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Your Letters
Reprint From:
Clear Lake Citizen News
CLCCA NEEDED - LIKE IT OR NOT
April 6, 2000
To the Editor:
We absolutely need the Clear Lake City
Community Association (CLCCA). Over the years, the Board of Trustees
of the CLCCA, Inc. has done a good job in maintaining the quality of life
in Clear Lake City without being overly intrusive. The Board serves
without compensation and deserves our thanks for their commitment to civic
responsibility. It should also be that civic responsibility that reminds
them they are elected to represent the citizens of this community and not
any hidden agendas or special interests or personality conflicts they may
have. Board meetings should be open to anyone who wants to come and
express their opinion regardless of what it is. The action of the Board at
the last meeting to limit discussion to only eight citizens doesn’t
promote openness. The actions of some in the audience at that meeting
weren’t very commendable either. There is no room for personal attacks
or name-calling at a public meeting to discuss our mutual concerns. We are
all in this together, and there must an open and frank interchange between
the Board and the citizens conducted in a civil manner.
The letter from Mr. Robert G. Musgrove
in the March 22, 2000, Citizen Opinion Section was very appropriate. We
absolutely need the CLCCA, Inc. to fairly and strongly enforce our deed
restrictions to community standards in order to maintain our property
values. But at the same time, it is the "deed restrictions" that
must be enforced, not some arbitrary or temporal interpretation of them.
We absolutely do not need the Board to try and enforce arbitrary and
subjective extensions to our deed restrictions that may be crafted by a
few and enforced by fewer still. Such embellishments, whether they be
called "maintenance guidelines", "policy statements",
"rules and regulations", or whatever are left to the whim of the
Board. The Board is composed of short-term incumbents who may arbitrarily
create or change such documents at their will without citizen approval.
The Board may not change deed restrictions without a binding vote of the
majority of the property owners.
If you are a resident in the CLCCA,
please go and find your copy of the deed restrictions you received when
you closed on your home. If you can’t find them, they are available at
the CLCCA, Inc. Office at the Recreation Center, 16511 Diana Lane. They
are also available at the Freeman Memorial Library in the Reference
Section. Please read them. You will find nothing about faded paint, or
cracked driveways, or mildew, or Christmas decorations that have been up
too long, or some of the numerous other "apparent deed
restriction" violations that you may have been accused of in a letter
from the CLCCA, Inc. Such "violations" are a result of this and
various past Board of Trustees’ attempts to clarify or interpret the
current deed restrictions by passing various policy statements or
guidelines. Their motives may well have been altruistic and in our best
interests, but they also may well have been uninformed. If our current
deed restrictions are indeed outdated or vague or do not reflect current
community standards, there is a lawful means to change them. It is
contained in your copy of your deed restrictions. It requires a majority
of the property owners to approve any amendments. The very last time I
looked, we still live in America, and like it or not, the majority rules.
And like it or not, we absolutely need the CLCCA, Inc. to enforce APPROVED
deed restrictions.
If you have any comments about deed
restrictions or their enforcement, please contact one of your Trustees
or come to the next Board meeting and express your opinion. That meeting
is supposed to be held on April 18, at 7:00PM in the meeting room next to
the CLCCA, Inc. Office at 16511 Diana Lane
J.T. Chapman
Clear Lake City
e-mail jtchapmaniii@msn.com
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