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Capturing the Pulse of the Homeowners Association Industry

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Pulse Exclusives (120)

Thursday, 04 August 2011 17:00

The Benefits of Having a Reserve Study

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As budget season approaches, many associations are focusing on their reserve studies for two reasons only; one, it is required, either by state statutes or governing documents, and two, to make sure that the reserve assessment fits within the desired overall budget of the association. 

Those are definitely important, but represent only the short term benefits of a reserve study.  The long range benefits include many more items.  For many associations, maintenance of common areas is the largest single cost of the association.  It is not often considered as such because it typically is broken into several different cost categories within the association budget, such as painting, pool maintenance, landscape maintenance, roofing repairs, paving, fencing, and other categories.  When considered together as maintenance activities, these are often the largest single cost.  

The reserve study is one factor that helps to identify, quantify, and attempt to control such costs.  Another major factor is the association’s maintenance plan.  Many people have taken the position that the association’s maintenance plan IS the reserve study, or is defined by the reserve study.  We believe that cannot be true, as a comprehensive maintenance plan must also include operating maintenance activities.  And, those operating maintenance activities often determine the resulting reserve maintenance activities applicable to the same common area components.  Therefore, the reserve study should be a reflection OF the maintenance plan, not the creation of the maintenance plan.  

Most associations have not yet developed internal procedures to the point that they have established formal maintenance plans or formal reserve policies.  These should be viewed as the planning process from which the reserve study is ultimately derived.   Because this advance planning does not exist in many cases, most reserve studies today are used for more purposes than would be considered normal in the above-described setting. 

The reserve study will always be used to fulfill the legal / fiduciary responsibility of the board and the association.  It is also used to establish an appropriate capital reserve budget.  Performed regularly, and assuming that adequate initial funding exists, the reserve study report includes a future funding projection, normally for a 30-year period, that can be used to achieve stable and predictable assessments and avoid special assessments.  In addition, many associations attempt to assure a “fair” reserve contribution by all owners.  This is usually referred to as “full funding” or “100 percent funding.”  The concept behind this funding model is that as the useful life of components is “used up” or “depreciated,” those members receiving the benefit of that useful life are also contributing an equal amount to the planned replacement of the “used up” or “fully depreciated” components.  Other associations opt for less than full funding under the theory that as long as you never go below zero in the reserve account, you have adequately funded reserves. 

The reserve study depends upon a comprehensive component inventory of the major components of the association.  Creating this inventory is another benefit of the reserve study.  The identification and evaluation of common area components can also result in the improvement of maintenance procedures, or an improvement in energy use practices.  Where no formal maintenance plan exists, the reserve study also allows the association to identify and plan for property repairs or replacements

The reserve study can play a big part in properly maintaining association common areas.  This directly affects property values.  A good plan will preserve and / or enhance property values.  A poor or nonexistent plan will have the opposite effect.  Given budget pressures, and particularly in today’s depressed property value market, many associations are not increasing their reserve assessments annually.  However, inflation IS affecting your future maintenance obligations annually, and the longer that adequate reserve funding is ignored, the greater is the gap between funds on hand compared to maintenance obligations.  During a 20+ year career of preparing reserve studies, we have seen the effect of inadequate funding, which is either significant special assessments, or deferral of necessary maintenance projects.  The short term thinking of keeping reserve assessments low can cause ultimate repair / replacement costs to dramatically increase.  We have seen the failure to increase monthly reserve assessments by as little as $2 per month per owner and performing necessary maintenance result in costs increasing by tens of thousands of dollars.  The cost benefit relationship or proper maintenance is well established.  Attempting to save “pennies” in budgets can result in large decreases in property values due to inadequate maintenance. 

The reserve study is also a useful tool for prospective buyers.  While too few buyers are educated as to the values of a reserve study, or even understand it, educated buyers, and there are more of them every day, will want to see a reserve study before they buy so that they can evaluate the funding status of the association’s reserves.  Although FHA has relaxed its reserve study requirements, more lenders are becoming savvy to the value of a reserve study and are requiring reserve studies before they will lend.  We believe we will see an increasing trend of lenders requiring reserve studies.  Another benefit of the reserve study is that it may help protect the association against litigation.  While this is a development that we hope does not represent a trend, we have seen litigation, and have testified as experts, in situations where litigation against associations has resulted from inadequate reserve studies or failure to perform a reserve study. 

While the above describes the various benefits of a reserve study, it still boils down to the fact that it is just common sense to have a reserve study prepared.  Not having a reserve study is like starting a trip with no destination in mind and no plan.  You may end up in a nice place, or you may not.  It’s better to have an idea where you’re going.  It’s better to know how you intend to get there.  It’s better to plan. 

Wednesday, 08 September 2010 17:00

The 10 Year Reserve Study

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Our reserve study company, Facilities Advisors, Inc., was recently hired to perform reserve study for a 27 year old association that has never retained an outside reserve professional to perform a reserve study.  All reserve studies for this association, and there were several of them, were performed by either the property manager or a volunteer committee of members. These prior reserve studies all shared one common factor; the financial projection period was for 10 years only.  The Association’s position was that “no one can predict anything beyond five to ten years with any degree of accuracy, so why bother to try and predict it at all?”

A group of concerned members finally prevailed upon the board to hire an outside professional (which ended up being our firm) because they were (1) concerned that not all common area components appeared to be considered in the study, and (2) uncomfortable with the ten-year funding plan, as they knew other associations used a 30-year funding plan.

