease contract, since that is the party who has responsibility to them.{{citation needed|date=September 2024}} In the 1973 book ''Federally Assisted Communities: New Dimensions in Urban Development'', author Hugh Mields, Jr. raised questions about the [[constitutionality]] of having an association that had the authority of a municipal government, despite being private in nature.{{sfn|Mields|1973|p=54}}

Additionally, voting representation is equal to the proportion of ownership, not to the number of people.{{sfn|McKenzie|1994|p=128}} The majority of property owners may be [[absentee landlord]]s, whose values or incentives may not be aligned with the tenants'. However, some HOAs limit owners of multiple properties to one or two votes regardless of the number of lots owned, so absentee owners do not end up controlling the HOA to the detriment of residents who only own a single lot or two contiguous lots as a current or future residence or vacation home.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}

In some HOAs, the [[Real estate development|developer]] may have multiple votes for each lot it retains, but the homeowners are limited to only one vote per lot owned. This has been justified on the grounds that it allows residents to avoid decision costs until major questions about the development process already have been answered and that as the [[residual claimant]], the developer has the incentive to maximize the value of the property.{{sfn|Boudreaux|Holcombe|2002|p=297}}

=== Restrictions ===
HOAs have been criticized for having excessively restrictive rules and regulations on how homeowners may conduct themselves and use their property.<ref name="Grossman">{{cite journal |last1=GROSSMANN |first1=John |title=Trouble on the home front? |journal=Woman's Day |date=November 1, 1996 |volume=59 |issue=17 |page=59 |url=https://research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=f374f32a-cc50-3fa9-9772-133624608f88 |access-date=23 September 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=A Guide To Architectural Control In Homeowners' Associations |url=https://www.hopb.co/blog/a-guide-to-architectural-control-in-homeowners-associations |access-date=21 April 2018 |website=hopb.co |date=17 April 2018 |publisher=Homeowners Protection Bureau, LLC}}</ref>

Some of the restrictions commonly put into place by HOAs are limiting the length of [[grass]], number of cars on a property, what animals you can have on your property, the maximum volume for playing music at certain times of day, what signs you can display on your property, and what plants you can plant.<ref name="Ashburn">{{cite web |last1=Ashburn |first1=Nancy |editor-last1=Agee |editor-first1=Jennifer |title=Homeowners associations (HOAs): Pros, cons, and what you need to know |url=https://www.britannica.com/money/what-is-a-homeowners-association |website=Britannica |publisher=Britannica Money |access-date=25 September 2024 |date=17 October 2023}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Stewart |first=Emily |date=2023-04-20 |title=When your neighbors become your overlords |url=https://www.vox.com/money/23688366/hoa-condo-board-john-oliver-real-estate-coop |access-date=2024-08-19 |website=Vox |language=en-US}}</ref>

Homeowners have challenged political speech restrictions in associations that federal or state constitutional guarantees as rights, claiming that certain private associations are ''de facto'' municipal governments and should therefore be subject to the same legal restrictions.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}

Several court decisions have held that private actors may restrict individuals' exercise of their rights on private property.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}} A 2007 decision in [[New Jersey]] held that private residential communities had the right to place reasonable limitations on political speech, and that in doing so, they were not acting as municipal governments.<ref name="TwinRivers">{{cite court|litigants=Committee for a Better Twin Rivers v. Twin Rivers Homeowners' Assoc.|reporter=N.J. Supreme Court|date=July 26, 2007|url=http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/opinions/supreme/A-118%20-%20122-05%20Twin%20Rivers.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071025082419/http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/opinions/supreme/A-118%20-%20122-05%20Twin%20Rivers.pdf|url-status=dead}} {{cite web |title=Archived copy |url=http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/opinions/supreme/A-118%20-%20122-05%20Twin%20Rivers.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071025082419/http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/opinions/supreme/A-118%20-%20122-05%20Twin%20Rivers.pdf |archive-date=October 25, 2007 |access-date=2007-08-13 }}</ref> With few exceptions, courts have rejected claims that private actors are subject to constitutional limitations in a manner comparable to courts and police.

In 2002, the [[United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit|11th Circuit Court of Appeals]], in ''Loren v. Sasser'', declined to extend ''Shelley'' beyond racial discrimination and disallowed a challenge to an association's prohibition of [[Signage|"for sale" signs]]. In ''Loren'', the court ruled that outside the [[racial covenant]] context, it would not view judicial enforcement of a private contract as state action, but as private action, and accordingly would disallow any First Amendment relief.<ref>{{cite court|litigants=Loren v. Sasser|reporter=11th Cir.|year=2002|url=http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&case=/data2/circs/11th/0211090opn.html&friend=nytimes/}}</ref>

In the ''Twin Rivers'' case, a group of homeowners collectively called The Committee for a Better Twin Rivers sued the association, for a mandatory [[injunction]] permitting homeowners to post political signs and strike down the political signage restrictions by the association as unconstitutional. The appeals court held the restrictions on political signs unconstitutional and void, but the appeals court was reversed when the [[New Jersey Supreme Court]] overturned the appellate court's decision in 2007 and reinstated the decision of the [[trial court]].<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.caionline.org/govt/news/Pages/NewJerseySupremeCourtCase.aspx
|title=New Jersey Supreme Court Case (7/07)
|website=[[Community Associations Institute]]
|access-date=December 29, 2013
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131231000046/http://www.caionline.org/govt/news/Pages/NewJerseySupremeCourtCase.aspx
|archive-date=December 31, 2013
}}</ref>

===Financial risk for homeowners===
In some [[U.S. state]]s (such as [[Texas]]) an HOA can [[foreclose]] a member's house without any judicial procedure in order to collect special assessments, fees and fines, or otherwise place an enforceable lien on the property which, upon the property's sale, allows the HOA to collect otherwise unpaid assessments.<ref name=Goodwyn/> In 2008, a soldier, who was serving in Iraq, was informed that his fully paid-for, $300,000 home in [[Frisco, Texas]] had been foreclosed on and sold for $3,500 to recover unpaid HOA dues of $800.<ref name=Goodwyn>{{cite web|first=Wade |last=Goodwyn|url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128078864&ps=cprs|title=Not So Neighborly Associations Foreclosing on Homes|date= June 29, 2010| publisher = [[NPR]]}}</ref> In 2010, the case was settled and the soldier regained ownership of the home. [[Servicemembers Civil Relief Act|Federal laws protecting military personnel from civil action]] may have been his defense;{{according to whom|date=September 2024}} however, a gag order prevents details from being known.

Other states, like [[Florida]], require a [[judicial]] [[hearing (law)|hearing]]. Foreclosure without a judicial hearing can occur when a "power of sale clause" exists in a mortgage or deed of trust.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Texas Foreclosure Law|publisher=StopForeclosure.com|url=http://stopforeclosure.com/Texas_Foreclosure_Law.htm|access-date= May 7, 2007}}</ref>

A self-published report by a professor at the [[University of Washington]] disputes the claim that HOAs protect property values, stating, based on a survey of Harris County, Texas (which had an unusual legal regime regarding foreclosures): "Although HOA foreclosures are ostensibly motivated by efforts to improve property values, neither foreclosure activity nor HOAs appear linked with the above average home price growth."<ref>{{Cite web|last=Adolph |first=Christopher |title=Homeowner Association Foreclosures and Property Values in Harris County, 1985–2001 |url=http://faculty.washington.edu/cadolph/homepage/Adolph_hoas.pdf |date=October 21, 2002 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071027041506/http://faculty.washington.edu/cadolph/homepage/Adolph_hoas.pdf |archive-date=October 27, 2007 }}</ref>

HOA boards can also collect special assessments from its members in addition to set fees, sometimes without the homeowners' direct vote on the matter, though most states place restrictions on an association's ability to do so. Special assessments often require a homeowner-vote if the amount exceeds a prescribed limit established in the association's by-laws.

In [[California]], for example, a special assessment can be imposed by a board, without a membership vote, only when the total assessment is five percent or less of the association's annual budget. Therefore, in the case of a 25-unit association with a $100,000 annual operating budget, the board could only impose a $5,000 assessment on the entire population ($5,000 divided by 25 units equals $200 per unit). A larger assessment would require a majority vote of the members.

In some exceptional cases, particularly in matters of [[public health]] [[Public security|or safety]], the amount of special assessments may be at the board's discretion. If, for example there is a ruptured sewer line, the Board could vote a substantial assessment immediately, arguing that the matter affects public health and safety. In practice, however, most boards prefer that owners have a chance to voice opinions and vote on assessments.

Increasingly, HOAs handle large amounts of money. Embezzlement from associations has occurred occasionally, as a result of dishonest board members or community managers, with losses up to millions of dollars.<ref>{{cite web |title=Hallandale arrests give teeth to other condo cases |url=https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2007/06/01/hallandale-arrests-give-teeth-to-other-condo-cases/ |website=Sun Sentinel |access-date=19 September 2024 |date=1 June 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=PB Staff|title=Certified Hawaii fires CEO Floerke over condo association thefts|url=http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/blog/morning_call/2012/03/certified-hawaii-fires-ceo-floerke.html|work=Pacific Business News|publisher=American City Business Journals|access-date= May 24, 2014}}</ref> Again, California's Davis–Stirling Act, which was designed to protect owners, requires that boards carry appropriate liability insurance to indemnify the association from any wrongdoing. The large budgets and expertise required to run such groups are a part of the arguments behind mandating manager certification (through Community Association Institute, state real estate boards, or other agencies).

