Rent Real EstateCar Wars in Homeowner Associations
It"s a war out there... Car ownership and land costs on the rise... street
width and parking on the decline. Where the two meet isn"t pretty and
battles erupt: parking committees posting dayglo orange violation stickers
on vehicles, roving tow trucks with instructions to hook and tow on sight
and neighbors duking it out over parking spaces.
In an effort to resolve the problems, the Board often enacts a reserved
parking system. If your board has invoked such a plan, is it in compliance
with the governing documents? In condominiums, each owner owns an undivided
interest in the common area parking spaces. In a homeowners association,
every owner has an easement to use the common area parking. So, all
residents have the right to use any parking space, provided the space is
vacant. By assigning parking spaces to a particular owner, the Board may be
illegally precluding residents from freely using available parking. Read
the governing documents carefully. The Board must have specific power to
enact reserved parking in the common area.
Assuming that your association"s governing documents do provide the Board
with the authority to assign parking spaces, before embarking upon a
reserved parking scheme for your community, there are a number of issues
still to consider:
How many parking spaces will be assigned to each unit or lot? After these
spaces are assigned, are there enough spaces left to designate as "Visitor
Parking"?
Are the parking spaces situated so that each owner will have a reserved
parking space close to the front door? What happens if there is only one
space in front of two units or no spaces in front of a particular unit at
all?
Do owners have the right to trade or sell reserved space?
What type of registration system will be implemented for tracking
violators? And who will do the monitoring?
What is the policy for handicapped parking spaces?
How will the reserved parking system be enforced? Fining? Towing? Make
sure your towing policy is in compliance with local ordinances.
Car Wars. This is not a battle easily won. Americans believe parking is
among the Bill of Rights. Before getting too radical with a parking policy,
consider the practicality of monitoring it and the conflicts that could
arise from enforcement. It may be more painful than leaving things as they
are.
For more information on this subject, see www.Regenesis.net.