Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Amid the pandemic, some area nonprofits are struggling to survive.

- By Eli Segall

Daisy Maldonado knew she was behind on her homeowners associatio­n dues. But when a collection agency mailed her a notice recently, she read a dire message.

“WARNING!” it declared. “IF YOU FAIL TO PAY THE AMOUNT SPECIFIED IN THIS NOTICE, YOU COULD LOSE YOUR HOME, EVEN IF THE AMOUNT IS IN DISPUTE!”

Maldonado, a 39-year-old auto loan underwrite­r who lives in North Las Vegas, had been slapped with a notice of default over her late HOA payments. The notice is a step on the trail to foreclosur­e — and it arrived amid a pandemic-sparked foreclosur­e moratorium in Nevada.

Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered a temporary freeze on foreclosur­es and evictions March 29 that is still in effect. Earlier that month, Nevada’s HOA ombudsman also said associatio­ns can

extend “compassion and understand­ing” by halting liens and foreclosur­es amid the chaos.

Still, around 230 notices of default were recorded with Clark County from March 30 through May 26, largely by homeowners associatio­ns, a county database indicates.

Getting hit with a default notice does not guarantee a house will be sold at auction. But homes throughout Southern Nevada have been thrown into the foreclosur­e-processing churn during the coronaviru­s pandemic, often over a few thousand dollars in HOA-related debt, property records show.

“They’re pretty aggressive,” Maldonado said.

‘Aggressive foreclosur­e artists’

Sisolak’s order states, in part, that no “foreclosur­e action” can be “initiated” over a mortgage default during Nevada’s state of emergency, or until the governor ends the ban. It does not mention homeowners associatio­ns.

Nevada HOAs can sell homes through foreclosur­e if the owners fall behind on their associatio­n dues, which typically pay for parks, pools, street repairs, and other community work and amenities.

Filing a default notice against a delinquent property owner typically initiates the foreclosur­e process in Clark County. Filing one during the pandemic, however, is “at tension with the spirit of (Sisolak’s) directive,” UNLV law professor Ngai Pindell said.

Sisolak encouraged banks, borrowers, landlords and tenants to negotiate payment plans for any defaults that stemmed from pandemic-related financial hardships. HOAs are taking a more “formal” and “adversaria­l” approach, Pindell said.

Despite filing foreclosur­e warnings, homeowners associatio­ns are not scheduling sales or actually auctioning off homes, said Las Vegas attorney John Leach, who has filed default notices for HOA clients during the moratorium.

“If you look at it closely, it doesn’t address HOAs, quite frankly,” Leach said of the governor’s directive, adding: “I think we’re honoring the spirit and intent of that. I really do.”

He said an HOA has “a right to protect its interest”; state law mandates the “WARNING!” message in default notices; and Sisolak’s order cited mortgages.

University of Nevada, Reno political science professor Eric Herzik contends the filings violate “what Sisolak was intending” with the moratorium.

“They just blew off the governor’s directive, and it doesn’t surprise me,” he said, adding HOAs “are probably the most aggressive foreclosur­e artists in this state.”

The Las Vegas Review-Journal read through 50 default notices recorded in Clark County between March 30 and April 27. Nearly all stemmed from delinquent assessment­s or HOA dues, the filings said, and the claims averaged $3,218.84.

Red Rock Financial Services, a collection agency, has filed default notices for HOAs during the moratorium. But there is “no way” it would schedule a foreclosur­e sale until the order is lifted, said Steven Scow, an attorney for the company.

Overall, “99 percent” of foreclosur­e sales held at the Nevada Legal News building — Las Vegas’ foreclosur­e auction site — are being postponed or canceled during the pandemic, auctioneer James Vignale indicated.

Some that came up for sale were vacant homes, he noted.

Before the pandemic hit, he figures there were a few HOA sales per week, maybe one a day. Since the directive came down, he has done only one.

Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford’s office said in a statement, in part, that it has not received any HOA-related foreclosur­e complaints since the governor issued the moratorium, though it “will continue to enforce the Directive as written for as long as it stays in effect.”

‘Compassion and understand­ing’

Sisolak’s foreclosur­e and eviction moratorium did not give tenants and homeowners a green light to live for free. But it was designed to prevent Nevadans from getting locked out of their homes amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, which shut down much of the economy virtually overnight and sparked skyrocketi­ng job losses.

Nevada’s HOA ombudsman, Charvez Foger, had asked associatio­ns in a March 18 letter to put a moratorium on liens and foreclosur­es amid the turmoil. Such fillings are necessary for operations, he wrote, but “it is times like these where boards can extend their compassion and understand­ing to their fellow neighbor.”

He also asked boards March 30 to freeze enforcemen­t of certain parking violations, writing that some HOAs “have been overzealou­s in their towing operations during this difficult time caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The Community Associatio­ns Institute, an HOA industry group, has said associatio­ns should put a moratorium on foreclosur­es during the pandemic, waive late fees and penalties for homeowners who face financial hardships, and “continue to record liens to protect their interests.”

Nevada was one of several states to halt foreclosur­es amid the outbreak, but it “does not have a moratorium on collecting debt,” said Dawn Bauman, senior vice president of government and public affairs at the Community Associatio­ns Institute.

The institute, she added, strongly believes in “letting people know what they owe if they missed a payment.”

‘Maybe that’s what they do’

Maldonado, the underwrite­r, bought her house in 2009. After getting hit with a lien in March, she was slapped with a default notice in late April that said she owed $2,471.08, property records show.

Maldonado said her HOA dues are maybe $60 per quarter, and she agreed to a payment plan of $281 per month to wipe out her debt.

“It was pretty upsetting,” she said. Heather Kolb, a teacher, bought her south valley house last year. She fell behind on her HOA dues because she thought they were included in her mortgage payment, and she didn’t receive mail for months because of problems with the post office, she said.

Kolb was hit with a lien in March and then a default notice in late April, which said she owed $2,885.18, property records show.

She’s not worried about losing her house, but it seems a little “ridiculous” that a $250,000 home would face foreclosur­e over a default a fraction of that size, she said.

“But I don’t know,” Kolb said. “Maybe that’s what they do.”

 ?? Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-Journal@ellenkschm­idttt ?? Daisy Maldonado is a North Las Vegas homeowner who recently received a default notice on her homeowners’ associatio­n dues.
Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-Journal@ellenkschm­idttt Daisy Maldonado is a North Las Vegas homeowner who recently received a default notice on her homeowners’ associatio­n dues.
 ??  ??
 ?? Eli Segall Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Homeowners associatio­ns have filed default notices in Clark County, including one seen here, after Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered a foreclosur­e moratorium in Nevada.
Eli Segall Las Vegas Review-Journal Homeowners associatio­ns have filed default notices in Clark County, including one seen here, after Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered a foreclosur­e moratorium in Nevada.

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