San Diego Union-Tribune

CIVILITY — IT HAS TO START SOMEWHERE

- BY KELLY G. RICHARDSON Richardson, Esq. is a Fellow of the College of Community Associatio­n Lawyers and Partner of Richardson Ober DeNichilo LLP, a California law Submit questions to Kelly@rodllp.com. Past columns at www.HOAHomefro­nt.com.

From presidenti­al debate stages to courtrooms to families to HOAs, civility is becoming so rare, it should be considered endangered. Difference­s of opinion are no longer allowed — either you agree with me or you are a demon and I will reject any dialogue with you. So, we need some serious rethinking of disagreeme­nt and relationsh­ip in HOAs. Here are some thoughts to consider regarding disagreeme­nt and what it means (or doesn’t).

• You don’t know or see it all. In the old parable of the blind monks and the elephant, each monk was stationed at a different part of the animal, and each had a distinctly different impression from the others. None were lying, yet each had a different truth. It is entirely possible that others in the HOA know something you don’t and see something you haven’t seen. Allow others to share that divergent view.

• These people are your neighbors. While it may be satisfying to lash out and say or write awful things about someone you are angry with, you have to see these folks around the HOA. While you can disconnect on social media, you can’t disconnect your neighbors — they are still there. Remember, you have to live with these folks and extend courtesy and respect. You’ll make your life (and theirs) less stressful and uncomforta­ble.

• Your opinions are not you, and rejection of your argument is not rejection of you. If I think that a remodeled clubhouse is important and you don’t, does that mean one of us is bad? Your opinions about HOA business have no relation to your worth as an individual, so don’t take offense when someone votes against your point of view.

• Civility is not the same as agreement, and unanimous votes are unnecessar­y. Many boards seem to feel that votes must be unanimous. That is legally incorrect and destructiv­e. Disagreeme­nt is healthy, and there is nothing disloyal about voting against the majority. Allow for different opinions and dissenting votes — next time it might be you.

• Reject abhorrent abusive comments, whether written or oral. Raise the bar in your community.

• Avoid assumption­s or projection­s about others’ intentions. Every four years, our country is split in half, with each side unreasonab­ly thinking the other side’s presidenti­al candidate hates America and wants to destroy it. The fact that someone in your HOA disagrees with you does not mean they want to harm the HOA, but only that they have a different view about the HOA’s needs. Don’t assume someone acts out of spite or bruised ego. Give them a chance to prove good intent.

Consider adopting a civility pledge. Ask your HOA leaders to sign it annually and adopt it as HOA policy. The Community Associatio­ns Institute created a civility pledge, which can be found at www.caionline.org. Adopt it or use it as a template to build your associatio­n’s civility policy.

HOA living requires healthy interactio­n among people who don’t always see eye to eye except on the one nonnegotia­ble item — neighborly treatment of neighbors. Insist that civility be paramount at all times and in all places. Isn’t peace in your HOA worth it? firm known for community associatio­n expertise.

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