Homeowners association
A Homeowners association is an organization
comprised of all owners of units in the development.
The vast majority of them are incorporated and
are therefore governed by a board, which is
a private government.
Some of the developments that real estate developers
build are common interest developments, a category
that includes planned–unit developments of single–family
houses, condominiums, and cooperative apartments.
Before the first unit is sold of one of these
developments, the developer records restrictive
covenants — on all of the properties — that
"run with the land," meaning that
all successive buyers are bound by the same
covenants as the original purchaser. These covenants,
among other agreements, form the basis for the
homeowners association.
Homeowners associations collect fees, fines,
and assessments from homeowners, maintain the
common areas of the development, and enforce
the association's governing documents. These
may include detailed rules regarding construction
and maintenance of individual homes. The common
areas maintained and governed may include landscaping,
common buildings (e.g., clubhouses) and recreational
facilities, common walls in attached housing
developments, and infrastructure such as streets,
mailboxes, sidewalks, and parking lots.
Often, a homeowners association collects special
assessments from all its members in addition
to set fees. Assessments can be made to cover
legal expenses for a judgement against the homeowners
association, to repair damage from a natural
disaster, or to make improvements.
In some states, California or Texas for instance,
a homeowners association can sell a member's
house without any judicial procedure in order
to collect a fine. Other states, like Florida
, require a judicial hearing.
Some of the responsibilities that the covenants
delegate to homeowners association boards would
otherwise be performed by local governments
or require private legal (civil) action.
Nevertheless, only owners -- who need not be
residents -- are allowed to vote in elections
to choose the board. Residents of the community
who are not owners (e.g., renters) do not typically
receive a vote.
Some of the first homeowners associations in
the United States were the private places, or
private streets, of St. Louis , Missouri . The
earliest, Benton Place , opened in 1867. In
the next five decades, over one hundred of these
streets were laid out in St. Louis . Many more
appeared in nearby suburbs, such as University
City , Missouri . Under the covenants of these
private places, the residents not only owned
the street but the utility easements and sewer
and water mains as well. After years of decline,
the places underwent a revival in the 1960s.
Most are in the prosperous Central West End
, but a few homeowners associations were all-black,
such as nearby Lewis Place , and were prosperous
enclaves surrounding by blighted neighborhoods.
Studies by urban planners, such as Oscar Newman,
found that these private places were less likely
to suffer from crime and other aspects of urban
decay than the nearby public streets.
In recent decades, homeowners associations
have become increasingly common in the United
States, exercising control over 22.1 million
American homes in 2005, according to the [Community
Associations Institute].
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