To address these concerns, our first step was to add in the couple of obvious component omissions.  The second step was to use our proprietary software which utilizes a 30-year projection period. Based upon a continuation of the funding plan presently in place, we determined the association would run out of reserve monies by year 17, unless it either borrowed money or approved a large special assessment.

This is the danger of looking at too short of a funding projection period. While a plan may work for the short-term, it doesn’t necessarily work for long-term. When you look at a longer term period you will often find that because expenditures vary so significantly from one year to the next that you can get a skewed picture of the health of your reserve fund by looking at just the shorter time period. Another way to have looked at this would be to analyze the percent funded on a year by year basis. What this association would have seen was that, while there was sufficient funds were available for the first 10 years of the plan (meaning the balance in reserves did not drop below zero), the percent funded decreased steadily and significantly, which was an advance indicator of problems to come.

While we agree that no one can predict exactly what’s going to happen 30 years from now, it is equally correct to state that no one can predict exactly what is going to happen 10 years from now. The fact is that a reserve study is a projection based upon a series of assumptions and virtually none of those assumptions will be exactly correct. However, the purpose of a reserve study is to create a plan to have approximately the right amount of money available at approximately the right time. You cannot do this with any reasonable degree of accuracy when you’re looking at only a 10 year period, given the long life of so many of the components that the association is required to maintain, repair, and replace.

Gary Porter is the president of Facilities Advisors, Inc., a company that provides reserve study services for associations nationwide.  Mr. Porter has 28 years of reserve study experience and has performed hundreds of reserve studies.  Mr. Porter served as national president of CAI in 1998 – 1999.

Facilities Advisors, Inc. is a member of Community Associations Institute (CAI), American Resort Development Associations (ARDA), the California Association of Community Managers (CACM), and the Association of Professional Reserve Analysts (APRA). 

Wednesday, 08 September 2010 17:00

A Question of Balance

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The Evolving Partnership Between Community Association Boards and the Professional Manager

The Manager - Maintenance Generalist or Business Executive?

Recently there has been much discussion about what the role of the professional community association manager should be. For many years the manager has often been expected (by the client and Management Company) to be an expert in all areas of physical property maintenance and management as well as all administrative areas including accounting, law, corporate administration, personnel and sociology.  Many would say this is simply too big a slice of the pie for most people to handle.

 

The above mixture of disciplines requires a knowledge base and skill level that is simply beyond the majority of people. To be an expert at any one of them can require a lifetime's worth of experience and training. However, each day thousands of association managers find themselves called on to make decisions, recommendations and judgments in areas where their expertise is limited. Many times they get lucky and are right. But when they make a mistake both the manager and the association are forced to live with that mistake for a long time. It impacts the quality of service the association receives as well the manager's credibility.

 

Several years ago I had a conversation with J. P. Daem, one of the early pioneers in the management of community associations. He was telling me that the Boards of the communities he managed could only meet twice per year according to his contract. One of those meetings was the requisite Annual Meeting; the other was a meeting to empower him, as the managing agent, to take all actions necessary to manage the property. In other words, the operation of the community was to be entirely in the hands of the professional. The Board simply endorsed all policies and actions of the managing agent. If he needed to confer with the Board, he did so by placing a phone call or writing a letter to the President.

 

His point was this. He was a trained professional in association operation and management. He had spent years learning the refinements and subtleties of his craft. If some maintenance or administrative task was outside his area of expertise he could consult with an expert to determine the proper course of action. The volunteer Board members serving the various communities he managed had neither experience nor training in any of the areas listed above. Yet they had been put in the impossible position of running multi-million dollar non-profit corporations. Without any basis or background they were supposed to make decisions on everything from landscape maintenance and cable television installation to investing the reserve funds. Shouldn't they have been relieved to turn over these tasks to someone trained to carry them out?

 

I can't say whether they were or not. I lost track of J. P. a few years ago. Perhaps he is still quite successful employing his methodology. It certainly contains elements of compelling logic. J.P. believed in the manager as a "generalist" as well as an "association business executive".

 

A "business executive" might be defined as a manager whose primary function is informational. That is, they would not be expected to be experts in all areas of maintenance, construction and sociology. They would gather information required for a particular decision of the Board, (often involving the use of outside professionals and consultants at the association's expense) and make recommendations based on the advice of experts.

A "generalist", on the other hand, might be expected to be expert in the above areas and be required to draft specifications and supervise routine as well as special maintenance and construction projects, interpret CC&Rs, handle insurance claims, etc. This would undoubtedly be less expensive for the Board in the short term, but may not be practical or cost effective over the longer term for a variety of reasons discussed below.

 

The Board of a community association is charged with the protection and enhancement of the value of the asset. To that end they are empowered by statute and their governing documents with broad authority. This authority includes areas of policy making, budgeting and maintenance. In some cases, theoretically, their authority cannot be delegated. However the responsibilities for making determinations in these areas can. Conflict between manager and Board most often occurs in these areas of maintenance and "quality of life" policy issues.

 

There is more to the value of the asset than the maintenance of the bricks and sticks. Quality of life issues arise that often cannot be easily quantified. The basis for decisions regarding the quality of life rest solely with the membership of the community. For example only the membership can say, through representative processes, whether the pool should be open at 6:00 am or 9:00 am, whether pets should be allowed in the community, or if the summer cookout should be funded.

 

It may be possible for a manager to maintain the physical plant of the community without input from the Board or members (especially with the advice and help of other professionals and consultants). Not prudent perhaps, but possible.  Apartment managers do this routinely. So do commercial property managers. That is their training. It is not as easy for a manager to determine the best rules and regulations or "quality of life" policies for a community.