In 2006, the AARP voiced concern that HOAs pose a risk to the financial welfare of their members. They have proposed that a homeowners "Bill of Rights" be adopted by all 50 states to protect seniors from rogue HOAs.<ref name = "CCFJ">{{cite web|url=http://www.ccfj.net/HOAAARPbillart.htm|title=AARP targets condo, homeowner boards|work=ccfj.net}}</ref>

However, many HOAs introduce regular accounting [[audit]]s to mitigate homeowners' [[financial risk]]s. In the framework of such an inspection, an independent third-party [[Certified Public Accountant|CPA]] (Certified Public Accountant)<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.op.nysed.gov/prof/cpa/cpalic.htm|title="Office of the Professions." NYS Public Accountancy - Initial License|date=January 30, 2020|website=www.op.nysed.gov/prof/cpa/cpalic.htm}}</ref> conducts a comprehensive analysis of an association's financial records and accounting procedures, to determine whether they are accurate, legitimate and compliant with [[Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (United States)|Generally Accepted Accounting Principles]] (GAAP){{sfn|Flood|2020|p=}}{{page needed|date=September 2024}} or other reporting frameworks.<ref>{{cite web |title=Audit |url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/audit |website=Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary |date=17 September 2024 |publisher=Merriam-Webster |access-date=23 September 2024}}</ref> Upon completion of the planned auditing procedures, a CPA issues an official [[Auditor's report|report]] that states an opinion regarding the organization's financial health.

In the US, auditing requirements vary from state to state, as well as from HOA to HOA. Some associations are obliged to audit their financial statements on an annual basis or once every few years. For others, it is enough to conduct a review, a compilation or an agreed-upon procedures engagement. The HOA's budget, size and terms prescribed in covenants and bylaws<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/RPP/339-V|title=Contents of by-laws|date=2020-02-15|website=NY State Senate|language=en|access-date=2020-02-21}}</ref> often act as decisive factors when determining whether an audit is obligatory for a particular board. An audit at the end of each [[fiscal year]] is deemed to be a [[Rule of thumb|good rule of thumb]]. However, the need for an unscheduled examination can arise in cases of major changes, like a transition to a new board or management company, implementation of a large-scale improvement project, receipt of a significant sum of money under unusual circumstances, suspicion of fraud or embezzlement, or other misconduct.{{citation needed|date=September 2024}}

====Auditing process====
The auditing process for HOAs can be divided into four stages:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cfo.pitt.edu/intaudit/auditProcess.php|title=Internal Audit - Audit Process|website=www.cfo.pitt.edu|access-date=2020-02-21}}</ref>

;Planning: An HOA board makes an initial inquiry to an accounting specialist about the need to conduct an audit. A consultation is held to negotiate the objectives, time frame, report deadlines, and cost of the examination.

;Risk assessment:A CPA determines what obstacles can float up when testing the association's accounting procedures and preparing financial statements, gauges the significance of potential problems, and finds ways to overcome them. To collect the necessary information and evaluate an HOA's financial performance, the auditor interviews board members at their office, monitors the main day-to-day operations, tests their security, and performs [[analytical procedures (finance auditing)|analytical procedures]]. The auditee must provide the CPA with the most recent audit report, copies of annual tax returns, current and ensuing year's budget, board minutes, covenants, bylaws, and other internal documents. The CPA tests internal controls for incoming and outgoing transactions, the maintenance of a [[reserve (accounting)|reserve fund]], the appropriateness of financing of major contracts and improvement projects, the proper disposal of funds acquired in legal cases and under other extraordinary circumstances, and the availability and accuracy of journal entries of receipts and [[disbursement]]s. These issues are given the most attention, since they have the strongest influence on an HOA's financial health. Also, an auditor reaches out to third-party organizations to verify the HOA's transactions on both sides:

:* Account confirmations are requested from banks to check whether the association's operational and reserve accounts contain the claimed sums.
:* The same is done for loans. A CPA verifies loan balances, interest rates, repayment terms and other important details.
:* The HOA's [[Lawyer|attorney]] is contacted to check whether the association is involved in any legal cases.

;Fieldwork: The auditor conducts a profound analysis to establish relationships between the association's [[income statement]] and [[balance sheet]]. The previous year's results are compared with the current results. Since it is impossible to cover all of an HOA's transactions in an audit, a CPA selects a sample of transactions and scrutinizes details. For example, they can use a sample of outgoing transactions to verify [[invoice]]s and make sure all the funds were spent as intended and properly documented. Also, an auditor can verify bank statements, reconciliations, payroll records, canceled checks, loan statements, approved contracts and leases, proof of real estate and equipment ownership, records on capital assets, supplies and inventories. If the HOA's actual financial performance deviates from the planned indicators, the auditee must provide evidence that fluctuations are not due to the board's negligence or misconduct.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://communityassociations.net/conduct-board-members/|title=Code of Conduct for HOA Board Members|website=Community Associations Network|date=24 September 2019 |language=en-US|access-date=2020-02-21}}</ref>

;Reporting: An audit report states the CPA's opinion on the HOA's financial health and its compliance with accounting documents and with generally accepted standards. There are three types of audit reports:

:* Unqualified opinion: in all respects, the HOA's financial statements are accurate, legitimate, reflect the actual activity of the association and comply with GAAP.
:* Qualified opinion: minor misrepresentations or deviations from GAAP were found in the HOA's accounting papers. This does not significantly influence its overall financial performance, and mistakes are easy to correct.
:* Adverse opinion: accounting violations that point to fraud or the board's blatant negligence were detected.

:One more option is a disclaimer of opinion, a document compiled when a CPA is unable to issue an audit report due to conflicting interests with an HOA, non-provision of the requested financial documents, or significant uncertainty in the association's accounting operations.

:Improvement recommendations in an audit report can be used to fix the board's past mistakes, establish internal discipline, and adopt more effective accounting practices. Also, audited financial statements serve as evidence of the board's [[Good faith (law)|good faith]] and sound strategies when reporting to unit owners, investors, potential real estate buyers, tenants and other interested parties.

;Repeat audits: The need for a repeat audit may arise if the board has received an adverse opinion and wants to restore its good name in the eyes of [[shareholder]]s and investors. After issues revealed in the initial audit are fixed, a repeat examination is conducted according to the standard scenario.

=== Other ===
Some scholars and officials of the [[AARP]] have charged that, in a variety of ways, HOAs suppress the rights of their residents.{{sfn|Barton|Silverman a|1994|p=xii}} Due to [[court]] [[Judgment (law)|decisions]], describing HOAs as a kind of private entity, HOA boards of directors are not bound by constitutional restrictions on [[government]]s—although they are ''de facto'' a level of government.{{sfn|McKenzie|1994|p=21}}

Corporation and HOA laws provide a limited role for HOA homeowners.{{sfn|Sproul|1994|p=73}} Unless either statutory law or the corporation's governing documents reserve a particular issue or action for approval by the members, corporation laws provide that the activities and affairs of a corporation shall be conducted and "all corporate powers shall be exercised" by or under the direction of the board of directors. Many boards are operated outside of their state's non-profit corporation laws.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}} Knowledge of corporate laws and state statutes is essential to properly managing an HOA.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}

Once notified by a homeowner, attorney or other government official that an HOA organization is not meeting the state's statutes, the board has the responsibility to correct their governance. Certain states, such as [[Texas]], permit misdemeanor charges to be filed against a non-compliant board and permit [[lawsuit]]s to be filed against the board and the HOA. In some instances, a known failure to rectify the board's governance to meet the state's statutes can open the board's members to personal liability as most insurance policies indemnifying the board members against legal action do not cover willful misconduct.{{citation needed|date=November 2019}}

==Board misconduct==
The New Jersey Department of Community Affairs reported these observations of association board conduct:<ref name=aarp>{{cite web|url=http://www.ccfj.net/twinriversAARPAmicus.htm|title=Battle at Twin Rivers – AARP Amicus Brief |work=ccfj.net}}</ref>
<blockquote>"It is obvious from the complaints [to DCA] that that [home]owners did not realize the extent association rules could govern their lives."</blockquote>
<blockquote>"Curiously, with rare exceptions, when the State has notified boards of minimal association legal obligation to owners, they dispute compliance. In a disturbing number of instances, those owners with board positions use their influence to punish other owners with whom they disagree. The complete absence of even minimally required standards, training or even orientations for those sitting on boards and the lack of independent oversight is readily apparent in the way boards exercise control"</blockquote>
<blockquote>"Curiously, with rare exceptions, when the State has notified boards of minimal association legal obligation to owners, they dispute compliance. In a disturbing number of instances, those owners with board positions use their influence to punish other owners with whom they disagree. The complete absence of even minimally required standards, training or even orientations for those sitting on boards and the lack of independent oversight is readily apparent in the way boards exercise control"</blockquote>
<blockquote>Overwhelmingly ... the frustrations posed by the duplicative complainants or by the complainants’ misunderstandings are dwarfed by the pictures they reveal of the undemocratic life faced by owners in many associations. Letters routinely express a frustration and outrage easily explainable by the inability to secure the attention of boards or property managers, to acknowledge no less address their complaints. Perhaps most alarming is the revelation that boards, or board presidents desirous of acting contrary to law, their governing documents or to fundamental democratic principles, are unstoppable without extreme owner effort and often costly litigation.</blockquote>
<blockquote>Overwhelmingly ... the frustrations posed by the duplicative complainants or by the complainants' misunderstandings are dwarfed by the pictures they reveal of the undemocratic life faced by owners in many associations. Letters routinely express a frustration and outrage easily explainable by the inability to secure the attention of boards or property managers, to acknowledge no less address their complaints. Perhaps most alarming is the revelation that boards, or board presidents desirous of acting contrary to law, their governing documents or to fundamental democratic principles, are unstoppable without extreme owner effort and often costly litigation.</blockquote>


Certain states are pushing for more checks and balances in homeowners' associations. The North Carolina Planned Community Act <ref>{{cite web|title=Chapter 47F - North Carolina Planned Community Act|publisher=North Carolina Statutes|url=http://www.ncleg.net/EnactedLegislation/Statutes/HTML/ByChapter/Chapter_47F.html}}</ref>, for example, requires a due process hearing to be held before any homeowner may be fined for a covenant violation. It also limits the amount of the fine and sets other restrictions.
Certain states are pushing for more checks and balances in HOAs. The [[North Carolina Planned Community Act]],<ref>{{Cite web|title=Chapter 47F North Carolina Planned Community Act|publisher=North Carolina Statutes|url=http://www.ncleg.net/EnactedLegislation/Statutes/HTML/ByChapter/Chapter_47F.html}}</ref> for example, requires a due process hearing to be held before any homeowner may be fined for a covenant violation. It also limits the amount of the fine and sets other restrictions.


