Support HOBB - Become a Sustaining Member |
|
|
HOA'S
HOA Syndrome Is Real, Nevada Professor Claims |
Sunday, 22 May 2011 |
Symptoms Include Headaches, Anger, Depression
A psychology professor from the College of Southern Nevada said that he has discovered a new anxiety disorder called HOA Syndrome. If you live in a community with a homeowner's association, you will likely experience some symptoms of anxiety, according to Dr. Gary Solomon. "You might experience anger, sleeplessness, headaches and emotional problems," said Solomon. "You can even experience a fear of going to the mailbox or living in your own home." ...What is the treatment for HOA Syndrome? It's pretty simple, said Solomon. Just do what Lantry and his family did, move out and never move into an HOA neighborhood again. "Why would I want another incompetent level of government standing in judgment of me?" said Lantry. |
Read more...
|
|
Texas HOA Reform Bills Nearing End |
Saturday, 21 May 2011 |
Chairman Solomons Confident SB 142 Will Come to the Texas House Floor
As time runs out in the legislative session, lawmakersâ promises to dampen the influence of homeowners associations may be fading. The only HOA bill that has passed both chambers did so Thursday, leaving many dead in committees and several awaiting a spot on the agenda in the final 10 days of the session...Both West and Solomons say theyâre confident they can reach a compromise on their bills, if the House can act in time. âObviously the clock is ticking and the House is focused on more weighty issues,â West said. âBut, yes, we can still get this through.â Solomons says he has the necessary support in the House. All he needs is time. âItâs got a better chance to pass than the budget,â he said. |
Read more...
|
|
HOA Payment Plan Rip-Offs |
Friday, 20 May 2011 |
Beware of HOA Payment Plan
When an expensive payment plan deal becomes a foreclosure
Current industry payment plan practices:
1. Payment plans have become a prerequisite to foreclosure. See HOBB Report:
1,425% Markup - Big Corporate Business for HOA Non-Judicial Foreclosures
2. An elite group of HOA industry attorneys/debt collectors have captured the
market of no-win homeownerâs payment plans as the option for HOA foreclosure
on homesteads.
3. The HOAs attorney business plan objectives for payment plans:
a) Is to derive a steady stream of income for themselves as the debt collector;
while the debt continues to mount under the payment plan
b) When a payment is missed under the plan (anticipated), the HOA attorney
posts notice for a âNonâJudicialâ foreclosure again, adding more fees and
offers another payment plan or face foreclosure. Additionally, homeowners
may be required to sign an Agreed Judgment
c) With 2 to-as-many-as 5 times of payment plan extensions and notice
postings, the attorney submits the Agreed Judgment for a default before
the judge under a Judicial Foreclosure
d) Foreclosed â THE END
Under payment plans many have paid thousands of dollars only to see their homes
taken in foreclosure over the original $150 assessment debt.
|
|
Texas HOA Reform Nears Passage |
Wednesday, 18 May 2011 |
HOA Reform Coalition Supports CSSB 142
Priority of Payments Provision would apply payments in this order: 1) any delinquent assessments; 2) any current assessment; 3) any attorney fees or third party collection costs. Homeowners have been trying to get meaningful legislation for more than a decade. The present laws have allowed HOA abuse and tens of thousands of foreclosures across the state - devastating to both homeowners and to property values. |
Read more...
|
|
Sunday, 15 May 2011 |
Homeowners group fights Marine familyâs banner
In January, following Corey Burrâs deployment to Afghanistan, Burr and her husband, Timothy, put up a large multi-colored banner with their 20-year-old sonâs Marine Corps portrait and the phrase âOur son defends our freedomâ in front of their south Bossier home. The couple received a letter a month later from the Gardens of Southgate Association stating the banner was in violation of the neighborhoodâs covenants. The covenants specify only real estate signs are permitted...the associationâs attorney, Geoffrey Westmoreland, informed her she had 10 days to remove the sign or litigation could ensue. |
Read more...