 

A PCAM, (Professional Community Association Manager), is trained to understand the best methods of maintenance, communications, problem solving, administrative structure and financial operations of a community. They are trained in methods and processes. They are trained to assist the Board in determining viable solutions to problems. They have been trained to assist the Board in implementing effective methods of communication and they tell the Board how to communicate using those methods. What needs to be communicated can differ from one community to the next depending on the priorities of the community members and the Board. Experience and education may allow a PCAM special insight into these areas. They are experts at using other experts to determine how best to solve a specific problem or accomplish a specific task. This is especially true in non-elective areas of operation such as budgeting, maintenance and reserves. In elective areas, they can say “how”, but who says “what”? In the case of J. P., if I understood him correctly, he said both “what” and “how”. A balance did not exist.

 

At the other extreme is a Treasurer I know who believes the job of the Board is to supervise, scrutinize and micromanage the day-to-day activities of the management firm and all vendors working on the property. In this case the Board says “what” and “how”, then proceeds to manage the manager in every task undertaken. Here too, the balance is nonexistent. It is the classic community association problem. Where should the Board's involvement end and the manager's authority begin?

 

In municipal governments, which employ a manager, all day-to-day tasks are the responsibility of the manager. The council meets only to decide questions of policy and pass ordinances. Once a decision is made, it becomes the task of the manager to determine the best methods of implementation. If research is required before an ordinance or policy can be decided it is often the manager who does the research for the council by contacting outside professionals and consultants. The manager is not expected to be an expert in all areas. He is expected to gather information from experts and present their findings and recommendations to the Board. The suggestion that managers and associations begin relying on the expertise of consultants and outside professionals may cause some Boards to chafe because of the additional costs. Some managers may object because they feel it denigrates their position or some how diminishes their value to their clients. I would disagree in both cases.

 

In 30 years I have yet to meet a manager whose qualifications included being a CPA, engineer, licensed investment broker, attorney, licensed insurance agent and licensed contractor all at one time. A manager may have in-depth knowledge of one or two of these areas and a superficial knowledge in many others. But they would be hard pressed to say they were qualified experts in all these areas. And yet, the Board often expects the manager to have expertise in all these areas.

Hocus Pocus, Where's the Focus?

 

How did this situation come about? How and why is it perpetuated? The answers can vary but generally they can be summed up in three words... money, money and money. Many association Boards feel their primary responsibility is to keep assessments as low as possible. They often take the lowest bid for a job (including management) and then feel the need to micro-manage each job to make certain it is "done correctly". Often, "done correctly" can mean performance to a standard which has not been sufficiently defined or paid for. Management companies have contributed to this mentality by continually selling their services on a "We can save you more than they can" basis. The Board comes to expect the management entity to be self-contained with virtually no professional limitations, and to rarely require the association to use and pay for "outside" professional guidance. It is a rare manager who has never (innocently) given a legal opinion by interpreting the CC&Rs, or drafted an insurance specification without proper training, or supervised a roofing project while never passing a contractor’s examination, or... you get the picture. Managers do these things in an effort to please the client by saving them money.

 

Many managers are expected to draft specifications for everything from painting and roofing to asphalt and pool repair. The idea of hiring an outside professional (specialist) to create specifications for projects is often viewed by the Board as an alien and an unnecessary expense. “That's what we hire a manager for.”, becomes the standard response to this suggestion. The manager then finds himself in the position of needing to cajole or plead with a vendor to acquire enough knowledge about a given discipline to draft a reasonably passable specification. Often, due to the manager's limited time and knowledge, the specification will contain only minimum requirements and may leave out important elements that a professional or consultant in that field would have been able to foresee.

 

This is not an indictment of managers. Most managers work long hours and perform yeoman service for their clients. However, it may not be practical or even possible for them to be a "jack of all trades".  Nor is it likely that this is the most efficient, productive or cost effective way for the Board to spend its money. There must be another way, and there is.

Accepting Professional Limitations

 

Suppose for a moment that professional community association management is the same as any other executive profession. The manager's job then becomes facilitation and information gathering so the Board can make informed decisions about jobs, contractors and administrative matters affecting their property and pocketbooks. One of the great advantages of having a manager should be the time they have for information gathering and their ability to communicate that information effectively to the Board.

Let us further suppose we serve on a Board. Our manager is the executive described above. We need to repair some potholes in the asphalt parking lot.

 

Under the traditional scenario the manager would draft a repair specification and put the job out for bid. Or perhaps the manager wouldn't even attempt a specification but simply call three contractors and ask them to recommend a solution and submit a bid based on their recommendations (this is the more likely case). The Board might find themselves comparing apples to oranges or selecting from bids based on the contractor's needs rather than their own.

 

It is probably a wiser course to have the manager contact a company specializing in asphalt engineering or repair and hire them at the association's expense to draft a specification for the work, then have them request bids based on the specification. Have them evaluate the bids and make a recommendation on which contractor and seems best for the job. The entire transaction could occur between the consultant and the manager. The manager would then take the professional's recommendation to the Board for action. Efficient, professional and yes, more costly than using the limited experience and training of the manager alone. However, the Board will have used prudent business judgment in making an informed decision.

 

The consultant can even be hired to supervise the work. He would report to the manager who would then report to the Board. An effective measure of the manager then becomes not simply what he knows, but what resources are available to him so he is not forced to exceed his professional limitations. What professional resources and contacts does the manager bring to the table? How effective are the manager's communications in helping the Board to understand the recommendations of these qualified expert resources? In other words, how well does the manager manage? Not, how well does the manager draft maintenance or other specifications (a job for which he may or may not be qualified).

