Your home owners association may be requiring you to follow your governing documents.
You can ask for a clarification of the violation for which you are being notified.
Further, read your governing documents so that you understand the process the board can follow when 'curing' a violation.
If you believe that contact from the home owners association is valid 'harassment' -- that you are not in violation of any covenant, condition, regulation, restriction or by-law -- you can involve the police.
They can if the streets are owned by the home owners' association rather than by a municipality.
The web address of the Dennisville Historic Home Owners Association Inc is: http://dhhoa.dennistwp.org
Generally, according to the site, below, Articles of Incorporation are required for any home owners association. An association-savvy attorney in North Dakota will be able to answer your question with precision.
Yes. You can withdraw by selling your unit. Your unit is permanently connected to the association, by law.
The address of the Dennisville Historic Home Owners Association Inc is: Po Box 311, Dennisville, NJ 08214-8214
Although your association may be a valid Florida non-profit corporation, grants are not generally a source of income. Association income is based on assessments paid by owners.
I would try to attend many of the home owners meetings and voice your opinion. You can find this information of the meeting times through your monthly news letter.
Your answer depends on the association's motivation for the request. If, for example, you are proposing a major project that can hamper, harm or otherwise use common areas -- including roads and landscape owned by the association -- the association may require that you insure these assets. Your broker and the association's broker can work out the details and concretize the requirement.
Read your governing documents to determine how the fees should be charged, whether they should be charged to a limited number of owners, or to all owners in the association. Apparently, a citation was required to settle a difference of opinion among owners, or between owners and the board. Yes, this is association business, and yes, the fees should be charged to owners.
Work with your board and your association manager to most fully understand why access is being denied. For example: It is possible that your governing documents specify that when you do not pay your assessments -- which pays for upkeep of the pool -- that you can be denied access to the pool by refusing to give you gate access codes.
No, because they pay for a service, among other reasons.
Yes, but is not mandatory to join or pay dues.