Showing posts with label CV Operations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CV Operations. Show all posts

Thursday, September 3, 2009

GATE CRASHERS

Hi all,

For reasons beyond my comprehension we have a small number of folks who like to drive through our transponder lane gates without stopping and waiting for the gate to go up!

What is the big hurry? Just a matter of a few seconds, but no; straight through they go.

The video clip above shows a CV unit owner vehicle driving through the gate with no intention whatever of stopping; it is the black car in the right lane, note that the brake light is never even flashed; not even a tap on the brake pedal!!

All unit owners be aware, these gates are monitored by cameras; and most of the time either the guards or the cameras capture the offenders license tag. In short order, the unit owner receives a letter with a demand for $35.00, if the offender stopped and provided his/her ID information.

If the driver flees without stopping; the fee is $80.00. Please, help enhance our security. don't crash the gate!

By the way, until the fee is paid; the unit owner is removed from the Transponder system!

Dave Israel

VP - UCO

..............................................................

Some fine references from Creakyknees:

http://roadragers.com/

http://www.platewire.com/location/?Florida

http://www.zapatag.com/

Dave

Friday, August 14, 2009

UCO Property

Repeating don4060 question:
Q - What exactly is "uco property" and "assn property"? Have these areas and lines been surveyed and marked? Does UCO or the assns have deeds to their respective lands? How does this work? I am interested in the history of this subject. I remember years ago being told that the land under the housing is on a one hundred year lease, hence the name.

A - Pat Blunck @ UCO has detailed maps of CV. Your own bylaw package should have your Survey of the Association Property (see last items on left of blog “Century Village, West Palm Beach, Condominium Documents – Working Aid”).
There has been plenty blog discussion on finding your deeds etc. I will leave it to you to search blog archives if needed, since I am mountain climbing.
http://pbcgov.com/papa/aspx/GeneralSearch/GeneralSearch.aspx
As to history of CV name, I do not know…

Friday, June 19, 2009

A Freedom Tweet

In nine months, we will be able to vote for new (or old) UCO officers. Get to really understand where they stand. Some candidates don't have the ability or education to run for the position they desire. They are presently gathering their groups for support. I suggest, strongly, that you look deeply into every candidate's statements. My experience has been to be careful of those who want to change basic rules, that have been in effect since day one of Century Village. Also, be careful of those who want closed meetings. There should be no secrets between officers and ordinary Century Village residents. We residents are the power, make use of it wisely.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

ANDRE'S QFR - POINT COUNTERPOINT

Hi All,
The following Post by Andre has been stuck in the Draft queue for a week; I do not know why.
Dave.
------------------------------------------------


Hi David, please allow me to follow suit to your June 3rd reply and input some comments after your red comments. Mine will be in this color and I might be using some of the following humorist acronyms in my text.

Since your a crossword wizard you will appreciate I hope... HAHA !!!Andre


V: Very, Various, Village;

I: Important, Intelligent, Interesting;

P: Person, People, President;

V.I.P.: Very Important Person;

V.I.P.: Various Intelligent People;

V.I.P.: Village Interesting President;

VP; Vice President, Village People, Village Payers;

F: Frieda, Fair, F---, the most 4 letter F word used in America;

S.B.: Sal Bummolo, Sam Buco, San Bernardino;

B.S.: Blunck Sal ( one and the same), Bull S--t, Bien-Etre Social ( welfare or dole or Frieda status);






Wednesday June 3rd, 2009
ANDRE'S QFR

Hi All,
Andre has posed some interesting questions in a Comment Stream on the BLOG. Below we will explore them; no doubt there will be some valuable comments and responses. As always, do not shoot the messenger:

My responses will be in red.

Acronym of the day: QFR = Questions for Record!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dave, I am trying to understand the process here.

-1) UCO is fully responsible for all operational cost required by WPRF to maintain the recreational activities of which the lakes and lagoons are part and parcel;
-
Dave: Yes, per the Millennium Amendment to the Long Term Lease, UCO/CV Unit Owners are responsible for all Operational costs of the Recreational Facility.