Use Professional Resources

 

Every Board might want to sit down with their attorney, insurance professional, landscape contractor, CPA, financial advisor, etc. once or twice a year to help them better understand the services required from, and those provided by, each. This annual review should also include the management contract. Each year the manager and Board could review the management agreement with an eye toward strengthening their professional relationship and the efficiency of the operations.

 

This “annual review” would be an opportunity for the Board to point out areas of strengths and weakness for the management team as well as providing an opportunity for the management firm to re-affirm the limits of management responsibilities. They might also want to use this opportunity to solicit help from the Board in controlling such things as non-emergency calls after hours or upgrading services through contractual amendment. The balance works when the manager is given the full trust and confidence of the governing body to recommend and then carry out policies.

 

The key phrase here is, "…full trust and confidence...” However, confidence must be earned. Many community association Board members will say, "We would love to not be involved in the day to day operations but we don't feel we can have that trust and confidence in our manager.”

 

Why not? The answer is simple. At some point during the year it is likely that the manager somehow exceeded her professional limitations by undertaking a job for which she was not qualified, (and which she probably wasn't responsible for contractually). The Board may have even directed her to do so in effort to save money by not using an outside expert. As a result, mistakes were probably made that the Board members interpreted as management failures.  Or it may have been something as simple as a clerical error. Maybe a locksmith's work was inadvertently charged to the landscape account. Or maybe a car was towed improperly.  Maybe the painters did a miserable job painting the doors and Board members discovered it before the manager. It wouldn't matter that the bill had not been paid or that the manager may have been planning to take corrective action. Maybe all these things happened this year.

 

Or the reverse the scenario may have occurred. Suppose the Board is weak. Maybe the President is a bully. Maybe the President is weak. Maybe conflict between Board members undermines confidence and fails to allow for clear direction to the manager.

 

In each instance a strong case could be made for the balance of authority to shift. It is a question of expectations. Clearly the Board members do a disservice to the manager and the community by involving themselves in areas where they have little or no expertise. By the same token, managers who exceed their professional and contractual limitations do the same disservice by creating unrealistic expectations in the minds of the Board. In all cases it is probably better for the Board to say what needs to be done and for the manager to say how these things can best be accomplished. Once decided the Board would be well served by taking the advice of their experts and professionals regarding maintenance and repairs and also trusting the manager to carry out the policies established by the Board.

 

In saying this let me caution that both the manager and the Board will occasionally make mistakes. This does not necessarily make them incompetent. It makes them human. I have often heard Boards say they cannot trust the manager's performance because of mistakes made over the years. I have also heard managers accuse Boards of being incompetent because they make decisions against the manager's advice.

 

What I am about to suggest may sound radical to some. All of us, managers, Board members and homeowners, must learn to be more “generous of spirit” if we are to help each other attain the highest levels of success. Occasional mistakes will occur. Bad decisions will be made. Few will be catastrophic and all can be corrected over time. We must remind each other and ourselves that we are not making "fate of nations" decisions. We are simply attempting maintain, protect and enhance the value of the property and the quality of life of the members.

Summary

 

Board members and managers work in a fishbowl. Their every action and decision is open to scrutiny and the second guessing of outsiders and each other. Mutual support is their greatest strength. Self-righteous indignation is their greatest weakness. The only certainties are their occasional fallibility’s as human beings and the controlled chaos of representative democracy.

 

Therefore, it is not so much a question of the balance of power/authority but the realization and acceptance that both the manger and the Board have a uniquely specialized role to play. Each must have concern for, and be supportive of, the other's successes and shortcomings. Each must strive to improve with the knowledge and wisdom of experience. Each must agree that competence should rightfully be measured by the level of prudence and care demonstrated by all involved.

 

Managers, (and professional consultants to self-managed associations), must exhibit extreme professionalism, care and concern for the problems of the clients. Board members must exhibit this same professionalism, care and concern in their actions and demeanor relating to association members and managers. Each of the parties must appreciate the other's knowledge and expertise and manifest this in mutual respect and trust, in successes and failures alike.

 

Success is built on mutual trust, understanding, knowledge and clearly defined expectations and areas of authority. The manager and the Board would do well to treat each other as partners in the operation of the community.

 

The nature of the Board/manager relationship has evolved over time. We must be able to recruit qualified personnel to serve in both capacities. To do this we must begin to view the relationship in its truest light.

 

The Board, (a group of volunteers often untrained), hires a professional with resources, skills and time it may lack. It solicits professional advice and, trusting it is credible, takes the appropriate actions.  A manager must learn to give credibility to the opinions and desires of the Board, sometimes subordinating his personal opinions and preferences. The manager needs to help make the knowledge of other association professionals and consultants available to the Board so the Board can have a complete understanding of the problems and opportunities they face and the Board should be willing to pay for the knowledge and information it receives for these experts. The manager can be the Board's gateway to every professional resource they will need to do a thoroughly competent and professional job running their multi-million dollar corporation.

Thursday, 09 September 2010 17:00

Just One Person Can Make a Difference

Just One Person can Make a Difference

This must be the “Year of the Grouch.” I have been involved in Homeowner Association Lawsuits, Mediations, and Consulting about “Out of Control” homeowners reeking havoc in lovely communities from LA to South Orange County.

 

It may just be the weather, the water or the happenstance of my consulting business but it seems I have been asked to work with very angry people in these first few months of this year. Boards are changing management, homeowners are recalling and changing Boards, members are fighting amongst themselves and lawyers are working day and night trying to calm down homeowner associations in turmoil.

