Promotional - Real Estate

Homeowner questions need for armed guards

By BARBARA HOLLAND
Posted: Oct. 1, 2011 | 2:02 a.m.

Q: I live in Topaz Ridge, a group of tract homes located in The Ridges. Recently we were notified that we are going to have armed guards patrolling the area. On Monday, I received a budget projection of $12 increase in monthly assessment.

This association has a history of selective enforcement. This additional increase in fees, without the members voting on it, is unacceptable. I was not aware of any incident that would have required an armed guard. In the past, we have always been told to call the local police department. Apparently this has worked satisfactory for about eight years.

Is a homeowners' association required by law to notify residents of a proposed increase prior to submitting a budget ? Individual safety is a most important subject but to implement an increase in costs without proving the need is totally illogical.

A: The association is notifying you of a proposed increase in assessments by submitting to you and other owners the projected 2012 operating budget.

The association is following the law. Now, as homeowners, you must either approve the budget or reject the budget.

In order to reject the budget and thereby rejecting the increase, the association must receive a minimum of 51 percent, or a higher percentage if required by your governing documents, to reject the budget. (The law works in reverse -- the association does not need 51 percent or more to approve the budget, just to reject the budget).

You have the right to contact the management company, and to obtain more information pertaining to the proposed increase, which may also be related to other proposed operational increases, distinct from the armed security, or related to the reserve study funding requirements.

In addition, you can find out why the necessity of armed guards. Ask of the management if the association has contacted its insurance company to see if it has any issue with armed security guards.

Q: Our HOA has been advised by our insurance company that protection against computer fraud insurance is a necessity. We have $50,000 worth of coverage with our regular policy. To get an additional $50,000 would cost $664 per year.

The agent indicates this is only to let us know that it is available. Is this something to be concerned about. Our general/reserve is more than $400,000. We have this amount covered with our fidelity/employee dishonesty coverage. Any comments will be most welcome.

A: Computer fraud has increasingly become a real issue not only for businesses, community associations but for individual homeowners. If your agent has indicated that the association can be protected by adding this coverage, and if the premium is affordable, you should add the coverage.

Q: We have a unit where the owner walked away about eight months ago. The unit was recently sold to new buyer. That buyer fixed up the interior and resold the unit about a month ago. That buyer is not living in it, but has other people in the home, which is a violation of the community rules.

The management company stated that we cannot send a violation letter because the unit is still in collections from the original owners. Is this correct? We can not act on a violation during the process?

A: You should have already received the delinquent funds. Contact the collection company to find out what happened to your assessments.

As to the current owner, you can send a violation letter. Check with the Clark County's Recorders Office to verify ownership.

The two issues should be treated as separate and distinct, unless there is more information the management company has not informed you about.

I have yet to see a covenant that stated that only the owners can live in the unit. You need to check that out with legal counsel.

Barbara Holland, certified property manager, is president and owner of H&L Realty and Management Co. To ask her a question, email support@hlrealty.com.

Comments

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.
Terms & Conditions

The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

  1. H.Wessell Oct. 1, 2011 | 7:01 a.m. Report Abuse

    Anyone who has a HOA, gets just what they deserve.

  2. lonetrader Oct. 1, 2011 | 6:58 a.m. Report Abuse

    If you don't like freedom, live in an HOA. An HOA controls your property, not you. YOU chose to live there. You are bound by their rules EXCEPT if it goes against the law. They have generally figured a way around law with clever lawyer wording. Maybe you should go to the meetings and see what is going on with YOUR property. This is just like big govt. Someone else makes decisions for you and you have nothing to say about it. The reason they are hiriing an armed gaurd is because someone knows something you don't. Maybe a lot of complaints to the HOA by members. Response time by the Police dept. can be very long. I suggest you move out of that tooty snooty neighborhood and move to a regular neighborhood with no HOA's.

  3. ComeOnMan Oct. 1, 2011 | 6:42 a.m. Report Abuse

    You live in Topaz Ridge and you're complaining about a $12 increase!!! The homes in the Ridges start around two million and go up to around ten million!!! I would want armed guards just in case! Twelve dollars!!!! Come On Man!

Saturday, May 26, 2012
Partly Sunny Partly Sunny, 53° Weather Forecast