California law has strictly limited the prerogatives of boards by requiring hearings before fines can be levied and then reducing the size of such fines even if the owner-members do not appear. In California, any rule change made by the board is subject to a majority affirmation by the membership if only five percent of the membership demand a vote. This part of the civil code<ref>[http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/displaycode?section=civ&name=01001-02000&file=1363.810-1363.850 ''Davis Stirling Act''] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100203015808/http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/displaycode?section=civ& |date=2010-02-03 }}</ref> also ensures that any dissenting individual who seeks a director position must be fully represented to the membership and that all meetings be opened and agenda items publicized in advance. In states like Massachusetts, there are no laws to prohibit unilateral changes to the documents by the association board.
=== Double taxation ===
All homeowners pay property taxes. These taxes are used to maintain roads, street lighting, parks, etc. Planned unit development owners pay association assessments that are used to maintain the 'private' roads, street lighting and parks of their developments. Local governments have saved money and reduced the community wide tax burden by requiring developers build 'public improvements' such as parks, passing the cost of maintenance of the improvements to the common-interest owners.<ref name="California Real Property Journal 27">Katherine N. Rosenberry, "The Legislature Addresses Problems in the Law of Condominiums, Planned Development and Other Common Interest Projects," 3 ''California Real Property Journal'' p. 27 (Winter 1985).</ref> However, homeowners association assessments pay for private amenities which are not maintained by state or local governments.


== Double taxation ==
Some states (including Maryland, Missouri, New Jersey, and Texas), however, give citizens who are also residents of community associations specific tax breaks in recognition of the principle that they should not be double-taxed for services already provided to them.{{Fact|date=May 2007}}
Most homeowners are subject to property taxation, whether or not said property is located in a planned unit development governed by an HOA. Such taxes are used by local municipalities to maintain roads, street lighting, parks, etc. In addition to municipal property taxes, individuals who own private property located within planned unit developments are subject to association assessments that are used by the development to maintain the private roads, street lighting, landscaping, security, and amenities located within the planned unit development.{{sfn|Rosenberry|1985|p=27}}


A non-HOA property owner pays taxes to fund street repairs performed by the city. The HOA property owners pay these same taxes, and benefit from their use of public roads, etc. without the local government (i.e. taxpayers) having to pay for the HOA's private roads, etc. which the non-HOA property owner cannot use.
===Financial Risk for Homeowners===
The proliferation of planned unit developments has resulted in a cost savings to local governments in two ways. One, by requiring developers to build 'public improvements' such as parks, passing the cost of maintenance of the improvements to the common-interest owners; and two, by planned-unit developments being responsible for the cost of maintaining infrastructures that would normally be maintained by the municipality.{{sfn|Rosenberry|1985|p=27}}
In some [[U.S. state]]s, including [[California]] and [[Texas]], a homeowners association can [[foreclose]] a member's house without any judicial procedure in order to collect special assessments, fees and even a fine. Other states, like [[Florida]], require a [[judicial]] [[hearing (law)|hearing]]. Foreclosure without a judicial hearing can occur when a ''power of sale clause '' exists in a mortgage or deed of trust.<ref>{{cite web|title=Texas Foreclosure Law|publisher=StopForeclosure.com|url=http://stopforeclosure.com/Texas_Foreclosure_Law.htm|accessdate=2007-05-07}}</ref>


== Limits to powers ==
Homeowners association boards can also collect special assessments from its members in addition to set fees, sometimes without the homeowners' direct vote on the matter, though most states place restrictions on an association's ability to do so. Special assessments often require a homeowner vote if the amount exceeds a prescribed limit established in the Association's by-laws. In California, for example, a special assessment can be imposed by a Board, without a membership vote, only when the TOTAL assessment is 5% or less of the association's annual budget. Therefore in the case of a 25 unit association with a $100,000 annual operating budget, the Board could only impose a $5,000 assessment on the entire population ($5,000 divided by 25 units equal $200 per unit). A larger assessment would require a majority vote of the members. In some exceptional cases, particularly in matters of public health or safety, the amount of special assessments may be at the board's discretion. If, for example there is a ruptured sewer line, the Board could vote a substantial assessment immediately, arguing that the matter impacts public health and safety. In practice, however, most Boards prefer that owners have a chance to voice opinions and vote on assessments.
In June 2012, the [[Supreme Court of Virginia]] ruled in the case ''Shadowood Condominium Association et al. v. Fairfax County Redevelopment and Housing Authority'' that an HOA's power to fine owners for rule violations (including being in arrears) is limited to those expressly provided in the HOA's valid governing documents (e.g. the HOA's Bylaws).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blog.tarleyrobinson.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Shadowood.pdf|title= Shadowood Condominium Association et al., v. Fairfax County Redevelopment and Housing Authority | publisher = Virginia HOA and Business Law Blog}}</ref><ref name="Jackman">{{cite news |last1=Jackman |first1=Tom |title=Reston's Shadowood condominiums make new Va. case law, can't fine owners for rule violations |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-state-of-nova/post/restons-shadowood-condominiums-make-new-va-case-law-cant-impose-fees-on-rule-violators/2012/12/13/52fb582c-4554-11e2-9648-a2c323a991d6_blog.html |access-date=23 September 2024 |newspaper=Washington Post |date=29 June 2023}}</ref>


Prior to the [[Telecommunications Act of 1996]], HOAs could limit or prohibit installation of [[satellite dish]]es. Many communities still have these rules in their CC&Rs, but after October 1996, they are no longer enforceable. With a few exceptions, any homeowner may install a satellite dish of a size of one meter or smaller in diameter (larger dishes are protected in [[Alaska]]). While HOAs may encourage that dishes be placed as inconspicuously as possible, the dish must be allowed to be placed where it may receive a usable signal.<ref name="fcc_otard">{{cite web|url=http://www.fcc.gov/mb/facts/otard.html|title= Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Information Sheet | publisher = [[Federal Communications Commission]]}}</ref>
Increasingly, homeowner associations handle large amounts of money. Embezzlement from associations has occurred, as a result of dishonest board members or community managers. Losses have been in the millions of dollars.[http://www.ccfj.net/JK4arrests.html] Again, California's Davis-Stirling Act, which was designed to protect owners, requires that Boards carry appropriate liability insurance to indemnify the association from any wrong-doing. The large budgets and expertise required to run such groups are a part of the arguments behind mandating manager certification (through Community Association Institute, state real estate boards, or other agencies).


Many HOAs have restrictive covenants preventing a homeowner from installing an OTA (over-the-air) rooftop antenna. These restrictions are also no longer enforceable, except in some instances. For example: the antenna may be installed at any location unless it imposes upon common property. Also, the antenna must be of a design to receive local, not long-distance signals and must not extend any higher than twelve feet above the top roof-line of the home, unless an exception is granted by the HOA due to extenuating terrestrial interference.<ref name="fcc_otard" />
The AARP has recently voiced concern that homeowners associations pose a risk to the financial welfare of their members. They have proposed that a homeowners "Bill Of Rights" be adopted by all 50 states to protect seniors from rogue Homeowner Associations.<ref name = "CCFJ">[http://www.ccfj.net/HOAAARPbillart.htm AARP: Homeowner Bill of Rights]</ref>


In [[Florida]], state law prohibits [[restrictive covenant|covenants and deed restrictions]] from prohibiting "Florida-Friendly Landscaping,"<ref name="FloridaSenate">{{cite web |title=373.185 Local Florida-friendly landscaping ordinances. |url=https://www.flsenate.gov/Laws/Statutes/2019/373.185 |website=The Florida Senate |publisher=State of Florida |access-date=19 September 2024}}</ref> a type of [[xeriscaping]]. In spite of the law, at least one homeowner has faced harassment and threat of fines from an HOA for having insufficient grass after landscaping his yard to reduce water usage.<ref name="George">{{cite web |last1=George |first1=Justin |title=Where Saving Water Bends the Rules |url=http://www.sptimes.com/2004/03/25/Citrus/Where_saving_water_be.shtml |website=St. Petersburg Times |access-date=March 21, 2009 |date=March 25, 2004 |url-status=dead |archive-date=May 20, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090520033645/http://www.sptimes.com/2004/03/25/Citrus/Where_saving_water_be.shtml }}</ref> Similar legislation was introduced and passed by the legislature in [[Colorado]] but was vetoed by governor [[Bill Owens (Colorado politician)|Bill Owens]].<ref>Darst, Kevin (April 13, 2005). [http://www.coloradoan.com/news/coloradoanpublishing/Legislature2005/041305_landscape.html "Bill Embraces Landscaping Options"]. ''[[The Coloradoan]]''.</ref><ref>Bartels, Lynn (June 1, 2005). [https://web.archive.org/web/20110501204000/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-132902446.html "Water Bill Gets Caught in Wash Four Vetoes Expand List of Owens' Rejects to 28. (News)"]. ''[[Rocky Mountain News]]''.</ref> Residents in Colorado have continued to call for regulation to protect xeriscaping, citing HOAs that require the use of grasses that consume large quantities of water and threaten fines for those who do not comply with the covenants.<ref>Jen Brooks, Cary (September 8, 2007). [http://www.newsobserver.com/580/story/696395.html "Rigid Rules on Lawns"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090519043826/http://www.newsobserver.com/580/story/696395.html |date=2009-05-19 }} ''[[The News & Observer]]''.</ref>
==Constitutional Challenges==
Homeowners have challenged political speech restrictions in Associations that federal or state constitutional guarantees as rights, claiming that certain private associations are subject to the same constitutional restrictions as municipal governments. However, in general, courts have held that private actors may restrict individuals' exercise of their rights on private property. A recent decision in New Jersey held that private residential communities had the right to place reasonable limitations on political speech, and that in doing so, they were not acting as municipal governments.<ref name=TwinRivers>{{cite court|litigants=Committee for a Better Twin Rivers v. Twin Rivers Homeowners' Assoc.|reporter=N.J. Supreme Court|date=2007-07-26|url=http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/opinions/supreme/A-118%20-%20122-05%20Twin%20Rivers.pdf}}</ref>