 

Usually, my business is a mixture of different types of projects. I get a wide variety of requests for different types of assistance. It would have been a good idea for me to have gotten an “Anger Management Degree” in order to work with the clients I have been asked to help in these last few months.

There are over 40,000 community associations in California. Most of those associations are doing just fine. Studies have shown that the majority of people living in a common interest development are pleased with the concept and enjoy sharing their amenities and having rules and regulations enforced. It is just those few associations that seem to crop up again and again in the newspaper or on the court house steps.

Sometimes it is because of just one person. That one angry or unreasonable person that runs amok through a community can be responsible for a lot of distressed and tired Board members. If the person cannot be satisfied by either joining the Board and trying to change the way things are done or convincing the Board to change, legal counsel is usually engaged. Management companies are oftentimes caught up in the conflict and it results in the Management Company canceling the account or losing the account.

As an experienced Manager and someone who likes things to run smoothly, I offer this advice to Boards facing an upset or active resident who seems to enjoy stirring things up:

  1. Listen to the person and really try to understand what the person wants. Sometimes it is difficult, confusing and misleading.
  2. Try and get the person to join you in solving the problem. Ask the person what they would like you to do?
  3. Set parameters for contact. Telephone calls only during the day. Only one call per day, only in writing, etc.
  4. Ask a Mediator to help you interact with the person. Sometimes a neutral party is helpful in gaining trust and suggesting alternatives.
  5. Stay calm. Don’t debate. Adjourn the meeting if it gets too heated.
  6. Realize that sometimes the individual is not interested in solving the problem.
  7. Communicate simply, often and with a positive approach. Let the other residents know what the Board’s positive goals and achievements are.
  8. Keep your meetings shorter rather than longer. Prioritize your goals. Don’t try and discuss and make decisions on every issue known to man.
  9. Praise your fellow Board members. Thank them for their service. Don’t wear them out.
  10. Be realistic and fair with Management. They are in a business to serve the Board and every owner and resident. It’s a tough job.

I hope your association is running smoothly. I hope your community looks well-maintained, is well-managed and most residents are pleased. Most communities are -- it is just that one person….. this too shall pass.

Karen Bennett, PCAM®, CCAM®

Community Association Consulting

www.CIDexpert.com

Thursday, 09 September 2010 17:00

Living in a Community Association I

Living in a Community Association – A Professional’s View

Fall is a busy time for Common Interest Developments. Volunteer homeowner Boards return from vacations ready to make decisions before the end of the year. Budgets and Reserve Studies are due to be mailed to the membership before fiscal years that end on December 31. It seems that time accelerates with Halloween coming up, then Thanksgiving and before you know it decorations begin appearing for Christmas. Pools and pool furniture are sometimes refurbished during the down time before spring. Hopefully, roofs have been inspected and repairs made before the winter rains. It is a good time to volunteer to help the Board or to watch what the Board is doing by attending your monthly community association meeting.

Most of what we read about homeowner associations in the newspapers is negative and sensationalistic. We all remember the articles about the poor homeowner who is picked on by his association. The homeowner who doesn’t feel he is being treated fairly when his architectural application is turned down or the owner who doesn’t like the way the rules are being enforced or not enforced. Certainly there are exceptions to the norm and there are Boards who act irresponsibly, but oftentimes the reason homeowners feel they have been treated unfairly by their association, is because they failed to understand the policies and procedures. Living in an association means being a good neighbor and making compromises and considerations for the good of the whole.

Reasonableness is a big word that is used when judging whether an association decision or a resident action is wrong. Using common sense and considering what the ramifications of your actions are is sometimes overlooked in our rush to solve conflicts. The Courts in judging homeowners and their associations often refers to whether or not the action taken or not taken was reasonable. Boards should always keep that in mind when they are establishing or revising the rules that the residents must follow.

Rules – The Board has the right and duty to establish the rules but recent changes in the laws governing the rules revised by the association, must first be accepted by the homeowners. If a certain number of homeowners object to the way a rule is written then the Board must meet to listen and revise the rule until it is acceptable or submit the rule to the membership for a vote. This only applies to changes in the rules. Boards may also make emergency rule changes with no notice if there is an immediate threat to public health or safety or an imminent risk of economic loss to the association.

Who Enforces the Rules? The Board writes the rules and then enforces the rules. The rules must be reasonable and within the guidelines of the CC&R’s. However, most of us receive letters reminding us of rule violations from the Management Company. Why is that? The Board has authorized the Management Company to check for rule violations, accept written complaints about rule violations, send letters about the rule violations and keep track of compliance with violation logs. If rule violators ignore the letters then, hearings are scheduled and owners are invited to attend and defend or explain their actions before the Board. Owners that ignore their opportunity to appear before the Board and the violation continues will oftentimes be assessed a fine which is added to their homeowner assessment account. Violators that continue to ignore the Board’s decision will then risk legal action. The cost of litigation is very expensive for everyone. I often think that owners that sue their association or get sued by their association forget that they are suing themselves. Everyone in the association shares in the cost of the litigation.

Why does solving a rule violation take so long? Everything seems to take too long in association governance. The Board is all volunteers and they typically meet once a month to make decisions in front of the association members. If a rule violator is ignorant of the power of the association or just doesn’t care, the conclusion of the situation can be very time consuming and costly. Other owners, who observe that the rule violation continues, will sometimes complain that the Board or Management is doing nothing to resolve the infraction when indeed they are doing their best. Court time is precious and very overburdened so it is best to try and settle homeowner disputes long before it gets into the courtroom.

