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On Jul 22, 4:30 pm, KC4UAI wrote:
On Jul 21, 11:07 pm, wrote: On Jul 17, 4:17 pm, KC4UAI wrote: On Jul 16, 7:45 pm, wrote: On Jul 16, 3:30 pm, Michael Coslo wrote: (insert standard "not a lawyer" disclaimer HERE) Same for me... I'm not a RE lawyer either... I'm not any kind of lawyer. looking at the legal process that went on before I purchased my house, this isn't going to work. The CC&R's are actually recorded for the whole property before it was plated and sold to the developer. Well, there goes that idea in your case. But in others it may work. There are over 300 lots in my subdivision and for the developer to except one of the lots, he would have to own them all, remove the restrictions on them all and reapply them to all but one. Maybe. Even if he bought them all, he may not have the right to repeal the restrictions. It depends on the exact wording. HOA rules are another issue completely, but the same approach may work. In my case the HOA rules are spelled out in the CC&R's (for the most part). They have some latitude in some areas of appearance, but not a lot. My CC&R's actually specify the maximum heigth of the grass in you yard. Think why that is..... Get a lawyer BEFORE you need one. Having all the "I's" dotted and "T's" crossed legally is the best way to proceed. By the time you need one, it's going to be too late. I look at it differently. Unless you are an RE lawyer yourself, assume you need one. The cure is for lots of people to write Congress and get them to order FCC to expand the OTARD preemption. FCC has clearly said they will do it when Congress tells them to. We can also go to the City, County, and State and ask for preemptive rules for Part 97 antennas. I get the impression that one might have more luck in those venues than in Congress. Probably not. Here's why: The thing about deed restrictions and covenants is that they are considered private contracts. Most governments don't want to bust in on private contracts - or at least that's the excuse they give. The one exception is that you cannot make a valid, legal contract to do something that is clearly illegal. Suppose A hires B to murder C, writes up a contract that they both sign, and A pays B in advance. But then B decides not to do the job. A cannot use the courts to get his money back from C for non-comission of a crime. The OTARD ruling stemmed from the idea that the anti-TV-antenna rules effectively created an illegal cable-TV-provider monopoly, and restricted interstate commerce in doing so. The satellite TV folks had to go all the way to the Supremes to get that ruling, too. As another example, it used to be legal to put all sorts of discriminatory restrictions in CC&Rs as to who you could sell the property to - race, ethnicity, religion, etc. Civil rights and equal housing laws made these illegal. On top of that, the local governments, if they have any sense, will say it's the FCC's area, not theirs, and to go talk to them. I've seen more than one antenna bill get introduced into congress with pretty good support only to get buried in committee and never to be seen again. I don't see that changing anytime soon. What is "pretty good support"? How many hundred thousand letters to Congress supporting it? 40 miles a day in a small car is maybe $6 in gas.... Compared to my current 6 mile/day bill of $0.60 using that car is pretty expensive. I'm also 6'7" so it's kind of hard to find a car I can fit into and get good mileage.. But we are moving off track. Maybe not. One of the big problems we have in the USA is that we're overdependent on rubber-tire, fossil-fuel-powered transportation. Consider your 300- unit development - does it include a shopping center you can walk or bike to? Or does almost anything require a car or truck ride? Too much of our country is designed around the automobile, which leads to all sorts of problems. But it doesn't have to be that way - look at Portland Oregon for how things could be. (And it didn't used to be that way - towns and suburbs used to be built so that a car wasn't an absolute necessity). Say the HOA doesn't like the current color of your fence. You live on a fixed income and cannot paint the fence but the ACC changed the rules and now your fence is unacceptable. HOA eventually assess fines, charging you for each day the fence is not painted. They file leans on your property to secure the debt and you could loose your house, all because the "rules" changed and you didn't agree to the change. Good point. I wonder if it could be argued that such rules effectively create a monopoly for the paint company that makes the approved kind of paint? Part of the problem is that a lot of folks don't really know what they're getting into when they buy. Some do but the fine details about what can happen would be lost on most of us. In Texas things get pretty crazy. I've read a case where a guy got a lot with deed restrictions that didn't allow "mobile homes". He started to have a pre-fab modular home built on the lot and got hauled into court by the HOA for trying to install a "mobile home". He ended up loosing the case after nearly 5 years of having a half completed house he couldn't live in. Paid substantial fines too. Crazy Texas courts where they attempt to take the most liberal interpretation in favor of the HOA they can. The fundamental problem was that he was doing something they didn't like. That's the key issue and the key question: why didn't they like the prefab modular home? Friend of mine bought into such a place, and after some time discovered that the upstairs windows leaked. The construction was rather slipshod IMHO but caulk had worked for a couple of years. But now he had a major job to fix the problem. Oh, I know how that goes. My dad made the mistake of getting the windows changed without consulting the HOA. Hooo Boy, what a mess that was. My friend dotted all the Is and crossed all the Ts. Point is, it cost him a lot more because he had to get the exact approved windows and such; he couldn't get the windows he wanted. Could that be a monopoly, again? I got a letter from the HOA telling me to mow my lawn... OK, but I had proof that my lawn was being mowed each week for the entire summer (can you say cancelled checks to the lawn care guys) and I'm sure the yard wasn't getting out of hand enough to warrant a nasty letter from the HOA in a week. But how long was it? The rules go by the length, not how often it's mowed. Also, I don't dare try and "hide" a stealth antenna in plain sight. It's like the SS is driving around looking for a justification for the high fees the management company charges. For some reason they can see 18 gauge bare copper coming off the back of my house heading for the back fence. (Oh yea, I got a letter on that one too.) I could barely see it from the street, knowing it was there. SHEESH! Has anybody had any success with getting an HOA to allow this kind of thing, in spite of the clear restrictions in the CC&R’s? I'm afraid the problem there would be that the HOA would hide behind the CC&Rs, saying their hands are tied. And they'd be telling the truth. --- I can think of one thing hams could do - a sort of "guerilla theatre", as it were. (Perhaps I listened to Arlo Guthrie's "Alice's Restaurant" a few times too many when I was younger....) Suppose that a developer is having an open house or similar promotion (expect a lot of them with the RE market the way it is). And suppose a lot of nicely-dressed radio amateurs and their spouse show up to look. They act eager and interested, comment on how nice everything is, and how the place is just what they are looking for and well within their price range. They start talking about preapproved mortgages, where the furniture will go and what kind of drapes they'll install, plus how much cash is in the checking account to make the deposit. Then they pull out a big measuring tape and start measuring the yard. The agent will ask what they are doing, and they say they're figuring out where the amateur radio antennas will go. "There's no rule against them, right?" they ask. Of course the agent will have to tell them the truth, because of disclosure laws. As soon as the agent says "no antennas", they put all the literature down, roll up the tape, say "Thanks but no thanks, we wouldn't live here if you gave us the house", get in their car and drive away. If one person does it, they'll think it's an oddity. If a few people do it, they'll look into it. If a lot of people do it, they may think it's a movement, and get the message. Waddya think? 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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