Monday, December 1, 2008

CONDO AGE RESTRICTIONS IN AN ERA OF REAL ESTATE BUST

The following article extracted from the Wall Street Journal will prove interesting:

REF:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122809427244267951.html




Thanks to Lona O'Connor of the Palm Beach Post for the reference.

What is your Association doing to deal with this problem

Dave Israel
----------------------------------------------------------------

DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla

For Sheldon Behr, buying a condo in Century Village East has meant the chance to live out his retirement years with other older adults who enjoy golf, long walks and comedy nights at the clubhouse. But with the financial crisis deepening and the housing market stalled, a growing number of units at the 55-and-over community are lying vacant.

Some residents are now considering the once unthinkable: letting younger people in -- a proposition that has pitted neighbor against neighbor. "We don't want someone to come in and suddenly have a flock of kids," says Mr. Behr, 65 years old, who opposes the move. "That'll destroy our village forever."


At "active adult" developments across the U.S., residents are debating whether to scrap the age restrictions that have helped define their way of life for almost five decades. Proponents of "age desegregation," as it's known in the industry, say opening the doors to people under 55 is the only way their once-idyllic enclaves can stay afloat amid a worsening economic climate.

From Florida to Arizona, condos are sitting idle as potential buyers find themselves stuck, unable to sell their houses and relocate. Residents of one New Jersey 55-plus development are living next to open foundations, with only 32 of 175 planned homes sold. And with retirement accounts hammered by the investment markets' plunge, people living in these communities are falling behind on homeowners' dues and scaling back on clubhouse activities.

But desegregation is nonetheless a hard sell among some residents of these developments, who say the change would ruin the dream they bought into in the first place. An influx of younger residents could also affect relations with surrounding neighborhoods. Municipalities have long favored developments for retirees because they don't require additional services like schools.

"Towns see these people as contributing to the tax base but not costing the community so much," says William Frey, a demographer with the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. "But there is a whole host of ancillary services that go with having lots of young children and teenagers. Then, you're talking about a significant increase in municipal expenses."

No one is predicting that age-restricted living will disappear entirely. But the financial downturn could be the tipping point that forces some places to reinvent themselves.

Many of these communities had already been struggling with declining sales as aging baby boomers either postpone retirement or opt to retire elsewhere. Last year, about 1.1 million households could be found in active-adult settings, down from 1.8 million in 2001, according to the National Association of Home Builders. And in a recent survey by AARP, the membership group for older Americans, almost nine in 10 people said they don't want to move at all in retirement; instead, they want to "age in place."
Retirement communities were popularized in the early 1960s by real-estate entrepreneurs like Del Webb, whose Sun City developments promoted the idea of a leisure-filled lifestyle specifically for older adults. In Arizona, California and Florida, retirees lined up to buy one-story villas bordering golf courses.

Usually run by elected boards of homeowners, these communities have spread to the Midwest and Northeast in recent years. They usually offer activities geared toward retirees, feature strict rules about homes' appearances, and have their own security staff and volunteer "posses" to keep an eye out for violations.

Typically, 80% of residents in active-adult communities must be at least 55 years old to meet federal regulations that allow developments to exclude children. (Many neighborhoods have rules requiring one household member to meet the age requirement.) Some enjoy low taxes. Residents of Sun City, a retirement community in Sun City, Ariz., for instance, don't pay city taxes because the development is technically unincorporated. They also pay relatively low school taxes, making their overall tax burden one-half to two-thirds lower than people in nearby towns, according to the Arizona Department of Commerce.

Last year, residents of the nearby Sun City Grand in Surprise, Ariz., voted to lower their age requirement to 45 from 55 -- though children under age 19 still aren't allowed as permanent residents.
The board of the 9,802-unit development, built in 1996, "felt like it would help our community financially in many areas," says Meda Cates, membership director for the Sun City Grand Community Association. "As people grow older, they stay home more. They don't golf, they don't use the facilities or the restaurants."


John Longabaugh, a city councilman who lives in the development, puts it this way: "If everybody's 80, nobody's using the two weight rooms."
Since Sun City Grand relaxed its age restrictions, the community has drawn people like Tom Butler, 48, a kitchen designer, and his wife, Jill, who is 53. The place popped up on their radar a year ago, when Ms. Butler visited her daughter-in-law's grandparents, who live in the community. She says she was "totally charmed by it," and drawn to the "plethora of activities." This fall, the couple bought one of Sun City Grand's "Casita" models, a ranch-style home with a pool and a guest house. "Sometimes, people look at us and say, 'You're not old enough to be here,' " says Ms. Butler. "But we take it as a compliment."

No one tracks the number of active-adult communities that are lowering their age limits or dropping them altogether. But developers and homeowners' associations say it's becoming the strategy-of-last-resort the longer homes sit vacant. Leisure World in Mesa, Ariz., has loosened its age requirements, and the homeowners' association at Arizona Traditions, another development in Surprise, is mulling whether to lower the minimum age to 45. In New Jersey, the age restrictions have been lowered or dropped for at least nine new projects, while an additional 10 planned developments were scrapped altogether, says Jeffrey Otteau, president of Otteau Valuation Group Inc., a real estate market-analysis firm in East Brunswick, N.J.

