DeWeese: Kiss Your Property Rights Goodbye!
From: "Tee"
http://www.federalobserver.com/archive.php?aid=6600
DeWeese: Kiss Your Property Rights Goodbye!
By Tom DeWeese
I have warned many times of the dangers of homeowner's associations
(HOA's). As I speak around the nation on the subject of "Sustainable
Development," an environmental term intended to disguise the elimination of
property rights, inevitably someone from the audience questions my
opposition to them. The common defense seems to be that they are voluntary
and, if you don't like them, don't move into a community that has one.
While it would be nice to let all of the control freaks and frustrated
Property Nazis live together in their walled compounds, unfortunately,
that's not reality. The problem is, as land use controls under Sustainable
Development policies become more widely imposed, HOA's are growing at rapid
rates. In Fairfax County, VA, more than 90% of all town homes, condos and
single family homes are now in HOA's. Freedom of choice is not an option.
For those of you not yet facing the tyranny of having your neighbors
empowered with the ability to control, place liens and even take your
property if they dislike the color of your paint job, here are a few
examples of what you have to look forward to.
A couple from Lawrenceville, GA, found they had a $3,500 lien on their
house when they tried to sell it. The homeowner's association had been
fining them every day they left pink flamingos on their lawn, but didn't
tell them.
A Tampa, FL, woman thought her attorney had paid all of her delinquent HOA
fees of more than $4,000, but she was wrong by $497. It cost her the house.
The HOA foreclosed and held a court auction. A property company snapped up
the house for $4,651, the price of the HOA's legal fees, then sold it for
$88,000.
A family that cares for foster children in Port Richey, FL, was threatened
with eviction from their residential development. The association
considered having foster kids a business because the state paid $2,028 a
month to care for the children. Having a business in the home was against
HOA rules.
A man from Rancho Santa Fe, CA, lost his home because he planted too many
roses on his four-acre site. The HOA board fined him and watched monthly as
the fines mounted. When they slapped a lien in his home, he went to court
and lost. He was stuck with the board's $70,000 legal fees and lost his
home to the bank.
Common ownership developments are the fastest growing form of residential
development in America. When a homeowner signs the HOA agreement at closing
they have signed away their property rights. It means giving up
Constitutional rights and control over your most valuable asset - your
home. Homeowners associations are the enforcers.
Under the Green's rubric of "Sustainable Development" there are no property
rights. If you like Communism, if you like tyranny, you will love
"Sustainable Development."
Editor's Note: For more information on Homeowners associations and how to
protect your rights visit www.onthecommons.com.
Tom DeWeese is the President of the American Policy Center; an activist
think tank in Warrenton, VA.
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