Meetings behind Closed Doors! - A process that is closely associated with litigation and homeowner violations or homeowner delinquencies is often discussed in private with only the Board, the persons involved and maybe attorneys. This is called an Executive Session of the Board. Management attends to take the minutes. This adjournment to a private meeting is sometimes mysterious to those in the audience observing the Board meeting but it is understandable and necessary to not embarrass and discuss personal issues before an audience. The Civil Code governing Common Interest Developments allows the Board to adjourn into Executive Session to discuss litigation, formation of contracts with third parties, member discipline, personnel matters, and member delinquencies. The matters discussed in Executive Session should be generally noted in the minutes of the meeting immediately following the adjournment of the Executive Session.

Living in an association usually results in higher property values. We all are reminded to maintain our yards, our driveways our pets and our children. We all must agree that following rules that provide a cleaner, more maintained community will be better for all of us in the long run.

Karen Bennett, PCAM®, CCAM®

Community Association Consulting

www.CIDexpert.com

Living in a Community Association II - A Professional's View

As the holidays approach, community associations tend to take a back burner and slow down. Sure, board meetings are held, annual meetings are held, budgets are mailed, but residents and board members oftentimes put off agenda items for a later decision.

Everyone gets busier, the days are shorter and rule violations are not as noticeable in the dark. The landscaping stops growing so fast and the pool area is no longer a problem. Holiday decorations go up and associations seem to just settle down.

It is a good time for reflection. If you have an annual meeting in December that is a perfect time to create a festive mood by decorating the clubhouse, bringing in cookies to share and maybe asking a choral group to perform. Large associations have a flurry of clubhouse use as the clubs all celebrate the end of the year.

Boards can use this time to list all of their accomplishments of the past year. It gives the board an opportunity to solicit members for committees, ask for volunteers to handle a specific project and let the residents know what the new year might bring. Boards never seem to “sell” what they do. Inactive members might have no idea what it takes to create a successful association of volunteers. A fresh group of volunteers is always welcome and necessary for successful programs to flourish and evolve. Using the same group of volunteers over and over tends to discourage review and change. Volunteers need to be thanked and not just taken for granted. Programs should always be fresh and inviting. New members on a committee should be encouraged.

I believe it is important to explain what you did and to ask for help in continuing the service or the program. Successful programs are not guaranteed to go on if the volunteers resign or tire of the work involved. It is always helpful to notice people who might be unaware that they could really help and make a difference. Boards should seek out their replacements and encourage new volunteers to get active in the community. It is quite an honor to be singled out and invited to become a committee member or to head a task force.

The cost for management and services in general will naturally increase in cost due to the increase in the cost of doing business. Volunteers are needed for training and replacement. Most residents who don’t become involved in community projects might not know where to begin. Watch for those people, invite them in and encourage their participation. Keep your community active and inviting. Enjoy your holidays. Stay safe and warm.

Karen Bennett, PCAM®, CCAM®

Community Association Consulting

www.CIDexpert.com

MOTIVATING BOARDS TO MAKE SOUND FINANCIAL DECISIONS

10 tips for working with boards on financial issues.

  1. Always plan enough time on the Agenda to review the monthly financial statement.
  2. Make sure each board member understands the monthly variables between the budgeted numbers and the actual numbers. Record the information in the minutes.
  3. When reviewing the annual Reserve Study, make sure all the members of the board understand and discuss the report. Are all components included? Is the life expectancy realistic?
  4. When reviewing the Audit Draft point out any “interesting points” that the Auditor has made. Consider hiring a different Auditor about every 5 years to get a “second opinion” and feel confident that another Auditor is looking at the books.
  5. Recommend experts to create specifications for large reserve projects. Then, create a matrix to clearly show the board the differences in the bids. Make sure enough is budgeted so that the expert can supervise to make sure that his specifications are being followed.
  6. When comparing bids be thorough and able to determine the quality of each product that is used. What is the life expectancy of the application?
  7. Collect assessments fairly. Review cost of living increases, completeness of reserve allocations, adequacy of reserve accounts and community expectations, each year. Homeowners should expect assessments to go up most years. Homeowners that “live” in the community should be setting aside money to pay for their fair share of the replacement of the assets.
  8. Asking homeowners to pay for a special assessment shouldn’t come as a surprise if the board has been monitoring expenses, planning for the future, setting adequate budgets and making reasonable decisions.
  9. Communication with owners is a large part of the board’s duty. Share the information. Invite owner participation in solving the problems. Create ad hoc committees to research and advise the board.
  10. With the cost of housing increasing every year, it is in everyone’s best interest to invest in maintenance, refurbishment and revitalization of homes and community centers. Hiring architects and landscapers to re-design and create newer looking facilities is exciting and rewarding for all the owners that live in the community. Keeping existing communities repaired, clean and well-funded adds to the value for every owner.

Karen Bennett, PCAM®, CCAM®
Community Association Consulting
www.CIDexpert.com

Thursday, 09 September 2010 17:00

Ten Tips for Better Board Meetings

Better board meetings through planning and time management.

10 Tips for Better Board Meetings

  1. Time is a gift given by volunteer Board members. Cut down on paperwork. Use Executive Summaries, written Manager Recommendations, Detailed Reports in place of actual correspondence, Timed Agendas and Consent Calendars.
  2. Hold the meetings in a businesslike setting. Don’t meet at the pool or in a room with other activities and distractions. Have adequate space and seating for everyone.
  3. Set up the room so the Board can easily talk to one another but not above or separated from the membership.
  4. Always bring Agendas to hand out to meeting attendees. Let the audience follow along.
  5. Start meetings earlier. Have refreshments delivered so hungry Board members will arrive earlier, be alert and stay until the end of the meeting.
  6. Have committees submit executive summaries for inclusion in the Board package and be available for questions only. Reward and praise committees in the Newsletter, Award Ceremony or at the Annual Meeting, not at the monthly Board meeting.
  7. Stick to the Agenda. Don’t allow business to be discussed without a prior motion and a second.
  8. Make it a Board policy to have experts create specifications prior to going out to bid.
  9. Provide annual Board updates for training and educating each Board. Be creative and make it mandatory that Boards will attend at least one training session each contract year.
  10. Adjourn each meeting before 10 pm. No one is at their best making decisions late at night.