At the Esplanade in Hudson, Mass., near Boston, people 55 and older can buy two-bedroom condominiums for about $250,000. Movies play on a big-screen TV in the common area on Saturday nights, regular groups play dominoes, and there are leaf-peeping outings to New Hampshire.

But since it broke ground in 2005, only two-thirds of the Esplanade's 140 units have been sold. The company has recouped $20 million of its $32 million in construction costs, says Joanne Foley, the attorney for MP Development LLC, which built the Esplanade. So last March, MP petitioned the town of Hudson to allow it to sell condos there to younger buyers.
Lou Tagliani, a 67-year-old retired physicist, is among the residents who have spoken out against the plan. He and his wife moved into the Esplanade because "we want to live with people our own age and interests," he says. Bringing in younger people "would change the general complexion of the community."

So far, homeowners in Mr. Tagliani's camp are winning: Hudson's town government in September denied the developer's request, saying that changing the rules would be unfair to residents who already had purchased units. In an effort to stave off an appeal by the developer to state officials, residents are hosting open houses and tours for prospective buyers their own age. Ms. Foley says relaxing the rules wouldn't harm the community, but so far, MP has no plans to appeal.

In Century Village, the three-decades-old retirement development in Deerfield Beach, some units are empty because grown children who inherited them can't sell them. Kenneth Barnett, the treasurer for the village management, says often the families don't pay the insurance or the monthly dues, which amount to about $5,000 a year for each unit.

The community is composed of 254 white stucco condominium buildings, nearly all governed by their own board of directors. Those boards are generally allowed to approve sales to people under age 55. Until recently, such sales were almost unheard of. But with two-bedroom condos that would have sold for $120,000 two years ago now as low as $40,000, younger people living in the area are now trying to move in, and are arguing their cases to condo boards.

Martin Cohen, an 88-year-old retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and resident of Century Village, voices common concerns about younger people moving in: "They speed. They use Century Boulevard as a race track," he says. But some buildings have decided they prefer that scenario to empty units.

Roy Landesman, an 89-year-old retired door-hinge salesman from New York, says 10% of the units in his condominium building are vacant. So his building is letting younger families move in; he now has a neighbor in her 20s. Century Village East's Master Management, which maintains the development, including its 16 swimming pools and 765 acres of palm trees and canals, "doesn't like it, but I don't care what they say," Mr. Landesman says.

Donna Capobianco, president of Master Management, says the community is financially viable as it is, and that there are many older retirees who want to move into Century Village, but who are waiting for prices to drop even more.

A 'Natural Way' to Live
Newer retirement communities could go the way of Pine River Village, originally sold as a 55-plus development in Lakewood, N.J. Over the past three years, hundreds of potential buyers had joined the waiting list for Pine River, but by this November, only 32 houses had been sold of the 175 that were planned. The developer, Ralph Zucker, appealed to Pine River's residents a few months ago to agree to let him eliminate age restrictions from the rest of the development, which they did. Now, he is trying to persuade the town to approve the plan.

Lakewood Mayor Raymond Coles says that township officials are sympathetic, but they are trying to sort out whether it's legal to change the zoning because the project is part of a redevelopment zone that specifically called for senior housing.

Residents have spoken up at public meetings in favor of the request. They say they realize that Mr. Zucker can't maintain the development, with its fitness center, indoor pool with a retractable roof, and elaborate landscaping, without monthly dues from more residents. They also worry that unless dozens of houses are built on the vast expanse of cleared land they can see out their windows, their property values could slide; they paid between $350,000 and $700,000 for their houses. Their monthly homeowner's association fees of $260 a month, based on 175 houses, could also climb sharply.

Some are tired of living in a construction zone. Mordechai and Hadassah Goodman moved to Pine River in February after retiring from Chicago to be closer to children and grandchildren. But as the finishing touches were being put on their home, construction in the rest of the community was grinding to a halt. Their manicured lawn borders acres of plowed-up dirt, cinder-block outlines of future homes, and 9-foot-deep foundations on otherwise vacant lots.

"I was out here playing football with one of the grandchildren -- and kicked the ball right into [an open] basement," says Mr. Goodman, a 71-year-old retired math professor.

To ease residents' concerns, Mr. Zucker has agreed to group younger buyers on one side of the village, create separate entrances, and plant shrubbery -- or even build a fence -- in between, if the plan is approved.
Some of Pine River's residents acknowledge that they're having to adjust their expectations for retirement. Mrs. Goodman, 64, says she's now looking forward to having younger neighbors: "It seems like a more natural way to live."

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Stop terrorizing the unit owners with your "problems".

The Nutmegger said...

Anonymous 11:43AM is a
prime example of the
Blog that I posted this
morning regarding losing
my sparring partner.

