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HURRICANE INFORMATION
HURRICANE DISASTER SUPPLY CHECK LIST

​HURRICANE SAFETY AND EVACUATION PROCEDURES
hurricane_aid_-_diasaster_supply_check_list_20220602.pdf
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hurricane_aid_-_hurricane_safety_and_evacuation_procedures_20220602.pdf
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WINTER HAVEN POLICE VACATION PATROL REQUEST FORM
​Following is the link to download the Winter Haven Police Dept. vacation patrol form.  

winter_haven_police_dept_-_vacation_patrol_request_form.pdf
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​THE LAW                        3/8/18
When nobody wants to serve on an HOA board
Dan Rich
Serving on a home­owners association board of direc­tors is a thankless job that often fails to receive the recognition it rightfully deserves.
Sadly, communities sometimes experience a dilemma in which the old board members have served to their term limits and no other volunteers are inter­ested in stepping up to the plate to volunteer their time and effort as a replacement board member. This cre­ates two legal issues: Whether the old "termed out" board members can stay on the board, as well as what happens if nobody is will­ing to serve on the HOA board moving forward.
 
Under Florida law, HOA directors are entitled to serve for their term and until their successor is duly elected. What this means is that if no new directors are willing to volunteer, Florida law permits those people who are already on the board to continue to serve until a replace­ment steps forward to take their position.
 
With that being said, you may be asking yourself whether that means an existing board member is ever able to resign or step down from
their position as a board member? The answer is yes. Any board member at any time can express their intent to resign as a director or an officer, but the resignation might not be without conse­quences because an HOA board needs officers and a quorum to conduct day-to-day business.
The definition of a quorum will change depending on the lan­guage of your govern­ing documents, but the most common quorum definition is generally 51 percent director partici­pation. For example, if an association is made up of a five-member board, a quorum would only be established after three of the board members decided to act. Failure to have enough directors to meet the definition of a quorum under your governing documents will prevent the HOA from being able to hold meetings and conduct meaningful business.
Resignations can also have a grave impact if the person stepping down is not only a direc­tor, but an officer.
Officers of the board include the president, secretary, treasurer and sometimes vice president. The roles and duties of those officers are generally outlined in your association's governing documents and provide each officer with certain abilities and powers. If a direc­tor who is also an officer decides to resign, the vacancy might impact the association's abil­ity to sign checks to pay third parties, access the H0A's bank account or enter into contracts with vendors and other providers.
Up to this point, all scenarios have assumed that at least one director is willing to serve on the board, but what happens when all directors have resigned and nobody is willing to replace them? Section 720.3053, Flor­ida Statutes, provides that "if an association fails to fill vacancies on the board of directors sufficient to constitute a quorum in accordance with the bylaws, any member may give notice of the member's intent to apply to the circuit court within whose jurisdiction the associa­tion lies for the appoint­ment of a receiver to manage the affairs of the association."
There is a particu­lar form for the notice, which is provided in Section 720.3053, that states that the petition to the court will not be filed if the necessary vacancies to establish a quorum are filled with 30 days after the notice is posted or transmitted to all owners. The Florida Legislature added this provision in hopes that the notice will conjure up enough volunteers will to serve on the board to prevent the appoint­ment of a receiver. If the 30-day window expires and nobody steps for­ward, the member who transmitted the notice can then petition the court for a receiver to run the association.
 
compensation, Section 720.3053 provides that the receiver is entitled to receive a salary and reimbursement of all costs and attorneys' fee: payable from association funds. It also goes onto say that the "associa­tion shall be responsible for the salary of the receiver, court costs and Unlike customary directors who take the position without attorneys' fees."
The difference between free volun­teer directors and paid receivers with their accompanying fees can be a large number that has a drastic impact on the reserves of an HOA. Monies reserved for common-area mainte­nance, repairs and just general upkeep could be directed to pay the receiver's salary to run your community. That's never a good idea, as it will inevita­bly take a visible toll on your community.
To prevent receiv­ership from happen­ing, I would encourage everyone who lives in a HOA and is even slightly pondering vol­unteering as a director to strongly consider stepping up and serv­ing as a director the next time your community has an election. Your participation may have a greater impact than you ever realized before.
​

Dan Rich is an attor­ney with the law firm Clark, Campbell, Lan­caster 6 Munson, P.A. in Lakeland
. Questions can be submitted to [email protected].



Important updates for the membership can be submitted to this page ​via email to
[email protected]
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 Following are the work-in-progress pics taken 9-18-18.  Visit our Facebook page for more pictures.
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9-22-18 -- The dock work progress: 
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Dock just about finished as of 10-4-18.  Looks great!  Be sure to check it out.

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