AV: This obviously includes $ for maintenance. On 03/16/2009 I wrote to Pat Blunck ( as in B.S. above ) ''that UCO was not living up to its obligation as can be attested by the poor condition of the lagoons and its canals ''. He never answered me but i had a number of phone call with S.B. ( As in S.B. above ) who asked me which agreement UCO was not respecting. Please read him the Millennium Amendment to the long term lease as he is a very slow reader since I submitted him the Wellington Lakeshore Improvement Plan ( L.I. P. not above ) on April 14 and he committed to come back to me he never did. So he gave me the LIP service.
-

2) These operational costs are approved by the UCO Operations Committee which is chaired by the President of UCO;
-
Dave: Yes, essentially correct.

AV: This P of UCO must be a VIP ( Select among the 3 definitions above ) because he never answered any of my correspondence on this subject either like the B.S. above. Maybe he is a V.I.P ( select the proper definition here )or a slow reader like B.S. ( be careful and select the proper definition again)

3) Once this approval is given to WPRF, Anita Cruz as the Manager, proceeds to spend that money and reports back to UCO as to the status of the account on a periodic basis;
-
Dave: Yes.

AV: When and where do the VP ( select at least two definitions from above ) happen to see these reports? Being a VP ( I'll help you here, I am the 3rd definition ) snowbird I cannot attend all the meetings taking place in CV ( Century Village is not above ) so please guide me to the responsible VP among the 4 VP at UCO.

Dave: Actually, the entire Operations Committee sees these reports at each meeting of the Operations Committee, which is once and soon to be twice monthly. I am not aware that these reports are further distributed; a fact that needs to be changed, IMHO. Remember this when you vote in March.
-
4) UCO would certainly not be allowed to go into the Hasting Clubhouse and do any type of physical changes to the building without the approval of the owner represented by WPRF;
-
David: Actually, if UCO wished to effect reasonable changes in the Hastings Clubhouse, and if appropriate approval process was followed and was obtained from the Delegate Assemble to provide required funding, then indeed we could make changes in the Hastings Clubhouse or, for that matter, the main Clubhouse. The maxim is simple; “you can have anything you want, as long as you pay for it”

AV:You are telling me that instead of building the Taj Mahal ( UCO OFFICE ) ( please note the capital letters here ) UCO could have simply walk into the Main Clubhouse or Hasting and build there office there? WOW, So simple and all that time I was under the impression that some VIP ( select above ) built the UCO office where it is because some VIP ( Up ) did not get along with the P of WPRF. Correct me if I am wrong.

Dave: I can top that one Andre; would you believe that there was a proposal on the table for WPRF to build a two story building on the site of the Taj Mahal and put WPRF Offices on one floor and rent the other floor to UCO for $1.00 per year? UCO rejected that idea out of hand!

-
Question

1: Under what authority is UCO authorized to restore the lakeshore without any approval from WPRF as stated by Mark Levy in his correspondence to me?
-
Dave: Again, It’s not a matter of approval; rather one of tacit concurrence. Why would WPRF refuse, if the Unit Owners must pay for the work? WPRF states that they have not approved the plan, but It is clear that they are permitting the project to proceed.

AV: David as you know the Wellington lakes and lagoons belong to the Wellington VP ( 3rd definition ). To my knowledge these VP ( 3 above ) were never asked or never gave their tacit or otherwise approval to this process. In fact at the last May Wellington Federation meeting an attempt was made by some VIP of the Federation to can the LIP ( Lakeshore Improvement Plan) and 6 of the 9 building representatives objected thanks to a move by a fine VIP ( 3rd definition ) of Wellington H.
-
Question 2: What tender process is being followed by UCO to spend that kind of money which is held in a separate account by WPRF?
-
Dave: This sort of project is scoped by the Operations Committee and funded through the Operations Budget. This process is clearly described in the Millennium Amendment to the long term lease . Please, everyone reading this diatribe must read the document.
-
REF: http://oris.co.palm-beach.fl.us/or_web1/or_sch_1.asp

Select the Book/Page tab:
BOOK: 11660 PAGE: 1550. Enter as follows: 11660/1550
-

Consider attending the Operations Committee meetings, they are very interesting drama and they spend lots of our money.
-
Question 3: When does the Delegate Meeting (the Board) happens to approve these kind(s) of spending?
-
Dave: Don’t confuse the UCO budget process, approved yearly by the Delegate Assembly, with the WPRF/Operations Budget. Your monthly payment to WPRF consists of two main parts; one part is RENT the other part is MAINTENANCE. Do the arithmetic;

an average $100.00 per month across 7854 Units = $9,424,800.00.

