In the book "Bitter Honey," writer and researcher Jennie Durant explores how industrial agriculture is destroying bees — and what can be done to stop them.
There are reasonable HOAs, you just dont hear about them. Plenty of them are just entities that exist to pay for care of common grounds. I lived in a place with one that just handled trash pickup, and a community pool.
I know multiple people that have them exclusively for road maintenance through their neighborhood. If that gets expensive, it’s just direct evidence that your community has sprawled too much.
There are a few main areas where an HOAs tend to pop up:
A developer wants to build out a neighborhood on what was previously farmland or whatever and there is no municipality that will build out the roads or utility access, or provide trash services (maybe not even emergency services), so the private developer needs to negotiate the build out with all of the services and infrastructure that make modern living possible, and then arrange for everyone in the neighborhood to pay for those services collectively, from road maintenance to the electricity consumption of the streetlights to the trash services picking up people’s trash.
A developer wants to build a large building or complex where each unit is individually owned, but that things like the foundations, roofs, walls, stairwells, and elevators need to be commonly owned.
A developer wants to build out a neighborhood with certain shared amenities available to the whole neighborhood: neighborhood swimming pool, playgrounds and parks, maybe a gate, maybe access to things like a lake or a beach. I’ve even seen one with a plane runway for small propeller aircraft that the homeowners could use.
Lots of these are just a replacement for what a city actually should be providing (infrastructure, parks), or designed to be exclusionary (gated communities, private clubs), or just the reality of shared buildings (typical condo association). A lot of the rules, then, start resembling normal municipal zoning laws or nuisance laws, and a lot of the fees pay for things that look a lot like taxes to pay for community-wide benefits.
Let them Rot. The alternative is to keep buying paper mache houses with a foot-bridge long list of monthly / semi-monthly expenses bound by the rules of brown-nosed power hungry “neighbors”/(developers). Do you really want to work until you die for house not worth owning? Can you even say you own an HOA house?
Too many people are ok with buying a house that’s part of an HOA.
The fees alone are staggering, and I’ve never see a one do their job properly (from a maintenance perspective).
There are reasonable HOAs, you just dont hear about them. Plenty of them are just entities that exist to pay for care of common grounds. I lived in a place with one that just handled trash pickup, and a community pool.
I know multiple people that have them exclusively for road maintenance through their neighborhood. If that gets expensive, it’s just direct evidence that your community has sprawled too much.
There are a few main areas where an HOAs tend to pop up:
Lots of these are just a replacement for what a city actually should be providing (infrastructure, parks), or designed to be exclusionary (gated communities, private clubs), or just the reality of shared buildings (typical condo association). A lot of the rules, then, start resembling normal municipal zoning laws or nuisance laws, and a lot of the fees pay for things that look a lot like taxes to pay for community-wide benefits.
they don’t have a choice. most new homes are constructed under HOA.
65% of new or updated properties, are in a HOA. and 85% of attached housing is.
the only way to not be in one is to buy older freestanding housing, which is the least affordable housing option.
Let them Rot. The alternative is to keep buying paper mache houses with a foot-bridge long list of monthly / semi-monthly expenses bound by the rules of brown-nosed power hungry “neighbors”/(developers). Do you really want to work until you die for house not worth owning? Can you even say you own an HOA house?