== Alternative to CIDs ==
With few exceptions, courts have held private 'actors' are not subject to constitutional limitations -- that is, enforcers of private contracts are not subject to the same constitutional limitations as police officers or courts. In 2002 the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, in in ''Loren v. Sasser'', declined to extend ''Shelley'' beyond racial discrimination, and disallowed a challenge to an association's prohibition of "for sale" signs. In ''Loren,'' the court ruled that outside the racial covenant context, it would not view judicial enforcement of a private contract as state action, but as private action, and accordingly would disallow any First Amendment relief.<ref>{{cite court|litigants=Loren v. Sasser|reporter=11th Cir.|date=2002|url=http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&case=/data2/circs/11th/0211090opn.html&friend=nytimes/}}</ref>
An alternative to HIOs is the [[multiple-tenant income property]] (MTIP). HOAs and MTIPs have fundamentally different forms of governance. In a CID, dues are paid to a nonprofit association. In an MTIP, [[ground rent]]s are paid to a landowner, who decides how to spend it.{{sfn|MacCallum|2002|pp=373–374}}


In both cases, certain guidelines are set out by the covenant or the lease contract. In the latter scenario, the landowner has a stronger incentive to maximize the value of all the governed property in the long term (because they are the [[residual claimant]] of it all) and to keep the residents happy, since their income is dependent on their continued patronage. These factors are cited as arguments in favor of MTIPs.{{sfn|MacCallum|2002|pp=373–374}}
In the ''Twin Rivers'' case, a group of homeowners collectively called "The Committee for a Better Twin Rivers" sued the Association, for a mandatory [[injunction]] permitting homeowners to post political signs and strike down the political signage restrictions by the association as unconstitutional. The appeals court held the restrictions on political signs unconstitutional and void, but the appeals court was reversed by the New Jersey Supreme Court overturned the Appellate courts decision in 2007 and reinstated the decision of the Trial Court. The Court determined that even in light of New Jersey’s broad interpretation of its constitutional free speech provisions, the "nature, purposes, and primary use of Twin Rivers property is for private purposes and does not favor a finding that the Association’s rules and regulations violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights." Moreover, the Court found that "plaintiffs’ expressional activities are not unreasonably restricted" by the Association’s rules and regulations. Finally, the Court held that "the minor restrictions on plaintiffs’ expressional activities are not unreasonable or oppressive, and the Association is not acting as a municipality."


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Housing}}
* [[Association law]]
* [[Business improvement district]]
* [[Comparison of homeowner associations and civic associations]]
* [[Davis–Stirling Common Interest Development Act]]
* [[Gated community]]
* [[Gated community]]
* [[Housing society]]
* [[Housing society]]
* [[Business Improvement District]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
<references/>

===Works cited===
* {{cite book |last1=Barton |first1=Stephen E. |last2=Silverman |first2=Carol Janet |editor1-last=Barton |editor1-first=Stephen E. |editor2-last=Silverman |editor2-first=Carol Janet |chapter=Introduction |title=Common Interest Communities: Private Governments and the Public Interest |date=1994 |publisher=Institute of Governmental Studies Press, University of California |isbn=978-0-87772-359-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W9iGAAAAIAAJ&q=sproul|ref={{sfnref|Barton|Silverman a|1994}}}}
* {{cite book |last1=Barton |first1=Stephen E. |last2=Silverman |first2=Carol Janet |editor1-last=Barton |editor1-first=Stephen E. |editor2-last=Silverman |editor2-first=Carol Janet |chapter=Common Interest Communities: Private Government and the Public Interest Revisited |title=Common Interest Communities: Private Governments and the Public Interest |date=1994 |publisher=Institute of Governmental Studies Press, University of California |isbn=978-0-87772-359-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W9iGAAAAIAAJ&q=sproul|ref={{sfnref|Barton|Silverman b|1994}}}}
* {{cite book |last1=Boudreaux |first1=Donald J. |last2=Holcombe |first2=Randall G.|chapter=Contractural Governments in Theory and Practice |editor-last1=Beito |editor-first1=David T. |editor-last2=Gordon |editor-first2=Peter |editor-last3=Tabarrok |editor-first3=Alexander |title=The Voluntary City: Choice, Community, and Civil Society |date=2002 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-08837-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISBN0472088378}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Hanke |editor1-first=Byron R |editor2-last=Krasnowieki |editor2-first=Jan |editor3-last=Loring |editor3-first=William C. |editor4-last=Tweraser |editor4-first=Gene C. |editor5-last=Cornish |editor5-first=Mary Jo |title=The Homes Association Handbook: A Guide to the Development and Conservation of Residential Neighborhoods with Common Open Space and Facilities Privately Owned and Maintained by Property-owners Associations Founded on Legal Agreements Running with the Land |date=1970 |publisher=Urban Land Institute |location=Washington, DC |isbn=978-0-87420-050-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISBN0874200504}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Caves |editor1-first=Roger W. |title=Encyclopedia of the City |date=2005 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-0-415-25225-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xrD1iuM_2LgC}}
* {{cite book |last1=Davis |first1=Mike |title=City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles |date=17 September 2006 |publisher=Verso Books |isbn=978-1-78168-430-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DWvnDwAAQBAJ}}
* {{cite book |last1=Flood |first1=Joanne M. |title=Wiley GAAP 2020: Interpretation and Application of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles |date=5 February 2020 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=978-1-119-65262-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G_vEDwAAQBAJ}}
* {{cite book |last1=Holland |first1=Robert |title=Arroyo Seco Improvement Program ( 2019 Annual Report) |date=1 January 2020 |publisher=Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) |isbn=978-0-252-05222-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FrD7DwAAQBAJ}}
* {{cite book |last1=Hudson |first1=Lynn M. |title=West of Jim Crow: The Fight against California's Color Line |date=28 September 2020 |publisher=University of Illinois Press |isbn=978-0-252-05222-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FrD7DwAAQBAJ}}
* {{cite book |first=Spencer Heath |last=MacCallum|chapter=The Case for Land Lease versus Subdivision: Homeowners' Associations Reconsidered |editor-last1=Beito |editor-first1=David T. |editor-last2=Gordon |editor-first2=Peter |editor-last3=Tabarrok |editor-first3=Alexander |title=The Voluntary City: Choice, Community, and Civil Society |date=2002 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-08837-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISBN0472088378}}
* {{cite book |last1=McKenzie |first1=Evan |title=Privatopia: Homeowner Associations and the Rise of Residential Private Government |date=1 January 1994 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=978-0-300-06638-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oTtRG7jBB9kC}}
* {{cite book |last1=Mields |first1=Hugh |title=Federally Assisted New Communities: New Dimensions in Urban Development |date=1973 |publisher=Urban Land Institute |isbn=978-0-608-11924-3 |url=https://archive.org/details/federallyassiste0000miel/page/n3/mode/2up?view=theater}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Goodwin |first1=Kimberly R. |last2=La Roche |first2=Claire Reeves |last3=Waller |first3=Bennie D. |title=Restrictions versus amenities: the differential impact of homeowners' associations on property marketability |journal=Journal of Property Research |date=2 July 2020 |volume=37 |issue=3 |pages=238–253 |doi=10.1080/09599916.2020.1740765 |issn=0959-9916}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Plotkin |first1=Wendy |title="Hemmed in": The Struggle against Racial Restrictive Covenants and Deed Restrictions in Post-WWII Chicago |journal=Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society |date=2001 |volume=94 |issue=1 |pages=39–69 |jstor=40193534 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40193534 |issn=1522-1067}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Rosenberry |first1=Katherine N. |title=The Legislature Addresses Problems in the Law of Condominiums |journal=California Real Property Journal|date=Winter 1985 |volume=3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q-8tAQAAIAAJ&q=Condominiums |publisher=The Section}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sproul |first1=Curtis C. |editor1-last=Barton |editor1-first=Stephen E. |editor2-last=Silverman |editor2-first=Carol Janet |chapter=The Many Faces of Community Associations under California Law |title=Common Interest Communities: Private Governments and the Public Interest |date=1994 |publisher=Institute of Governmental Studies Press, University of California |isbn=978-0-87772-359-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W9iGAAAAIAAJ&q=sproul}}
* {{cite book |last1=Stabile |first1=Donald |title=Community Associations: The Emergence and Acceptance of a Quiet Innovation in Housing |date=30 June 2000 |publisher=Bloomsbury Academic |isbn=978-0-313-31571-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISBN031331571X}}
* {{cite book |first=Alexander |last=Tabarrok |chapter=Market Challenges and Government Failure: Lessons from Voluntary City |editor-last1=Beito |editor-first1=David T. |editor-last2=Gordon |editor-first2=Peter |editor-last3=Tabarrok |editor-first3=Alexander |title=The Voluntary City: Choice, Community, and Civil Society |date=2002 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-08837-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISBN0472088378}}
* {{cite book |last1=Weiss |first1=Marc A. |title=The Rise of the Community Builders: The American Real Estate Industry and Urban Land Planning |date=2002 |publisher=Beard Books |isbn=978-1-58798-152-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZXjddnZYyLYC}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* {{cite journal |last1=Fleischmann |first1=Julius |title=Collective Home Ownership: A New Activity for Savings and Loan Associations |journal=The Journal of Land & Public Utility Economics |date=1937 |volume=13 |issue=4 |pages=411–413 |doi=10.2307/3158226 |jstor=3158226 |url=https://doi.org/10.2307/3158226 |issn=1548-9000}}
* David T. Beito, Peter Gordon, and Alexander Tabarrok, eds., ''The Voluntary City: Choice, Community, and Civil Society,'' University of Michigan Press, ISBN 0-472-08837-8/
* {{cite book |last1=Nelson |first1=Robert Henry |title=Private Neighborhoods and the Transformation of Local Government |date=2005 |publisher=The Urban Insitute |isbn=978-0-87766-751-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ISBN0877667519}}
* Ronald M. Sandgrund and Joseph F. Smith, "When the Developer Controls the Homeowner Association Board: The Benevolent Dictator?" ''The Colorado Lawyer'', January 2002, p. 91.
* Ronald M. Sandgrund and Joseph F. Smith, [https://www-burgsimpson-com.webpkgcache.com/doc/-/s/www.burgsimpson.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/WHEN-THE-DEVELOPER-CONTROLS-THE-HOMEOWNER-ASSOCIATION-BOARD-THE-BENEVOLENT-DICTATOR-1.rtf "When the Developer Controls the Homeowner Association Board: The Benevolent Dictator?"] ''The Colorado Lawyer'', January 2002, p.&nbsp;91.
* Robert H. Nelson, ''Private Neighborhoods: And the Transformation of Local Government'' Urban Institute Press (Washington, DC): 2005. ISBN 0877667519/ ISBN 978-0877667513/
* {{cite journal |last1=Sussman |first1=Marvin B. |title=The Role of Neighborhood Associations in Private Housing for Racial Minorities |journal=Journal of Social Issues |date=October 1957 |volume=13 |issue=4 |pages=31–37 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-4560.1957.tb01387.x |issn=0022-4537}}