Are we beginning to see the light? Again read the Millennium Amendment.

AV: I see the light but I am wondering if the train is coming or going. I will ask a VIP ( only two of the definitions can apply here )) to help.


Question 4: If WPRF is only holding the money bag and the work is to be executed under UCO sole discretion and authority, why didn’t UCO collected the money directly from the owners through the UCO fees?

Dave: As noted throughout above, because it is an expense for Maintenance of the Recreational Facility per the Millennium Amendment.

AV: No further comments,

-
Question 5; Is there more here to this issue than meets the eyes? Thank you Andre
-
Please be a bit more specific; and please do not shoot the messenger!


Dave Israel

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Fire Be Prepared


Different assoc try different ways. Does Randall have a regulation for this photo. Maybe they saw this video.


I use a lid before a wet cloth, but the water and oil fireball is accurate.

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Sunday, May 17, 2009

Tobacco Road


Outside the Clubhouse are ‘smoke’ and ‘no smoke’ signs. Also at associations and on an elevator. Do associations add regulations to their bylaws? How far do they go! I don't like smoke or signs.

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Friday, May 15, 2009

Tragic Death

In viewing the guest book for Jason Moyer who suffered a tragic
death I feel how cold can the residents of CV be especially the Officers of
Dover B and UCO not sign his guest book giving their sympathy to
his family.

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."

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

CV Guest & Childrens Pool




Here is the other outdoor pool at the Clubhouse - guest/childrens pool, all our pools are so delicious and quiet at this time, they are always worth more photos. (click to enlarge)

Sunday, September 21, 2008

thanks Elaine

thanks - those pix will get me thru until i fly down for a big 2 days in Oct! meanwhile
the packing continues ---my uncle in Georgia was so impressed with the pix I sent him, wants me to hunt up a unit for him ---so i am spreading the word! Imagine, me wanting to leave a city with the highest sales tax in the country! absolutely love you bloggers!

Photos for Mag


Shadows in the clubhouse, resident’s pool at clubhouse.Bring a sweater, the temperatures are falling all the way to mid 80s next week :-)
(
Permission to take photos from A. Cruz)

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Saturday, September 20, 2008

Okeechobee Century Village Sign



Some people are not happy with our west/south gate sign, they feel it does not say ‘welcome to the best of everything’! I think the problem is the overwhelming signs from businesses on Okee Blvd and our lack of frontage.
At least with our current sign it survives trucks, car carriers and other behemoths, and our errant drivers and hurricanes. I think a simple classic sign is fine, (fountains are endless problems).

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Monday, July 14, 2008

Gray skies are gonna clear up


Gray skies are gonna clear up, Put on a happy face
Anyone who is still mad should stay home until they get over it.
Remember anything that comes out of Wednesday is very temporary. When people are calmer there will be a delegate mtg where real decisions for the next few months will be made.
Any UCO replacements on Wednesday should be given a pledge. “I know this is only temporary, I will mend fences wherever I can, I promise to keep UCO running steadily, no tricks no major changes”. I'm sure they will do what is best for the village with due consideration of delegate wishes last Friday.

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

The 3rd Gate and Group Rights

The open the door thread got so far off topic lets start again.
Giacomo said “UCO Officials will have try an make a reasonable solution for those? who may need assistance to go and come”. Anytime you begin a thought with “UCO should” you might as well forget it. Their budget is not going to do it.
Let me say this about catering to individual wishes in CV. It is too big for that!