 

Excerpted from a speech entitled, “The Psychology of Successful Board Meetings & Board Liability.” September 2003

 

Karen Bennett, PCAM®, CCAM®

Community Association Consulting

www.CIDexpert.com

Thursday, 09 September 2010 17:00

Getting Along

Written by

Getting along involves multiple aspects human nature. The requirements for getting along include a little of each of these - good communication, working together, and problem solving skills. And most importantly, a good sense of humor.

 

Good Communication

As managers and board members you know how critical communication is to accomplishing your objectives. This concern is nothing new to anyone in this field. There has been a drive in the industry to impress upon everyone that there is a big difference between Property Managers and Community Managers. We in the industry are moving toward the term Community Managers, as it more clearly reflects the position that it is the Community that we manage as opposed to the property. Board members alike manage the Community which includes the people and often takes more time than managing the physical property. When CEO’s, Presidents and other leaders get together a topic of large concern is the people side of the equation. The physical property and bottom line are important, but are often easier to manage.

 

Getting along is not as easy as it should be. There are whole industries, seminars, classes, experts, and many books about the subject. It creeps into our daily lives on a personal and professional level. Everyday we misunderstand someone or someone misunderstands us. Part of the reason for this is that we just don’t think about communication. It usually occurs without any preparation. Since we learned it at a very young age instinctually, we just do it. Statistics from Purdue University Department of Organizational Leadership and Supervision indicate that we only remember:

 

  • 10 percent of what we read
  • 20 percent of what we hear
  • 30 percent of what we see
  • 50 percent of what we see and hear
  • 80 percent of what we say
  • 90 percent of what we say and do

 

These numbers indicate how little we retain from our daily lives. The daily lives of many people move so fast that there is little time for reflection or forethought. Technology has catapulted us into a world where silence truly is golden and almost extinct. Where our expectations of instantaneous responses via phone or email set us up for not thinking about what we are communicating and for not listening to what others are communicating to us. So technology helps us get answers faster and communicate more often, but what happens to the quality of the communication?

 

A lack of quality in communication results in misunderstandings and damages relationships. Think about your best relationships and notice how well you communicate with the people in those relationships. Communities are all about relationships, as you all know. The business of running your Communities is about good communication. In order for things to hum along with fewer bumps good communication is necessary. It needs to be honest, open, respectful and sincere. The content rarely matters as much as the manner in which it is delivered. Communication requires a sender and a receiver. The context and frame of reference on the senders’ side and the receivers’ side affect what message will be conveyed. The saying “it’s not what you say but how you say it” stands true in communication.

 

The message that we think we deliver may not have been received. The ways in which this happens have to do with how the deliverer is feeling at the moment. The tone, pitch and volume of the voice of the deliverer affect what message is received. Facial expressions and body movements are interpreted by the receiver and affect the interpretation of any and all messages. The time and place (context) of the communication affect whether or no the message you sent is the one that is received. The receiver’s current state of mind and body affect what will be received. Conversational styles and background affect daily communication. Taking all this into consideration requires thought and effort.

 

Once these things are considered one realizes that; adjusting how you say the same thing to different groups, will only result in better success in communicating. Your relationship with them will also affect how you deliver the message. It is never the message we deliver, its how we deliver the messages, the sort of relationship we have to the receiver, and who we are that matters. We need to deliver the same message in different ways according to our audience.

 

 

Working Together

The industry we work in is relatively small and close knit. The six degrees of separation and/or most often, less than six degrees of separation, apply here. We all have the same problems and can help each other through them, but still remain friendly competitors. As mentioned earlier honesty, openness respectfulness and sincerity when dealing with each other will result in good communication and better business relationships. How we treat others will result in how they treat us. The saying what goes around comes around definitely applies in this industry where we never know when an association will decide to change vendors. The thing to remember is that there will be another association around the corner to take its place.

 

Linguistics determines others physical and emotional responses. It is very important how we frame a comment or question as this often determines the response we will receive. Always try to use good words and star away from bad words.

Good Words

 

ability

abundant

achieve

active

admirable

advance

advantage

ambition

appreciate

approval

aspire

attainment

authoritative

benefit

capable

challenge

cheer

comfort

commendable

comprehensive

concentration

confidence

conscientious

cooperation

courage

courtesy

definite

dependable

deserving

desirable

determined

distinction

diversity

ease

economy

effective

efficient

energy

enhance

enthusiasm

equality

excellence

exceptional

exclusive

expedite

faith

fidelity

fitting

genuine

good

grateful

guarantee

handsome

harmonious

helpful

honesty

honor

humor

imagination

improvement

industry

ingenuity

initiative

integrity

intelligence

judgment

justice

kind

lasting

liberal

life

loyalty

majority

merit

notable

opportunity

perfection

permanent

perseverance

please

popularity

practical

praiseworthy

prestige

proficient

progress

prominent

propriety

punctual

reasonable

recognition

recommend

reliable

reputable

responsive

responsible

salient

satisfactory

service

simplicity

sincerity

stability

substantial

success

superior

supreme

thorough

thoughtful

thrift

truth

truthful

useful

utility

valuable

vigor

vivid

wisdom

you

yours

 

