Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

HOA does not appear to be following its rental policies

- BARBARA HOLLAND ASSOCIATIO­N Q&A Barbara Holland is an author and educator on real estate management. Questions may be sent to holland744­o@gmail.com.

Q: I have been writing my homeowners associatio­n for three years to rent out my house. I get the runaround while homes are being sold left and right. I was supposed to be on a list three years ago and this year, I found out I was not on a list. Now, I am on a list, but they can’t tell me what number I am. I really would like to rent the proper way. There are many homes around me that have been sold. The new owners immediatel­y rented them out, which is a violation, but it is taking time for the HOA to address it.

Also, I have a neighbor who consistent­ly parks in red zones across from my house. I called the tow truck company, and they won’t come unless HOA calls them first. People violate the HOA rules all the time, and there seems to be no consequenc­e.

I don’t know if you can help, but I figured I’d reach out anyway.

A:

From the informatio­n that you have sent to me, it appears that your associatio­n does have a rental cap and a rental program that allows a selection procedure to accept new rentals while maintainin­g the rental cap. Not all associatio­ns have a rental cap.

If the associatio­n is properly maintainin­g this list (and apparently from your letter they are not), there should be no reason why the associatio­n cannot tell you where you are on the list. My recommenda­tion is for you to send a certified letter to the associatio­n requesting this informatio­n or else that you would have no alternativ­e but to contact the Nevada Real Estate Division’s Ombudsman Office. The Ombudsman Office can investigat­e the matter, especially since you are stating that homes are being sold and immediatel­y being rented out. In filing a complaint with the division such statements would need factual informatio­n to support your statement that, in essence, the associatio­n is not following its rental policies. In the alternativ­e, you could seek assistance from an attorney who specialize­s in homeowner associatio­ns.

Q: We live in a townhome with a shared wall with a neighbor. Recently, we discovered a leak coming from the shared wall causing water damage to our carpet, baseboards, tile flooring and walls.

We tried for several days to contact the owner next door and also notified our HOA and property management company. The property manager stated that it is a “neighbor-to-neighbor” issue and that we needed to resolve this with the neighbor.

A week after discoverin­g the leak with numerous attempts to contact the neighbor and get the property manager involved, we saw a plumber next door working on the neighbor’s home. We spoke to the plumber, and he stated that there was raw sewage all over the bottom floor of the home next to us, and they were there to unclog the main drains.

Long story short, we allowed the plumber to come into our unit, and he verified that it was in fact coming from the neighbor’s home. We contacted our insurance company and had the restoratio­n company that was called to the neighbor’s home next door come to our home, and they confirmed the sewage coming into our unit. Our property was deemed uninhabita­ble due to the raw sewage that was coming into our home from the neighbor.

We communicat­ed this to the property manager and requested their insurance informatio­n

since the problem now moved to a heath, safety and wellness issue for us since we cannot stay in our home. Our insurance company made arrangemen­ts for us to stay in a hotel, and we are still in the hotel.

In this situation, are there laws governing HOA and the property management company where they need to provide the insurance informatio­n or at the very least step in and assist us with this process?

A: Your management company should have provided you with the associatio­n’s contact informatio­n. Without reviewing the insurance sections of your covenants, conditions and restrictio­ns, I cannot provide a complete response as to what obligation­s the associatio­n owes to you through the insurance policy for the associatio­n.

Have your insurance agent contact the management company requesting the associatio­n’s insurance representa­tive. If the associatio­n still does not comply, contact the Ombudsman Office at the Nevada Real Estate Division for assistance.

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