==External links==
* [http://www.regenesis.net/WhatIs.htm What is an HOA?]
* [http://www.regenesis.net/community_matters.pdf HOA Information to Know Before you Buy]

==Original references==
<!--As the article was based on an article copyrighted under the [[Wikipedia:Text of the GNU Free Documentation License|GFDL]] the link to the original article may not be removed. -->
The [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Homeowners_association&diff=prev&oldid=2819123 original article] was based on an article first published at [http://www.internet-encyclopedia.org/wiki.phtml?title=Homeowners_association Internet-encyclopedia.org].


{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Real estate]]
[[Category:Types of organization]]
[[Category:Housing]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Homeowner Association}}
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[[Category:Condominium organizations]]
[[Category:Housing organizations in the United States]]
[[Category:Neighborhood associations]]

Latest revision as of 02:25, 21 December 2024

A homeowner association (or homeowners' association [HOA], sometimes referred to as a property owners' association [POA], common interest development [CID], or homeowner community) is a private, legally-incorporated organization that governs a housing community, collects dues, and sets rules for its residents. HOAs are found principally in the United States, Canada, the Philippines, as well as some other countries. They are formed either ipso jure (such as in a building with multiple owner-occupancies), or by a real estate developer for the purpose of marketing, managing, and selling homes and lots in a residential subdivision.[1]The developer may transfer control of an HOA after selling a predetermined number of lots.[1]

In most cases, a person who wants to buy a residence within the area of a HOA must become a member, and therefore must obey the governing documents including articles of incorporation, CC&Rs (covenants, conditions and restrictions) and by-laws—which may limit the owner's choices, for example, exterior design modifications (e.g., paint colors). HOAs are especially active in urban planning, zoning, and land use—decisions that affect the pace of growth, the quality of life, the level of taxation, and the value of land in the community.[2]: page? 


Most HOAs are incorporated, and are subject to state statutes that govern non-profit corporations and HOAs. State oversight of HOAs varies from state to state; some states, such as Florida and California,[3][4] have a large body of HOA law. Other states, such as Massachusetts,[5] have limited HOA law. HOAs are commonly found in residential developments since the passage of the Davis–Stirling Common Interest Development Act in 1985. In Canada, HOAs are subject to stringent provincial regulations and are thus quite rare compared to the United States. However in recent decades, HOAs have infrequently been created in new subdivision developments in Alberta and Ontario.

The fastest-growing form of housing in the United States today are common-interest developments (CIDs), a category that includes planned unit developments of single-family homes, condominiums, and housing cooperatives.[relevant?][6] Since 1964, HOAs have become increasingly common in the United States. The Community Associations Institute trade association estimated that in 2010, HOAs governed 24.8 million American homes and 62 million residents.[7] Throughout the rest of the world, HOAs—though they do exist in some neighborhoods—are uncommon.

History

[edit]

For centuries, communities have, informally or formally, combined resources to maintain common areas, like wells or roads. However, modern HOAs established covenants and deed restrictions to dictate who could buy a home in a development. These were the children of deed restrictions in a new kind of planned subdivision, and they established the national legal precedent for zoning districts exclusively for upscale, single-family residences. Private restrictions normally included provisions such as minimum required costs for home construction and the exclusion of all non-Caucasians, and sometimes non-Christians as well, from occupancy, except domestic servants.[8][9]

In the early postwar period after World War II, many were defined to exclude African Americans and, in some cases, Jews, with Asians also excluded on the West Coast.[10] Some of the first HOAs were formed early in the 20th century in Los Angeles County.[11][page needed] The Arroyo Seco Improvement Association in Pasadena was founded around 1905 by Henry Huntington, a transit magnate who developed several whites-only housing divisions.[11][page needed] The Los Feliz Improvement Association (still in operation today) in Los Angeles was founded in 1916.[citation needed] A racial covenant in a Seattle, Washington, neighborhood stated, "No part of said property hereby conveyed shall ever be used or occupied by any Hebrew or by any person of the Ethiopian, Malay or any Asiatic race."[12] In 1948, the United States Supreme Court ruled such covenants unenforceable in Shelley v. Kraemer. However, private contracts effectively kept them alive until the Fair Housing Act of 1968 prohibited such discrimination.[13] However, by requiring approval of tenants and new owners, HOAs still have the potential to permit less formalized discrimination.

In 1963, the FHA had approved federal home mortgage insurance exclusively for condominiums or for homes in subdivisions that had a qualifying HOA. The rationale was that developers wanted to get around density laws. The effect, however, was to divert investment from multi-family housing and home construction or renovation in the inner cities. This accelerated the middle-class exodus to the suburbs and into common-interest housing. The rapid expansion of federally subsidized highways under federal programs made access to new areas easy.

According to Donald R. Stabile, the explosion in the number of CIDs (many of which were based on homeowners' associations) was strongly influenced by a 1964 publication (TB 50) by the Urban Land Institute.[14][page needed] This technical bulletin was funded by the National Association of Home Builders and by certain federal agencies: the FHA, the United States Public Health Service, the Office of Civil Defense, the Veterans Administration, and the Urban Renewal Administration.[15]

In order to do this while still retaining a suburban look, they clustered homes around green open areas maintained by associations. These associations provided services that formerly had been provided by municipal agencies funded by property taxes. Residents of such development also had to pay their local taxes. Accordingly, local governments began promoting subdivision development as a means of improving their cash flow.[16]

In an effort to control water pollution, the U.S. Clean Water Act of 1977 required that all new real estate developments had to detain storm water so that flow to adjoining properties was not greater than the pre-development runoff. As a result, nearly all residential developments had to construct detention or retention areas to hold excess storm water until it could be released at the pre-development flow level. Since these detention areas serve multiple residences, they are almost always designated as "common" areas. This requirement was a reason for developers to establish an HOA. Although these areas can be placed on an individual homeowner's lot, eliminating the need for an association, some U.S. municipalities now require these areas to be part of a common area to ensure an entity, rather than an individual or the municipality itself, has maintenance responsibility.[citation needed] Real estate developers have frequently established HOAs to maintain such common areas. Having established the HOA, the developers have expanded their scope, giving them authority to regulate changes to residences, landscaping and maintenance requirements, color of houses, etc., a variety of other requirements and amenities that the developers believe will make their project more desirable to the market.[vague][citation needed]

Industry

[edit]

The Community Associations Institute (CAI) is a trade association of individuals and businesses that sell supplies or services to HOAs, and is dominated by lawyers and HOA managers.[17][page needed] The CAI does not represent HOAs. It lobbies the legislatures of states that have HOAs in order to promote legislation beneficial to its interests.[18][19][20]

Operation

[edit]

Although in some cases membership in an HOA may be voluntary for a property owner, in the majority of cases membership in an HOA is mandatory. Once an owner purchases property within the subdivision, that owner becomes a mandatory member of the HOA, and must pay assessments to, and abide by the rules of, the HOA.