ANONYMOUS USED THE WORD
TERRORIZING BUT HE IS
HIDING BEHIND ANONYMOUS.

Anonymous said...

I understand the pressure to open up, but CV WPB was really not designed for the under 55 crowd, especially those with families. The attraction of CV to many under 55 is probably just inexpensive (cheap) purchases and rentals.

Anonymous said...

I agree with Anonymous 11:43. Why don't you, Ed and Ken spend your time making life easier for us. Save your "the sky is falling" mentality for the national ecomonic situation
$25 TRILLION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
where the sky truly is falling. We want some peace in our old age.

UCO President said...

Hi All,
I am sorry that some find Information terrorizing.

The article from the Wall Street Journal, one of the most respected Financial Newspapers in the World; treats a situation which is our problem.

Real Estate is moving very slowly in CV and at greatly reduced prices; hundreds of owners cannot make their payments, the start of finding the solution to any problem begins with Information.

If this sort of news article disturbs you, please do not read it.

Thanks,
Dave Israel

Anonymous said...

I would like to have the age limit to 50 year olds. however being here only partime still would not be in favor of children because
I don't miss having a ball breaking my window, or the dumping of a basketball or children running into the streets' etc. etc.
We also may find out wednesday at the meeting on payment's how we are doing here in the present state of our trully bad economic situation. I agree with Dave that info should be provided on this blog. I also agree with Paul Stroble only on the peace and quiet
we inspire to, but we can't seem to ignore in these trouble times
in yes the autumn of our Lives.
I see it, hear it, and trully feel it when I get the calls from the North, from Family and Friends!!!!
Yes maybe I can limit my information sourses, but not the Calls from family and friends, and
90% of it is $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$,
very sad but true!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I for one couln't afford to live outside these gates, but appreciate
many blessings I have received.
BEST TO ALL IN THIS HOLIDAY SEASON
and A HEALTHY NEW YEAR!!!!!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Giacomo,
Any association can permit a LIMITED number of units to be occupied by persons under 55 years of age and still qualify as a 55+ community. Each association is considered a "community" under State Law and the Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA). Many associations have been doing this for years and and have remained qualified as a 55+ community under State and Federal Law. No change in the Bylaws are necessary as long as the legal requirements under Chapter 760.29(Florida Statutes) and the Federal requirements under The Fair Housing Act are being met.
Anyone interested in learning the "ins and outs" of this subject would do well to read the HOPA guidelines. It is a lengthy read, but well worth the time if you"re interested.

http://www.hud.gov/offices/fheo/library/hopa_final.pdf

Anonymous said...

Randall As usual thanks to you for providing info, and by your knowledge of these facts done by you thru research has given us the the guide to further us to learn facts concerning 55+ Condo Living.
Here is a fact I would like to present to others who read or participate to this blog,and I can't name them all but Dave, Randall,Ken, ED, are doing a Monumental Task in giving info to this Village and beyond it's gates.
I also feel the participation of our UCO Officers and Volunteers
could and should contribute to this blog?let us understand all these problems are being felt by
all and everywhere.To all who puts thoughts to print on this Blog
I admire an appreciate being able
to stay in comunication with you!!

Anonymous said...

Dave makes a good point noting that some at CV are having trouble making maintenance payments, etc. A quick look at some of the buildings in disrepair across from the medical building is troubling. However, does under 55 or under 50 mean more money for CV?

Anonymous said...

Picruise,
There is no substitute for a competent and caring board of directors who will properly budget their association's projected expenses, including the full funding of reserves (my opinion), and the maintenance and repair of their building(s).
When units remain empty for years, and assessment delinquencies and foreclosures are on the rise, it may be time to think of additional options. Some buildings let their associations go to the dogs... literally, which seems to have raised their property values and reduced unit vacancies. I am in way condoning this approach as a fast fix for our economic woes, nor am I advocating that associations abandon their housing for older persons status by amending their documents. I do advocate the provision of an adequate budget and good condominium management. Who knows, maybe the time for the consolidation of associations is drawing near.

Anonymous said...

The over 55 senior community has much merit going for it. You have the choice of purchasing or not purchasing in such a development. The current real estate crises crosses every type of community, and is not specific to ours. This crises shall pass and leave us with what we all chose, a nice over 55 active community. The cycle always turns.

Anonymous said...

I was born after the depression however we in this country do not seem to realize the severity of these times I for one have a very bad feeling of what is going to happen in the next year or two,.
I pray and hope our new President
can unify all Americans to all work together if he does then I can see a beginning that will make all of us proud. Osama Bin Laden stated years ago he was going to
bankrup this country because he knew by our ways of corruption, fraud, and downrigth stealing , from every facet of life we helped him achieve his goal, now we must prove to the world we can do better and emerge as a better country. Asking god's blessing but knowing here on earth we must truly
by these acts do it on our own each and everyone of us.

Anonymous said...

Hi, thanks for the link, it was extremely helpful, but did not address the issues of (being over 55 and living with a partner under 55) is there some other link which addresses this issue? Thanks