Why HOA Management Company San Francisco Acts Outside Of Law

By Jill Faulkner


Many residents have complaints where it concerns their HOA Management Company San Francisco, and elsewhere. Some homeowners feel that these homeowners associations are over-reaching in their power. People do not appreciate receiving fines for petty matters, or improvements they make to their own property.

It is expected that apartments and condo units have rules requiring everything to look basically the same. Unfortunately, many of these same rules are being applied to private homes through these associations. In the past, there might be a complaint over abandoned cars or anything that was unsightly, but basic improvements or new plants were never regarded as an issue.

As homeowners associations have become more prevalent, new rules have been getting imposed against homeowners which hail from the notion of an apartment complex. Even in neighborhoods that are old and have never had a homeowners association, all of a sudden residents have started getting citations for improvements made years before the association was created. They have been threatened with fines and other actions over fences or plants that are ten or more years old.

Even temporary changes such as vegetable gardens have become a problem for these control freaks. To make matters worse, often the companies who manage the associations are not comprised of residents of the neighborhood. Total strangers who live nowhere near the community all of a sudden can instruct people on how to maintain their own property, right down to what structures they are allowed to build and what kinds of plants they can grow.

This kind of control over private citizens is getting completely out of hand, and homeowners need to stand up for their rights. A few control freaks should not think they can supervise the rest of us, passing laws which are not constitutional in order to give power to their position. This precedent must be challenged by those who have been victimized by these new systems of control.

Only through the legal system can be fight this insidious imposition against privacy laws. These people are violating the right of citizens to privacy, and also the right to private ownership of property. If some bureaucrat can tell us what to plant in our own yard, then it cannot be claimed that Americans have the right to own private property.

Representatives of these associations have been caught patrolling neighborhoods that they do not reside in. They have stopped teenagers and demanded identification, claiming they are part of a neighborhood watch. They have also been seen taking photographs of back yards in order to cite homeowners for building patios or installing a pool. This is harassment of the worst kind, and these people must be stopped.

The time to challenge the HOA Management Company San Francisco is now. The rights of the American people to freedom from illegal search, the rights to privacy, the rights to the ownership of private property are all at stake here. This situation cannot be ignored for long, or there will not be any more private property in America.




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