|
|
Good intentions Could Make Texas HOA Bad Business Legal |
Wednesday, 11 May 2011 |
HOA Reform or a Lucrative Funded Mandate
In response to a multitude of major news reports depicting abusive actions by Home Owners Associations (HOA), boards and vendors, Texas lawmakers have seen some sixty (60)) plus reform bills filed. Although the intent may be good, some of these bills may well enable an unrestrained funded mandate to siphon more money from homeowner for the benefit of builders, developers and management companies. |
Read more...
|
|
Can Communities Afford Lucrative HOA Business? |
Thursday, 28 April 2011 |
Texas Bexar County Interactive HOA Foreclosure Postings
Click on
Texas
map to view courthouse foreclosures posted by HOA management companies.
Home Owners for Better Building Calls for AG Investigation. One attorney gets 83% of all HOA foreclosures. âObviously there are many communities that can not afford or tolerte an HOA; certainly not at the expense of losing their homes for the enrichment by an aggressive industry,â said Janet Ahmad. 1,425% Profits for the Non-Profits HOA Empire Read more... |
| |
|
Texas HOA Managemnt Charges $300.00-$500.00 for Resale Certificate |
Friday, 22 April 2011 |
Ripoff Report: WHY IN THE HECK ARE RESALE CERTIFICATES AND TRANSFER FEES SO EXPENSIVE WHEN YOU SELL A HOME IN THE STATE OF TEXAS?
The truth of the matter is that the information in a Resale Certificate takes minutes to issue and deliver by an AGENT. Normally the Resale Certificate is sent to the title company in a form of a PDF file. There is NO copying, there is NO assembling and delivery is a mere click of a mouse. Keep in mind many AGENTS are charging $300.00-$500.00 for this service. How much is your AGENT charging? In a nutshell, agents are doing everything wrong. Agents think that once they are hired to manage a HOA that they have inherent authority to: 1) Charge homeowners directly for fees related to resale-certificate and transfer, 2) Set the fee amount (whatever they want to charge) for the resale certificate and transfer 3) Collect the fees for their own account. 4) As a result, the respective fees have been increasing to unreasonable amounts. All of which are absolutely wrong on several levels! |
Read more...
|
|
HOA Treasurer Has Lien Placed on HIS House |
Friday, 22 April 2011 |
Former HOA treasurer arrested
The former treasurer of a Brookhaven homeowners association has been arrested and charged with stealing $123,000 from the groupâs reserve account. William Blake, 68, lived at the Bluffs of Nancy Creek, a development of about 80 homes. He was arrested April 12 on a charge of theft by taking and released the same day on $100,000 bond, according to information on the DeKalb County Sheriffâs Office website. |
Read more...
|
|
Thursday, 21 April 2011 |
HOA Attorney Fees: An Unconscionable Racket
HOAs have a close relationship with private attorneys that result in homeowners getting fleeced. HOA management companies sign up attorneys eager to sue, and charge homeowners thousands when the amount in dispute is a few hundred dollars. HOAs love the money the attorneys collect and turn a blind eye to the fact that the attorney fees dwarf the amount the homeowner is behind. HOA boards may not even realize their management companies and attorneys intentionally design a system to make more money with installment agreements with extra fees and charges added each month. To make matters worse some HOA attorneys pad their bills by charging attorney time when a legal secretary or paralegal merely changes a few names on form lawsuits these HOA attorneys file regularly in court. |
Read more...
|
|
Call for AG Investigtion when $360 HOA dues cost $12,000 |
Thursday, 21 April 2011 |
HOA legislation builds debate during session
During this legislative session, people across the state are asking lawmakers to limit the power of HOAs. In 2004, Evelyn Garcia bought a four bedroom, three bathroom house in Hutto with her husband. Unfortunately, her excitement didn't last long. Garcia thought joining her HOA was optional, and when she didn't pay the first year's dues, roughly $360, she learned attorneys were involved. Now, Garcia is stuck paying the attorneysâ fees, which total more than $12,000. |
Read more...
|
|
| << Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next > End >>
| Results 23 - 33 of 74 |
|
|