In return, the owner/member is permitted to participate in the HOA's governance and use the amenities offered by the HOA, provided that they are current on assessments (or on a payment plan to become current). Once an owner sells or otherwise transfers interest in all the property owned within the HOA, the owner ceases to be a member of the HOA and loses all rights previously held.

Governance

[edit]

Usually HOAs are structured as private corporations or private unincorporated associations (commonly as non-profit ones). HOAs are governed by federal and state statutes applicable to corporations (or unincorporated associations if so structured), as well as the HOA's own "governing documents".[21]

The HOA's governing documents generally "run with the land", which means that all current and future owners of property within the HOA will be bound by them as a condition of property ownership. They usually include:

  • The covenants, conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs) of the subdivision. These are likely the most important documents affecting the subdivision and are usually created when the subdivision is initially formed, and as such are often recorded in the official property records of the county or other jurisdiction where the subdivision is located. Commonly the CC&Rs specify what types of structures can be placed on a lot (e.g. an upscale community may prohibit mobile homes or travel trailers and require minimum sizes on dwellings, along with offsets from the property line where building is prohibited) and other property restrictions (e.g. no animals except for traditional household pets, no operation of commercial business).
  • The HOA's Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws.
  • In some cases the documents may include board-enacted rules as authorized (expressly or implicitly) by the CC&Rs.

Generally CC&Rs are enforceable as legal documents. However, there are instances where a CC&R is rendered illegal by later enacted state or federal law and therefore is no longer enforceable. For example, a developer-drafted covenant giving the developer sole rights to amend the CC&Rs was declared unenforceable as a matter of public policy in at least one state, where the developer attempted to amend years after he had sold all the property. That state's legislature later codified that public policy.[22] Other examples include CC&Rs which prohibited sales of property to certain racial groups; the Fair Housing Act rendered all of these also to be unconstitutional and unenforceable.

Board of directors

[edit]

The HOA will be governed by a board of directors.

Initially, the board is composed of developer-appointed members, in order to maintain the character of the community that the developer has for it. As the percentage of ownership shifts from the developer toward owners, the corresponding percentage changes from developer-appointed members to homeowners elected at an annual meeting, and ultimately the board will consist solely of homeowner-elected members.

Usually, the board (or parts of it) will be elected at an annual meeting of the homeowners, as specified in the Bylaws. In order to avoid an owner of multiple lots (who likely own the lots for resale or rental property) controlling the HOA's operation (to the detriment of those owners who only own a single lot or two contiguous lots as a current or future residence or vacation home), the Bylaws may limit all owners (regardless of the number of lots owned) to one or two votes per owner.

Depending on the state, board meetings may be required to be open to the public, except in instances where a board may enter into an "executive session" for discussion on confidential matters (e.g. discussions with its attorney on an upcoming lawsuit).

The board of directors makes decisions regarding the HOA, including management of the HOA's finances, protecting the HOA's real and intangible assets (generally the amenities provided which were the basis for inducing people to purchase lots), and enforcing the governing documents.[23] Boards of directors have a fiduciary duty to the property owners; violation of that duty may result in liability for individual directors, and as such the HOA will often adopt an ethics code for the board members to ensure they act ethically and in accordance with their responsibilities.[23] To gain a clear understanding of the responsibilities of the HOA board, community members need to read their association's CC&Rs, Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws, and other rules.[24]

Association management

[edit]

Many HOAs (especially larger ones with more upscale amenities) hire management companies to handle the governing duties of the association.

Management services are typically divided into three categories: financial only, full management, and on-site management. Financial services typically cover administration of bank accounts, bookkeeping, assessment collection, and the HOAs budget. Full management typically includes the financial services plus help with board meetings (keeping minutes, agendas, etc.), board elections, and maintenance duties (obtaining contractor bids, etc.). On-site management typically includes all of the full management services plus direct assistance to homeowners with an assigned manager to the HOA.

Education requirements for managers varies from state to state, with some requiring certification under all circumstances and others having a more lenient approach. For instance, while California does not require HOA managers to be certified, it does require that managers meet certain educational requirements to claim certification.[25]

Powers

[edit]

Through its board an HOA will provide some level of amenities (though differing greatly between HOAs), regulate activities within a development, levy assessments, and may (if authorized by CC&Rs or a state legislature) impose fines for noncompliance.

Depending on the governing documents, HOA boards may create committees, such as an "architectural control committee" (this is a very common one, and frequently this committee has the ultimate authority to approve or deny a building request), a pool committee, a neighborhood watch committee, etc.

Depending on the governing documents or state law, the HOA may have the authority to place liens on a property (for non-payment of assessments and/or noncompliance with CC&Rs, an example would be the costs to remove a non compliant structure such as a mobile home on a lot restricted to "site built" housing) and to, ultimately, foreclose on it.

Homeowners have the ability to defend against such actions, and are usually entitled to sue HOAs for contractual or statutory violations, or for a legal determination as to the enforceability of a provision in the governing documents. However, because HOAs are private associations, they are not considered "state actors" subject to constitutional constraints,[26] and therefore homeowners cannot sue for civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. 1983.

The major power of the HOA is the ability to compel property owners to pay a share of common expenses for the overall maintenance of the HOA and the amenities, usually proportionate to the ownership interests (either by unit or based on square footage). These expenses generally arise from the operation and maintenance of common property, which vary dramatically depending on the type of association. An HOA may have, in addition to a regular assessment, a "special" assessment for unexpected expenses (such as for road maintenance).

The assessment may be paid monthly, quarterly, or annually; generally the more amenities provided the more frequent the assessment must be paid. Some associations operate little or no common property, and the expenses relate solely to enforcement of use restrictions or assumed services. Others are effectively private towns, with elaborate amenities including private roads, street lights, services, utilities, commonly owned buildings, pools, and even schools. Assessments paid to HOAs in the United States amount to billions of dollars a year, but are not classed as property taxes.[27]

When determining what the assessment should be, it is important to consider what funds are required. There should always be a minimum of two funds: an operating fund and a reserve fund. The operating fund is used to pay for the operating expenses of the association. A reserve fund is used to pay for the infrequent and expensive common area assets maintenance, repair and replacement costs. The reserve fund is crucial for reducing the chances of a special assessment (mentioned in the risks below). Obtaining a reserve study is recommended to help determine and set the reserve contribution rate which is included in the regular monthly assessment.

Effects

[edit]

According to a 2019 study in the Journal of Labor Economics, "houses in HOAs have prices that are on average at least 4%, or $13,500, greater than observably similar houses outside of HOAs. The HOA premium correlates with the stringency of local land use regulation, local government spending on public goods, and measures of social attitudes toward race."[28] The study also found that people in HOA neighborhoods "are on average more affluent and racially segregated than those living in other nearby neighborhoods."[28]

For homeowners

[edit]

The perception of the benefits that an HOA provides to homeowners varies depending on the specific regulations and practices of the HOA.[29] These benefits may include amenities (eg. a pool, tennis courts, clubhouse, and open areas).[29] Individuals may also benefit more or less depending on their political standing in the association and the degree to which the community's decisions match their preferences. In the 1994 court case Nahrstedt v. Lakeside Village Condominium Assn., the California Supreme Court noted:

"...Owners associations 'can be a powerful force for good or for ill' in their members' lives. Therefore, anyone who buys a unit in a common interest development with knowledge of its owners association's discretionary power accepts 'the risk that the power may be used in a way that benefits the commonality but harms the individual.'"[30]

Benefits to homeowners may include maintenance and management services, provision of recreational amenities such as pools and parks, insurance coverage, enforcement of community appearance standards which may lead to higher property values, and the opportunity for members to plan development in accordance with community values.[31][unreliable source?]

Disadvantages to homeowners may include the financial burden of association fees, punitive fines, and costs of maintaining appearance standards; restrictions on property use and personal autonomy; and the potential for mismanagement by the board, including the possibility of arbitrary or heavy-handed enforcement of rules.[32][unreliable source?]

For the municipality

[edit]

Many municipalities have welcomed HOAs in the belief that they may reduce operational costs for the local government. Since the homeowners sometimes pay for roads, parks, and other services within the development, the local government may believe it can gain revenue from property taxes from owners in a development that costs the municipality little or nothing.[33]

A 2009 study of California HOAs suggested that this assumption was partially true, but that the overall effect of HOAs on municipalities was mixed. While HOAs did offset the costs of city governments to a small degree, they also reduced overall tax revenues because their members, insulated from the larger community, tended to vote down taxes that the city required to fund services. This led to an overall decrease in government expenditures that disproportionately affected those citizens who did not reside in an HOA.

As the study noted,

"...critics of private governments claim that HOAs erode support for public institutions. Those who join can bypass the public system: homeowners who fear crime do not have to vote for tax dollars to attack the root of the problem; they can build a gate to keep the criminals out. Opponents maintain that the erosion of public support, reflected at the ballot box, leads to further deterioration of municipal services and reductions in local revenues. Nonmembers experience a reduction in public service levels and may be worse off. At the extreme, HOAs may contribute to sentiments of secession and withdrawal from the public sector."[34]

For real estate developers

[edit]

Real estate developers establish HOAs in the belief that they can contribute to the developer's ability to build and sell units profitably. Providing common amenities may enable developers to build at a higher density, if the local government has encouraged such results. In addition, by relieving municipalities of the costs of road and utility maintenance, developers may obtain more favorable terms.[33] Ordinarily, the developer retains some control over the HOA until a specified number of units are sold, and the covenants, conditions, and restrictions of the HOA are put in place to further this goal.[35]

The potential disadvantage to a developer is that they may be exposed to liability to the HOA for poor construction, misleading marketing, or other problems. In these cases, the HOA may sue the developer.[36]

Regulations

[edit]

In The Voluntary City, published by the libertarian Independent Institute, Donald J. Boudreaux and Randall G. Holcombe note that the association's creator (e.g. a developer) has an incentive to set up a government structured in such a way as to maximize profits and thus increase the selling price of the property.[1] If a certain decision would increase the selling price of certain parcels and decrease the selling price of others, the developer will choose the option that yields his project the highest net income. This may result in sub-optimal outcomes for the homeowners.

