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Committee Basics For HOAs and Condo Associations

  
  
  
  
  
  

As a volunteer organization, a community association faces the unusual challenge of running a corporation with part-time leadership. Volunteer homeowners have varied experience and limited time to dedicate to their roles. Even with professional managers managing the day-to operations of a condo association, board members are still called upon to fulfill roles for which they do not have the resources (time or experience) and this is where committees can be particularly valuable.

The three types of committees are

  • Mandatory committees
  • Standing committees and
  • Ad-hoc Committees

Mandatory committees such as the Architectural Review Board are specifically named in the governing documents. The Architectural Committee/Review Board is often described in detail in the Declaration. Architectural control is an important component in maintaining the character and quality of a community, and the powers that are given to the architectural body vary significantly from one community to another. In some documents the architectural committee is an advisory body composed of homeowners appointed by the board that makes recommendation to the board of directors. In other communities the board may appoint homeowners to an architectural board thatoperates independently of the board of directors, with full and final authority to render decisions and make rules but with an appeals process to the condo association or HOA board.

Other mandatory committees may also be specified in the declaration or bylaws, such as a Nominating Committee and an Elections Committee, and both play an important part in ensuring that qualified and willing candidates are available for election to vacant board positions at the annual meeting.

The powers of the board usually also include the power to appoint other committees "as the board deems appropriate in carrying out its purpose." These committees may include a Recreation Committee, Maintenance Committee, Communications Committee, Audit Committee or a Grievance Committee. (The grievance committee has traditionally not been one that attracts droves of volunteers!). Such committees are further distinguished based on whether they are a standing committee or an ad-hoc committee.

Standing committees are often identified in the declaration and/or bylaws of the association.

  • They are "function oriented" e.g. an Budget and Finance Committee serves a clearly defined function in the operation of the association.

  • Standing committees remain in force indefinitely.

In contrast, ad-hoc committees

  • Are "task oriented" e.g. a grounds improvement committee may be established to fulfill the task of planning, researching and coordinating installation of new landscaping at the entrance to a community.

  • Cease to exist once the assigned task has been completed.

For any committee to be successful some basic steps should be followed.

  • Determine the authority/basis for the establishment of the committee (refer to the legal documents of the association)

  • Also identify the scope of authority that the committee has to act - are they allocated a budget, can they make decisions independently or do they make recommendations only to the board without authority to act?

  • Clearly define the purpose and function of the committee so that they fulfill a specific need within the association

  • Detail the responsibilities and activities of the committee and its members

  • The composition/structure of the committee should identify how many members it should have, how are they appointed, whether they should be residents, the leadership and voting structure of the committee

  • Identify a timeline for tasks to be completed and the term of the committee's charter (especially for ad-hoc committees)

  • State how many and what kinds of recommendations the committee is expected to deliver to the board

  • Clarify the board's expectations for reports and minutes to be provided to the board at regular intervals so as to ensure clear oversight and communications

  • Create an understanding of the committee's relationship to the manager and how they will be expected to interact

For continued success of committees in your association

  • Be sure to recognize the efforts of the volunteers

  • The board should be prepared to make decisions and act on recommendations brought to them by committees. (Think this through when establishing the committee and defining its purpose).

  • Verify that the association's insurance covers committee members in addition to board members for errors and omissions as well as fidelity insurance.

Often overlooked or under-appreciated, committees are the basic building blocks of a healthy association. Committee member involvement meets the board's goal of fostering a stronger community in several ways. Aside from fulfilling a specific role in the functioning of the association and addressing an identified need, the committee's contributions help the board to fulfill its policy-making role more efficiently by allowing board members to receive necessary input and different viewpoints, while remaining focused on their role of governance.

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Source: Association Times

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Comments

I work at a Medical Condo Association and I took over, initially what would just be the bookkeeping. To my surprise, nothing had been documented or accounted for in over a year and taxes werent even filed for 3 years! Files were everywhere, the condo owners pay their fees whenever they want and worse yet, the person who did it before me was no where to be found. I had to just "figure it out." They only pay $350/month with NO reserve account. I have done a major clean up but being a young woman and NOT a male doctor, its hard for them to take me seriously. I plan to raise the fee $50 per month b/c its been the same amount for over ten years. I work on it day and night in addition to my medical billing job. They pay me $250/MONTH. How much should I be making: What is a fair salary to be asking because I am working too hard for this amount of money and also, where is a good site to find templates or sample letters such as "Rent increase" or "Fee Reminder" letters to send out to the condo owners. I would really appreciate ANY and ALL feedback. Thank you all. 
 
-Stressed out
Posted @ Wednesday, April 01, 2009 6:27 PM by Samantha Kilduff
I think you should ask for more money based on the extra time you are putting in. Keep track of your extra hours and then figure out your hourly rate.
Posted @ Thursday, May 28, 2009 2:52 PM by Roger
This is an informative article.  
 
However, I came across this article while looking for Association Committee 'guidelines'. I don't see anything mentioned in our condo documents about my following question: I need to know: are the committee members allowed to meet in unison (all of them together at one time) or are they restricted as Board members are?
Posted @ Monday, May 02, 2011 9:16 AM by KELLI2L
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Posted @ Wednesday, October 12, 2011 7:18 PM by authentic gucci handbags
my lady lives in a condo community however two of the board members insist on walking the grounds trying to exert power ( which i don't believe they have ) in dictating rules and regulation as they choose. meaning most recently aresident's gas tank started leaking and they scrambled to confine the vleak in vessels. the one member came and said no working on vehicles. they stated the emergency and she replied she didn't want working on auto's because she owned the place. how can this be and how to put an end to this. 
 
Posted @ Thursday, October 20, 2011 8:26 PM by john kovacs
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