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WHITTIER - For 61 years, the Friendly Hills Homeowners Association held social events, mediated over home improvements, worked with the city on area home developments and even dealt with traffic issues.
For the most part, these were non-controversial issues or they only affected a few people and the board stayed out of politics.
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A Casa Grande homeowners association was placed in receivership, following allegations that board members drained funds for their own benefit - including what was described as the "theft" of more than $600,000.
Pinal County Superior Court Judge Robert Olson's Sept. 30 order placed a receiver in charge of the Desert Carmel Lot Owners Association.
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Historic Baldwin Hills Estates is located in the southwestern district of Los Angeles overlooking the Los Angeles Basin and is characterized by winding streets beginning with the Spanish address "Don" (meaning "Sir"). One of the wealthiest majority-African American areas in the United States, Baldwin Hills Estates has been home to such celebrities as Ray Charles Tina Turner, Nancy Wilson, Oscar-nominated film director John Singleton, and the late Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley.
Baldwin Hills is named for Elias "Lucky" Baldwin a San Francisco hotelier and one of Los Angeles' most wealthy and prominent land owners and financiers. Development of the Baldwin Hills Estates began in the early 1950s. In 1954, the Baldwin Hills Estates Homeowners Association was established to allow residents an...
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- Grace United Methodist Church, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. City of Cheyenne; City of Cheyenne Board of Adjustment; Dorothy Wilson, City of Cheyenne Development Director; Cheyenne City Council, Defendant-Appellees, Mountview Park Homeowners' Association, Defendant-Intervenor-Appellee, United States of America, Plaintiff-Intervenor-Intervenor, the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, Amicus Curiae., 451 F.3d 643 (10th Cir. 2006)
Stephen H. Kline, of Kline Law Office, Cheyenne, Wyoming (Michael D. Basom, Attorney for City of Cheyenne, Cheyenne, Wyoming, on the brief), for the D...
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A bill being pushed by a homeowners association trade group is being touted as the solution to the annual glut of legislation seeking to limit the types of restrictions the neighborhood management groups can place on residents.
Gone would be the days of lawmakers deciding whether HOAs should be allowed to prevent homeowners from flying American flags or installing solar panels or to curtail parking on public streets, lobbyist Kevin DeMenna said
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Real Property: Execution Sale - Inadequate Price - Bona Fide Purchaser
Pleasant Hollow Homeowners Association v. Webster (MLW No. 59177/ Case No. ED91822 - 5 pages) (Missouri Court of Appeals, Eastern District, Romines, J.)
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GLENDORA - The palms on Palm Drive are gone.
The trees that towered above the main thoroughfare to the gated community had outgrown their welcome, creating a rift between neighbors who okayed their removal and those who wanted them saved. Workers cut the trees down Monday.
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It's a rarity in this world: a homeowners association that welcomes a developer's plans to build or develop additional single- family and patio homes in an established community.
But it does happen. Last November, for example, history was made when Rob Monday, president of Eagle Development, worked with city planners and the boards of the Mountain Shadows Community Association and the Pinon Valley Neighborhood Association to iron out issues surrounding a 48.62-acre, mixed-use development at Tuscan Foothill Village.