Gatlinburg residents question bills on burned homes
KNOXVILLE - Some property owners in Gatlinburg’s Chalet Village, which was hit hard by November’s wildfire, say they’re getting hit again by the development’s homeowners’ association: assessed fees on properties that burned down.
Bruce Brock’s house burned at Christmas 2011, and he’d been working on it ever since, he said.
“We just finished our house three weeks before the (November 2016) fire,” Brock said. Now it’s gone again.
“We lost everything. That was our permanent residence,” he said. “Then we got a bill: $290.”
Brock said he had always paid what the HOA asked, but saw no benefit.
“I think the whole thing should be done away with. It’s a joke,” he said. He alleges property owners weren’t alerted to the board meetings at which they
might seek answers or changes.
“We would receive the notification the day after, or a week after, they would have a meeting,” Brock said. That, and other lapses, should release landowners from responsibility for HOA fees, he says a lawyer has advised.
“The attorney told me when you don’t follow all the rules, then none of the rules apply,” Brock said.
Lloyd Martin owned a cabin in Chalet Village for 24 years.
“We were told when we bought it, yeah, there was a usage fee for the facilities,” he said.
Martin’s cabin burned in November’s fire. He plans to rebuild next year, but thinks it’s unfair that owners of destroyed houses, who obviously aren’t using the recreation facilities, should have to pay while the assessment is optional for others. For many years Martin rented out his cabin, and only his tenants used the recreation areas; it wasn’t until he began living there himself that he looked more closely at the HOA agreement.
There are 678 lots in North Chalet Village, of which about 560 have — or had — houses, Martin said. Of those lots with houses, the assessment is only mandatory for about 340, written into their deeds, he said. Even among the mandatory fees, prices vary — but depending on when people signed up, not how many people are likely to use the facilities, Martin said.
Multiple recent calls to the HOA office, as concerns began growing among neighbors, were not answered or returned. But a few months ago Tamie Sentz, manager of the Ski Chalet Village Owners’ Club, as the HOA is officially known, spoke to a USA TODAY Network Tennessee reporter. She said the assessment on some lots is optional unless residents want to use recreation facilities, while it is mandatory on others.
“It’s the land,” Sentz said. “It’s not the home on it, it’s the land that’s assessed.”
That’s why Chalet Village still expects people to pay even though they lost houses, according to Sentz. All the money goes toward managing the association’s three recreational facilities, which include swimming pools, she said.
Regarding Chalet Village property owners who said they didn’t know about the HOA fees, Sentz said they should have asked those questions when they signed their papers.
Stephanie and Donald Isakson had a vacation and rental cabin in Chalet Village North for about five years. The Isaksons always have paid the HOA membership fee of $15, and the annual assessment of $291, Stephanie Isakson said.
Their cabin burned down in November, like many others.
“We have a cleared lot now,” she said. But she still got a bill for the annual assessment, due by March 31; she isn’t certain whether it’s written into her deed. Isakson said she’s not sure why the HOA wants money from people whose property in Chalet Village is obviously unusable.
She provided a letter which accompanied the bill: “Please understand that this letter is difficult to send knowing and understanding the losses you all have experienced,” it says. “However, we are bound by the covenants and restrictions in good times and bad.”
USA Today Network Tennessee reporter Travis Dorman contributed to this report.