Criticisms

[edit]

Voting

[edit]

HOAs established a new community as a municipal corporation.[37] Voting in an HOA is based on property ownership,[38] By the 1970s, only property owners were eligible to vote, while renters are prohibited from directly voting for the unit.[37] They could, however, deal directly with their landlords under their lease contract, since that is the party who has responsibility to them.[citation needed] In the 1973 book Federally Assisted Communities: New Dimensions in Urban Development, author Hugh Mields, Jr. raised questions about the constitutionality of having an association that had the authority of a municipal government, despite being private in nature.[37]

Additionally, voting representation is equal to the proportion of ownership, not to the number of people.[39] The majority of property owners may be absentee landlords, whose values or incentives may not be aligned with the tenants'. However, some HOAs limit owners of multiple properties to one or two votes regardless of the number of lots owned, so absentee owners do not end up controlling the HOA to the detriment of residents who only own a single lot or two contiguous lots as a current or future residence or vacation home.[citation needed]

In some HOAs, the developer may have multiple votes for each lot it retains, but the homeowners are limited to only one vote per lot owned. This has been justified on the grounds that it allows residents to avoid decision costs until major questions about the development process already have been answered and that as the residual claimant, the developer has the incentive to maximize the value of the property.[40]

Restrictions

[edit]

HOAs have been criticized for having excessively restrictive rules and regulations on how homeowners may conduct themselves and use their property.[41][42]

Some of the restrictions commonly put into place by HOAs are limiting the length of grass, number of cars on a property, what animals you can have on your property, the maximum volume for playing music at certain times of day, what signs you can display on your property, and what plants you can plant.[43][44]

Homeowners have challenged political speech restrictions in associations that federal or state constitutional guarantees as rights, claiming that certain private associations are de facto municipal governments and should therefore be subject to the same legal restrictions.[citation needed]

Several court decisions have held that private actors may restrict individuals' exercise of their rights on private property.[citation needed] A 2007 decision in New Jersey held that private residential communities had the right to place reasonable limitations on political speech, and that in doing so, they were not acting as municipal governments.[45] With few exceptions, courts have rejected claims that private actors are subject to constitutional limitations in a manner comparable to courts and police.

In 2002, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, in Loren v. Sasser, declined to extend Shelley beyond racial discrimination and disallowed a challenge to an association's prohibition of "for sale" signs. In Loren, the court ruled that outside the racial covenant context, it would not view judicial enforcement of a private contract as state action, but as private action, and accordingly would disallow any First Amendment relief.[46]

In the Twin Rivers case, a group of homeowners collectively called The Committee for a Better Twin Rivers sued the association, for a mandatory injunction permitting homeowners to post political signs and strike down the political signage restrictions by the association as unconstitutional. The appeals court held the restrictions on political signs unconstitutional and void, but the appeals court was reversed when the New Jersey Supreme Court overturned the appellate court's decision in 2007 and reinstated the decision of the trial court.[47]

Financial risk for homeowners

[edit]

In some U.S. states (such as Texas) an HOA can foreclose a member's house without any judicial procedure in order to collect special assessments, fees and fines, or otherwise place an enforceable lien on the property which, upon the property's sale, allows the HOA to collect otherwise unpaid assessments.[48] In 2008, a soldier, who was serving in Iraq, was informed that his fully paid-for, $300,000 home in Frisco, Texas had been foreclosed on and sold for $3,500 to recover unpaid HOA dues of $800.[48] In 2010, the case was settled and the soldier regained ownership of the home. Federal laws protecting military personnel from civil action may have been his defense;[according to whom?] however, a gag order prevents details from being known.

Other states, like Florida, require a judicial hearing. Foreclosure without a judicial hearing can occur when a "power of sale clause" exists in a mortgage or deed of trust.[49]

A self-published report by a professor at the University of Washington disputes the claim that HOAs protect property values, stating, based on a survey of Harris County, Texas (which had an unusual legal regime regarding foreclosures): "Although HOA foreclosures are ostensibly motivated by efforts to improve property values, neither foreclosure activity nor HOAs appear linked with the above average home price growth."[50]

HOA boards can also collect special assessments from its members in addition to set fees, sometimes without the homeowners' direct vote on the matter, though most states place restrictions on an association's ability to do so. Special assessments often require a homeowner-vote if the amount exceeds a prescribed limit established in the association's by-laws.

In California, for example, a special assessment can be imposed by a board, without a membership vote, only when the total assessment is five percent or less of the association's annual budget. Therefore, in the case of a 25-unit association with a $100,000 annual operating budget, the board could only impose a $5,000 assessment on the entire population ($5,000 divided by 25 units equals $200 per unit). A larger assessment would require a majority vote of the members.

In some exceptional cases, particularly in matters of public health or safety, the amount of special assessments may be at the board's discretion. If, for example there is a ruptured sewer line, the Board could vote a substantial assessment immediately, arguing that the matter affects public health and safety. In practice, however, most boards prefer that owners have a chance to voice opinions and vote on assessments.

Increasingly, HOAs handle large amounts of money. Embezzlement from associations has occurred occasionally, as a result of dishonest board members or community managers, with losses up to millions of dollars.[51][52] Again, California's Davis–Stirling Act, which was designed to protect owners, requires that boards carry appropriate liability insurance to indemnify the association from any wrongdoing. The large budgets and expertise required to run such groups are a part of the arguments behind mandating manager certification (through Community Association Institute, state real estate boards, or other agencies).

In 2006, the AARP voiced concern that HOAs pose a risk to the financial welfare of their members. They have proposed that a homeowners "Bill of Rights" be adopted by all 50 states to protect seniors from rogue HOAs.[53]

However, many HOAs introduce regular accounting audits to mitigate homeowners' financial risks. In the framework of such an inspection, an independent third-party CPA (Certified Public Accountant)[54] conducts a comprehensive analysis of an association's financial records and accounting procedures, to determine whether they are accurate, legitimate and compliant with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)[55][page needed] or other reporting frameworks.[56] Upon completion of the planned auditing procedures, a CPA issues an official report that states an opinion regarding the organization's financial health.

In the US, auditing requirements vary from state to state, as well as from HOA to HOA. Some associations are obliged to audit their financial statements on an annual basis or once every few years. For others, it is enough to conduct a review, a compilation or an agreed-upon procedures engagement. The HOA's budget, size and terms prescribed in covenants and bylaws[57] often act as decisive factors when determining whether an audit is obligatory for a particular board. An audit at the end of each fiscal year is deemed to be a good rule of thumb. However, the need for an unscheduled examination can arise in cases of major changes, like a transition to a new board or management company, implementation of a large-scale improvement project, receipt of a significant sum of money under unusual circumstances, suspicion of fraud or embezzlement, or other misconduct.[citation needed]

Auditing process

[edit]

The auditing process for HOAs can be divided into four stages:[58]

Planning
An HOA board makes an initial inquiry to an accounting specialist about the need to conduct an audit. A consultation is held to negotiate the objectives, time frame, report deadlines, and cost of the examination.
Risk assessment
A CPA determines what obstacles can float up when testing the association's accounting procedures and preparing financial statements, gauges the significance of potential problems, and finds ways to overcome them. To collect the necessary information and evaluate an HOA's financial performance, the auditor interviews board members at their office, monitors the main day-to-day operations, tests their security, and performs analytical procedures. The auditee must provide the CPA with the most recent audit report, copies of annual tax returns, current and ensuing year's budget, board minutes, covenants, bylaws, and other internal documents. The CPA tests internal controls for incoming and outgoing transactions, the maintenance of a reserve fund, the appropriateness of financing of major contracts and improvement projects, the proper disposal of funds acquired in legal cases and under other extraordinary circumstances, and the availability and accuracy of journal entries of receipts and disbursements. These issues are given the most attention, since they have the strongest influence on an HOA's financial health. Also, an auditor reaches out to third-party organizations to verify the HOA's transactions on both sides:
  • Account confirmations are requested from banks to check whether the association's operational and reserve accounts contain the claimed sums.
  • The same is done for loans. A CPA verifies loan balances, interest rates, repayment terms and other important details.
  • The HOA's attorney is contacted to check whether the association is involved in any legal cases.
Fieldwork
The auditor conducts a profound analysis to establish relationships between the association's income statement and balance sheet. The previous year's results are compared with the current results. Since it is impossible to cover all of an HOA's transactions in an audit, a CPA selects a sample of transactions and scrutinizes details. For example, they can use a sample of outgoing transactions to verify invoices and make sure all the funds were spent as intended and properly documented. Also, an auditor can verify bank statements, reconciliations, payroll records, canceled checks, loan statements, approved contracts and leases, proof of real estate and equipment ownership, records on capital assets, supplies and inventories. If the HOA's actual financial performance deviates from the planned indicators, the auditee must provide evidence that fluctuations are not due to the board's negligence or misconduct.[59]
Reporting
An audit report states the CPA's opinion on the HOA's financial health and its compliance with accounting documents and with generally accepted standards. There are three types of audit reports:
  • Unqualified opinion: in all respects, the HOA's financial statements are accurate, legitimate, reflect the actual activity of the association and comply with GAAP.
  • Qualified opinion: minor misrepresentations or deviations from GAAP were found in the HOA's accounting papers. This does not significantly influence its overall financial performance, and mistakes are easy to correct.
  • Adverse opinion: accounting violations that point to fraud or the board's blatant negligence were detected.
One more option is a disclaimer of opinion, a document compiled when a CPA is unable to issue an audit report due to conflicting interests with an HOA, non-provision of the requested financial documents, or significant uncertainty in the association's accounting operations.
Improvement recommendations in an audit report can be used to fix the board's past mistakes, establish internal discipline, and adopt more effective accounting practices. Also, audited financial statements serve as evidence of the board's good faith and sound strategies when reporting to unit owners, investors, potential real estate buyers, tenants and other interested parties.
Repeat audits
The need for a repeat audit may arise if the board has received an adverse opinion and wants to restore its good name in the eyes of shareholders and investors. After issues revealed in the initial audit are fixed, a repeat examination is conducted according to the standard scenario.

