Posted on 06/28/2011 11:05:38 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd
SAN ANTONIO --With 100-degree, hot, dry days, Armando Urdiales decided to plant a new lawn.
Well, not really. It was his HOA, he said, that suggested it, after they found patches of dirt amongst the withered blades in his front yard.
"That was the kicker for me. Really? You're going to tell me to grow grass in a drought," Urdiales said.
The social studies teacher said after receiving two threatening letters in the last 60 days, he planted $150 worth of sod and started watering it.
"Isn't there a better use of our resource--of our precious resource of water--other than maintaning grass? he said.
The Crown Meadows HOA didn't return KENS 5's calls.
SAWS officials say they have yet to see any homeowner deed restrictions that demand homeowners keep their lawns green. And as a public water utility, SAWS has no jurisdiction over HOAs.
But the utility is asking all associations to think of brown grass as the new green, at least for now in stage-2 restrictions.
Grass is trying to go dormant right now. That's what it's trying to do. It doesn't necessarily mean it is going dead. It's trying to shut down," Karen Guz, SAWS Director of Conservation, said.
But what does this matter to HOA nazi's?
NAZI is exactly the correct term. I am certain that a psychological evaluation would show that the mindset of those who seek to head the HOA is the same as the most rabid NAZI. It takes a very sadistic human to relish punishing homeowners over such insignificant matters.
You don't seek out belonging to an HOA board unless you get "kicks" out of watching other humans suffer. The only difference, and I am serious about this, the only difference between the NAZIs and the HOA boards & the evil left in general is that they don't have absolute control over the populace the Nazis had.
Evil humans to their core, ALL of them.
No more HOAs for us.
First question before you make a purchase, “Is there an HOA?”
HOA’s are nothing more than small libtard fiats that have no excuse for existence but to protect the homogenous neighborhood. Race clauses are illegal in covenants so should be mini-fascist HOA boards. Both allegedly are there to protect property values. What makes HOA’s morally superior?
If you really feel that your neighbors alternate theory of upkeep is going to impact you, you didn’t buy enough property or you picked the wrong neighborhood.
Like one without an HOA?
Cute, when something is explained so that there will be no misunderstanding, there will be a misunderstanding.
Anyway, it would be socially insensitive to suggest that someone might wish to simply reduce the number of one’s neighbors until that someone is the HOA.
Yup. Today’s my day and I was out there at 6am trying to save the $600 worth of sod I put down last spring. I’ll be out there again between 8 and 10 this evening.
Sucks.
Not sure if anyone on here listened to Phil Hendrie’s comedy show on the radio in the 90s and 2000s. He had a recurring character named Bobbi Dooley who was the president of her homowner’s association. Usually he’d have her character on trying to defend some crazy thing she’s done with her HOA. One in particular I remember is when Bobbi restricted a woman flying a yellow ribbon for her missing Marine son because it was an “out of season decoration” but said a loophole allowed Bobbi to fly dirty underwear to try and coax her runaway dog back home through a “familiar scent.”
Anyone who doesn’t like their HOA rules has only themselves to blame. And HOAs are different from Nazis, because HOAs are voluntary.
It costs money to keep your yard looking nice, and it doesn’t require daily watering to keep grass green.
There are lots of alternatives to lawn, especially of you in a hot, dry area. But they aren’t as cheap.
“because HOAs are voluntary.
“
Not really. Collectively they individually have gain a monopoly on all housing within any reasonable distance of every city and town.
One even had the audacity to come knocking on my door to inform me that clover had taken over nearly half my lawn and try to sell me on a program to rectify this awful situation.
I looked at him and asked him if he knew that clover provided its own nitrogen? Further, I preferred honeybees in my yard to lawn chemicals in my groundwater. He looked at me like I was crazy and told me that if no action was taken, clover would soon cover my entire lawn. I told him I was looking forward to that day and my lawn would only need a monthly mowing when it came. To hasten that end, every fall, I dug up clumps of clover and transplanted them into the grassy areas of the lawn to speed up the process.
When you move into a HOA regulated community, you do so with full knowledge that you are placing yourself under the control of someone else’s whim.
There have been enough horror stories of HOA excesses that it’s hard to believe anyone is unaware of what is likely to occur under their dictates.
Nazis? Perhaps, but they are Nazis who have power only over those who actively choose to move in and give them said power.
I’d live in the truck before I’d let a squad of self important neighbors have a say in what I can and can’t do in my yard and with my house.
Or you actually care about your community, and see that nobody else cares enough to help run things. The swimming pool doesn't pay for itself, the common areas don't maintain themselves, the playground doesn't fix itself.
The key is to elect people who understand the essential things for the HOA, and aren't power-hungry people looking to order others around.
I finally escaped my board a while ago but was coaxed back by some homeowners who were worried about the direction the board was taking.
There certainly are bad HOAs, and more than a fair share of dictatorial types serving on them. But there are also a lot of good neighbors simply giving up their own time to try to maintain the neighborhood so the rest of us can go to the pool or use the playground.
On the other hand, in most cases HOAs are representative of the community. The board members are elected by a majority vote of members in the community, and are up for re-election every few years. In many cases, only a small minority of people show up to the elections.
It’s pretty easy therefore in most cases to get yourself elected to a board. If your board is truly not representing a majority of the people, and the people are at all concerned, it is pretty easy to get enough to show up to elect a new more representative slate for the year (our HOA it’s 3 members out of 9 each year, so in 2 years you’d have a majority).
Many HOAs also allow proxies, so you just have to get your neighbors to give you their proxy, they don’t even have to show up.
But in fact, for all the grumbling, often a majority of the community actually support what the HOA is doing. It still may be tyrannical, but it’s not just the board, it’s the majority of the community that re-elects the board.
I just hope it’s not burr clover.
It is the standard white blossom stuff with a little yellow blossom clover mixed in to add hardiness and color. They put in a great root system so that it stays green even during those short periods when we go a week or more without rain.
If it’s like the clover that loves to invade my yard. If you don’t eradicate it before it flowers, then forget about going barefoot in the yard with all the burrs it puts out.
I’ve never heard of burr clover. Mine is as soft as a baby’s bottom.
What counts are the CC&Rs. The Board can’t break those, and those are what you buy when you buy the property.
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