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I live in a Condo in the state of Florida. Our Board of Directors has been complacent for 12+ months about known structural problems. The city has now become involved and is requiring that these problems get resolved immediately. (This is a good thing because I want to live in a safe environment and retain my property value.) Here's the thing; the board has now assessed 6+ million on the ownership here. 388 owners divided by 6,000,000. equals approx 15, 500.00 each unit!!!. We are average, middle-class citizens who don't have this type of money. Are there any legal options against the board for their failure to act for so long? Can anyone out there be an advocate? Will the state get involved from a legal/funding standpoint? Don't get me wrong: I want my home fixed...but I also believe that the Board should be held accountable for NOT acting; and I know the fees would be less had they acted in a timely manner.

2006-06-15 11:34:02 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

The folks to contact on this issue are the Department of Business and Professional Regulation - Division of Florida Land Sales, Condominiums and Mobile Homes:
http://www.state.fl.us/dbpr/lsc/index.shtml

There is also a section of the State of Florida website devoted to other housing-related groups and issues:
http://www.stateofflorida.com/Portal/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=48

You may be able to find more assistance there.

Hope this helps!

2006-06-16 01:53:15 · answer #1 · answered by extremenerd 7 · 1 0

that's the #a million reason to no longer stay in a residence or subdivision with regulations and bylaws. because of the fact the residence residing house proprietor's association has bylaws and regulations, in case you go with for to stay there, you could desire to conform or they're going to evict you. would not be counted if it is owned by a chum or no longer. you would be kicked out, trouble-free and easy. those are the varieties of regulations that inform you the place to park, what shade you could paint, what you could have outdoors and the place. combat the residing house proprietor's association and you will lose, trouble-free and easy. they have their rules recorded on the sign up of Deeds, and once you moved in and signed the hire, you agreed to the words of the regulations. Sorry.

2016-12-08 09:30:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have A leased person that lives here can they change this to not to lease anymore?

2015-12-21 21:08:27 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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