San Diego Union-Tribune

THE RULES ON COMMUNITY RULE CHANGES

- BY KELLY G. RICHARDSON Kelly G. Richardson, Esq. is a Fellow of the College of Community Associatio­n Lawyers and Partner of Richardson Ober DeNichilo LLP, a California law firm known for community associatio­n advice. Submit questions to kelly@rodllp.com.

Good community rules and regulation­s (“operating rules,” per Civil Code 4340) help set standards and encourage neighborly conduct. However, good rules also must be enforceabl­e and associatio­ns must follow a prescribed rule amendment process. Because rules are amended by the board only, the law requires special procedures to alert members in advance when boards consider a rule change.

Civil Code Section 4360 establishe­s the following meeting process:

1. In the first open meeting, the board decides to announce a proposed change, the board must give members at least 28 days’ advance written notice of an upcoming meeting to consider a change, a copy of the verbatim proposed change, and a statement as to the purpose and effect of the change.

2. At the second board meeting, the board must allow member comments before voting on the proposed rule change.

3. If the rule change is adopted, a notice must be announced to members within 15 days after the meeting.

4. If the change is controvers­ial, 5 percent or more of the membership may, within 30 days of notificati­on of a rule change, demand a membership meeting to vote upon its reversal. If a majority of a quorum votes to overturn the rule change, the board cannot reinstate the overturned rule change for one year.

The law allows for emergency rules, if immediate action is necessary to avoid imminent threat to health, safety or to substantia­l economic loss. Boards may pass emergency rules for up to 120 days but they cannot be renewed.

Before changing associatio­n rules, consider these process tips:

1. Discuss the rule. If the rule change is too complicate­d to draft during the board meeting, then delegate someone (perhaps the HOA’s attorney) to draft language for considerat­ion at the next meeting to consider publicatio­n of the proposed change. Don’t rush — good rules adopted slowly are better than poor rules quickly approved.

2. Once the motion to adopt the rule change is made in the second board meeting, suspend deliberati­ons and reopen members’ open forum on the rule change. Comments will be minimal unless the rule change is controvers­ial.

3. Listen to the members. The process’s open forum aspect is important. Listen. If significan­t opposition to the rule arises, more considerat­ion should be given. Can the proposed change perhaps be improved? Is the board unexpected­ly upsetting homeowners so that an overturn vote is all but certain? Such rule changes might not be in the best interests of neighborho­od relations, even though it may have originally seemed like a good idea.

4. Don’t rush past member objections. Perhaps after further study/discussion/modificati­on, the proposed change can be republishe­d to members again later.

5. If the change is adopted, announce it promptly. Don’t wait to send it with the draft meeting minutes — the secretary has 30 days for the draft minutes, while this announceme­nt must be made within 15 days.

6. Have legal counsel review the draft rule change to prevent legal problems.

Perfection is not required. Per Civil 4350(d), if the board acts in good faith and in substantia­l compliance with the procedures, the rule should be valid.

The law, while potentiall­y frustratin­g, adds transparen­cy and deliberati­on to the rulemaking process. The hoped-for results are better and less divisive rules — and more harmonious communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States