Other

[edit]

Some scholars and officials of the AARP have charged that, in a variety of ways, HOAs suppress the rights of their residents.[60] Due to court decisions, describing HOAs as a kind of private entity, HOA boards of directors are not bound by constitutional restrictions on governments—although they are de facto a level of government.[61]

Corporation and HOA laws provide a limited role for HOA homeowners.[62] Unless either statutory law or the corporation's governing documents reserve a particular issue or action for approval by the members, corporation laws provide that the activities and affairs of a corporation shall be conducted and "all corporate powers shall be exercised" by or under the direction of the board of directors. Many boards are operated outside of their state's non-profit corporation laws.[citation needed] Knowledge of corporate laws and state statutes is essential to properly managing an HOA.[citation needed]

Once notified by a homeowner, attorney or other government official that an HOA organization is not meeting the state's statutes, the board has the responsibility to correct their governance. Certain states, such as Texas, permit misdemeanor charges to be filed against a non-compliant board and permit lawsuits to be filed against the board and the HOA. In some instances, a known failure to rectify the board's governance to meet the state's statutes can open the board's members to personal liability as most insurance policies indemnifying the board members against legal action do not cover willful misconduct.[citation needed]

Board misconduct

[edit]

The New Jersey Department of Community Affairs reported these observations of association board conduct:[63]

"It is obvious from the complaints [to DCA] that that [home]owners did not realize the extent association rules could govern their lives."

"Curiously, with rare exceptions, when the State has notified boards of minimal association legal obligation to owners, they dispute compliance. In a disturbing number of instances, those owners with board positions use their influence to punish other owners with whom they disagree. The complete absence of even minimally required standards, training or even orientations for those sitting on boards and the lack of independent oversight is readily apparent in the way boards exercise control"

Overwhelmingly ... the frustrations posed by the duplicative complainants or by the complainants' misunderstandings are dwarfed by the pictures they reveal of the undemocratic life faced by owners in many associations. Letters routinely express a frustration and outrage easily explainable by the inability to secure the attention of boards or property managers, to acknowledge no less address their complaints. Perhaps most alarming is the revelation that boards, or board presidents desirous of acting contrary to law, their governing documents or to fundamental democratic principles, are unstoppable without extreme owner effort and often costly litigation.

Certain states are pushing for more checks and balances in HOAs. The North Carolina Planned Community Act,[64] for example, requires a due process hearing to be held before any homeowner may be fined for a covenant violation. It also limits the amount of the fine and sets other restrictions.

California law has strictly limited the prerogatives of boards by requiring hearings before fines can be levied and then reducing the size of such fines even if the owner-members do not appear. In California, any rule change made by the board is subject to a majority affirmation by the membership if only five percent of the membership demand a vote. This part of the civil code[65] also ensures that any dissenting individual who seeks a director position must be fully represented to the membership and that all meetings be opened and agenda items publicized in advance. In states like Massachusetts, there are no laws to prohibit unilateral changes to the documents by the association board.

Double taxation

[edit]

Most homeowners are subject to property taxation, whether or not said property is located in a planned unit development governed by an HOA. Such taxes are used by local municipalities to maintain roads, street lighting, parks, etc. In addition to municipal property taxes, individuals who own private property located within planned unit developments are subject to association assessments that are used by the development to maintain the private roads, street lighting, landscaping, security, and amenities located within the planned unit development.[66]

A non-HOA property owner pays taxes to fund street repairs performed by the city. The HOA property owners pay these same taxes, and benefit from their use of public roads, etc. without the local government (i.e. taxpayers) having to pay for the HOA's private roads, etc. which the non-HOA property owner cannot use. The proliferation of planned unit developments has resulted in a cost savings to local governments in two ways. One, by requiring developers to build 'public improvements' such as parks, passing the cost of maintenance of the improvements to the common-interest owners; and two, by planned-unit developments being responsible for the cost of maintaining infrastructures that would normally be maintained by the municipality.[66]

Limits to powers

[edit]

In June 2012, the Supreme Court of Virginia ruled in the case Shadowood Condominium Association et al. v. Fairfax County Redevelopment and Housing Authority that an HOA's power to fine owners for rule violations (including being in arrears) is limited to those expressly provided in the HOA's valid governing documents (e.g. the HOA's Bylaws).[67][68]

Prior to the Telecommunications Act of 1996, HOAs could limit or prohibit installation of satellite dishes. Many communities still have these rules in their CC&Rs, but after October 1996, they are no longer enforceable. With a few exceptions, any homeowner may install a satellite dish of a size of one meter or smaller in diameter (larger dishes are protected in Alaska). While HOAs may encourage that dishes be placed as inconspicuously as possible, the dish must be allowed to be placed where it may receive a usable signal.[69]

Many HOAs have restrictive covenants preventing a homeowner from installing an OTA (over-the-air) rooftop antenna. These restrictions are also no longer enforceable, except in some instances. For example: the antenna may be installed at any location unless it imposes upon common property. Also, the antenna must be of a design to receive local, not long-distance signals and must not extend any higher than twelve feet above the top roof-line of the home, unless an exception is granted by the HOA due to extenuating terrestrial interference.[69]

In Florida, state law prohibits covenants and deed restrictions from prohibiting "Florida-Friendly Landscaping,"[70] a type of xeriscaping. In spite of the law, at least one homeowner has faced harassment and threat of fines from an HOA for having insufficient grass after landscaping his yard to reduce water usage.[71] Similar legislation was introduced and passed by the legislature in Colorado but was vetoed by governor Bill Owens.[72][73] Residents in Colorado have continued to call for regulation to protect xeriscaping, citing HOAs that require the use of grasses that consume large quantities of water and threaten fines for those who do not comply with the covenants.[74]

Alternative to CIDs

[edit]

An alternative to HIOs is the multiple-tenant income property (MTIP). HOAs and MTIPs have fundamentally different forms of governance. In a CID, dues are paid to a nonprofit association. In an MTIP, ground rents are paid to a landowner, who decides how to spend it.[16]

In both cases, certain guidelines are set out by the covenant or the lease contract. In the latter scenario, the landowner has a stronger incentive to maximize the value of all the governed property in the long term (because they are the residual claimant of it all) and to keep the residents happy, since their income is dependent on their continued patronage. These factors are cited as arguments in favor of MTIPs.[16]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Tabarrok 2002, p. 415.
  2. ^ Caves 2004.
  3. ^ "Title XL REAL AND PERSONAL PROPERTY, Chapter 720: HOMEOWNERS' ASSOCIATIONS". The Florida Legislature. Retrieved 20 September 2024.
  4. ^ "Common Interest Developments". leginfo.legi.ca.gov. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  5. ^ "Massachusetts HOA Laws, Regulations & Resources". Homeowners Protection Bureau, LLC. Retrieved 2021-11-30.
  6. ^ McKenzie 1994, p. 7.
  7. ^ "Industry Data – National Statistics". Community Associations Institute. Archived from the original on 2011-11-01.
  8. ^ Davis 2006, p. 161.
  9. ^ Weiss 2002, pp. 3–4, 11–12.
  10. ^ Plotkin 2001, pp. 39–69.
  11. ^ a b Hudson 2020.
  12. ^ "Racial Restrictive Covenants". University of Washington.
  13. ^ "How The Fair Housing Act Protects Homeowners From Discrimination". hopb.co. Homeowners Protection Bureau, LLC. 6 February 2018.
  14. ^ Stabile 2000.
  15. ^ Hanke et al. 1970, Title page.
  16. ^ a b c MacCallum 2002, pp. 373–374.
  17. ^ McKenzie 1994.
  18. ^ "CAI Lawyers Slaughter Homeowner Protection Bill". ccfj.net.
  19. ^ Hentschel, Nancy (August 4, 2010). "Home Owner Associations Growing in Power While with Little Oversight or Transparency". Fort Bend Now. Archived from the original on 2011-05-01. Retrieved 2011-01-04.
  20. ^ "The CAI". thehoaprimer.org.
  21. ^ "Civic Leaders – Or More Community Association Institute?". ccfj.net.
  22. ^ "RCW 64.38.028 - Removal of discriminatory provisions in governing documents—Procedure, see footnote on intent". Washington State Legislature. Washington State. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  23. ^ a b "Ethics Code for HOA Board Members". Educational Community for Homeowners. 12 November 2013. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  24. ^ "The Fiduciary Duties of An HOA: Know Your Rights As A Homeowner". hopb.co. 12 March 2018.
  25. ^ "Guide to Community Association Management Certifications". www.echo-ca.org. Educational Community of Homeowners. Archived from the original on January 25, 2015. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  26. ^ McKenzie 1994, p. 142.
  27. ^ "Educating Homeowners" Archived 2009-01-16 at the Wayback Machine, Orange County Register, 12 November 2006.
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Works cited

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Further reading

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