 

 

Bad Words

 

 

abandoned

abuse

affected

alibi

allege

apology

bankrupt

beware

biased

blame

calamity

cheap

collapse

collusion

commonplace

complaint

crisis

crooked

deadlock

decline

desert

disaster

discredit

dispute

evict

exaggerate

extravagant

failure

fault

fear

flagrant

flat

flimsy

fraud

gratuitous

hardship

hazy

ignorant

illiterate

imitation

immature

implicate

impossible

improvident

insolvent

meager

misfortune

muddle

negligence

obstinate

oversight

plausible

precipitate

prejudiced

premature

pretentious

problem

retrench

rude

ruin

shirk

shrink

sketchy

slack

smattering

split

squander

stagnant

standstill

straggling

stunned

superficial

tamper

tardy

timid

tolerable

unfair

unfortunate

unsuccessful

untimely

verbiage

waste

weak

worry

wrong

 

 

 

 

Problem Solving Skills

What do managers and board members do every day? Solve problems. This makes managers very busy people. Managers tend to juggle many tasks at the same time out of necessity. Community volunteers are the same way in that those of you who volunteer for this task typically volunteer on more than one board or committee. The saying that 80% of the work is completed by 20% of the people applies in Community work. Nobody works in a bubble by themselves. This causes everyone to need to become self-aware. How we fit into the picture affects how we should communicate to each group. Everyone is different with different needs; being aware of that will greatly improve our chances for success.

 

Your needs are important in considering getting along. Not being able to control how you communicate will result in a potential lack of communication. Miscommunication may result in not getting along. Everyone needs balance. Balance in your life will result in a balanced approach to resolution. Problem solving from a level head will result in a more rational perspective.

 

Consider the impact of your approach. Are you sending a message that will be received the way you want to attain your desired result? It is not an unknown fact that the number one fear is public speaking. This is likely due to our lack of successful experiences in communicating one-on-one. Focusing on the message and how you communicate with self awareness and self control will bring you the successes you desire.

 

Some other resources regarding Getting Along

 

Dealing with People you Can’t Stand – by Dr. Rick Brinkman and Dr. Rick Kirschner

 

That’s not What I Meant by Deborah Tannen, PH. D.

 

How to Disagree without Being Disagreeable by Suzette Haden Elgin, PH. D.

Thursday, 09 September 2010 17:00

Computer Banking: Make More, Work Less

Written by

Computer Banking: Make More, Work Less

Consider the source. In the May & June edition of its magazine, the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) listed ways to make more money with your computer. One way is to invest in FDIC-insured online banks that do not have expenses such as branch offices. The added income is substantial. Even “bricks and mortar” banks recognize the benefits of computerized banking as they attempt to save costs by encouraging customers to use online banking services.

In today’s world, nearly all of an association’s internal money management is done by computer. Associations are comfortable with the electronic management of their money. It is hard to imagine an association that would prefer managing its finances using traditional manual methods. Those same associations, however, may not be taking advantage of the benefits of conducting their external business electronically.

Many associations have been reluctant to use online banking services. Those concerns often do not reflect the reality of today’s world. The internal operating systems of the world’s banks are all most entirely electronic. They are designed to interact with customers electronically if those customers chose to do so. Businesses conduct most of their banking online. In light of the benefits, the question is why associations have lagged behind the rest of the world in using online banking. Consider the benefits they are losing:

More Money

Online banks can generally pay a substantially greater return on investments. Associations are always looking for ways to cut costs in order to avoid raising common expenses. They need to spend as much energy on getting the greatest possible return on investments. This is particularly true in Hawaii where associations can hold millions of dollars in reserves. Boards of directors have a fiduciary duty to their associations to invest association assets wisely. In light of the potential for substantially greater returns, boards should consider FDIC-insured online banks in making their investment decisions.

Internet Cash Management

By using internet banking, association’s have greater, and easier, access to basic financial information. Any board member can view the status of accounts online, 24 hours a day, from any computer. They can see scanned copies of cleared checks which will allow them to immediately respond to payment questions. That avoids the days of delay that can occur waiting for a bank to produce copies of cancelled checks. Instead, copies of checks can be printed immediately on computer’s printer.

An association’s treasurer can receive balance alerts by e-mail if association accounts rise above or fall below preset balance amounts. Funds can then be transferred, by computer, to meet the association’s needs.

An association’s bills can be paid online. Envelopes, stamps and trips to the mailbox are no longer necessary, nor do they make sense. Vendors can be paid online and the Association will have all the records of payment that it would with paper checks. Further, with password protection, payment authorization is as secure, or more secure, than writing paper checks.

Greater Security

Electronic banking reduces opportunities for fraud. Paper checks can easily be stolen and altered and it may take days or weeks before anyone realizes what has happened. Online payments can be posted and reviewed immediately. There is also software that can monitor payments and receipts for transactions and notify bookkeepers and treasurers of transactions that appear to be out of the ordinary.

Check 21, Check Imaging

When Congress passed the 21st Century Act, commonly known as Check 21, it radically altered the use of paper checks. Since the inception of the Act in October of 2004, banks have been required to accept digital images of checks in lieu of the original check. The original check is not used at all. This means that bills can be paid as quickly as it takes an e-mail to arrive at its destination.

These are just a few of the benefits of banking online. Electronic banking has significantly altered the world’s banking and finance systems. It is the standard for business banking. It is time for community associations to move into the 21st Century as well.

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