And we are not an assisted living facility.
We have buses, and benches, and pools, and clubs, etc. OK.
There are laws for the handicapped, that’s fine.
We should not change our ways for religious requests, there are too many religions here.
There are too many people here who think their way is the only way and that they are right all the time. Others come from hard times and are only too happy to have whatever is offered here.
These are condos, its communal living in many ways.

I’m not even going to go into multi-language issues, there are probably laws on that too.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Haverhill Gate, again

Is there any new information on when the Haverhill Gate walls clean up project will begin? As of last week, it looked as bad as ever. Thanks.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Tennis Court Noise

NO WORK ON TUESDAY
Larry must have forgotten the CV Q&A posting Criteria

Author: Larry Kall (---.hsd1.fl.comcast.net)Date: 04-15-08 13:09


I called my Maintenance Company Monday to request that they do some lawn work on Tuesday and was informed that they do not do work near the tennis courts on Tuesday due to a Tennis Court rule. I asked what the rule was and was informed that on Tuesdays there are tennis tournaments and the tennis players do not like the noise of any equipment. I then asked where the rule came from and I was informed that it came from the tennis courts. To say the least I was somewhat amazed at what I was told. In any case I received a call back from my maintenance company that they could indeed come on Tuesday as long as it was after 11 AM when any tournaments would be over.I then advised my maintenance company that our building was not controlled by the tennis courts and I expected them to be there at 9 AM Tuesday to do the required work which they did.MY QUESTION IS -IS THERE SUCH A TUESDAY RULE? WHO HAS THE POWER TO MAKE SUCH A RULE? WHO HAS THE POWER TO ENFORCE SUCH A RULE?
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Why not on Tuesday?
Larry Kall
04-15-08 13:09

Monday, April 14, 2008

CV Association Property Lines

In a post below Larry brings up the question of association property lines (PL).
When I first came to CV I’m sure I was imprinted with the bit of wisdom that all of CV was common land for all residents, even fruit trees were common property (politeness suggested).
When UCO beautifies there are PL.
When someone falls there are PL.
If you have an RV there are PL
If you park in a guest spot sometimes there are PL.
If UCO does erosion control there are no PL.
If you look at a Hasting avocado tree – BOOM.
Some areas have fences, do they really need them?

I don’t have a point I am just trying to keep up.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Guest

If a friend or a member of my family comes for a month long visit , can I get them clubhouse, health club and other activity privileges while the are staying with me. Mike

Thursday, March 27, 2008

WHO OWNS ASSOCIATION PARKING AREAS

Hi All,
There is an incredible controversy swirling on the CV Q & A; hard to believe, given the Published guidlines of that Forum suggesting that "Appropriate" subjects are "Plumbers" "Tile People" and "High School Reunions".

A certain fan of draconian control and regulation would deny us all the right to have visitors who own Motor Homes, RV's and who knows what else would be denied.

What concerns me is the following extract from the thread:

------------------------------------------------------------

Author: Fernando (---.hsd1.fl.comcast.net)Date: 03-27-08 19:48

Larry, you say that the associatons own the land and the parkings lots, i beleived that we rent the land, please correct me if I am wrong.Thanks you for your helpFernando
Reply To This Message

Re: Proliferation of RV's/motor homes

Author:
Larry Kall (---.hsd1.fl.comcast.net)Date: 03-27-08 20:10

I have been told that this is a popular misconception. However, I will defer to some of you other experts out there.

------------------------------------------------------------
This is a classical example of not reading your documents:

Your basic set of documents contain, among other things, a SURVEY of Association Property.

If you will please examine the survey you will find that Larry Kall is absolutely correct in this case;

The Association owns the Parking spaces as part of the Common Element.

Specifically; each Parking space is designated, initially by the Developer and thereafter by the Board of Administration as a Limited Common Element, for the exclusive use of the each Unit Owner.

While for his/her exclusive use, it is not deeded.

Hence, each Association must make rules for the type, and number of vehicles to be parked therein,
just be careful, as Palm Beach County PZB Code Enforcement is always alert for illegal parking area usage.

anyone who cannot locate their Survey, please publish the name of your association in the Comment Stream and I will give you the specific Book and Page, to be found at the Clerk of Court site.

Dave