Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Woodmen Hills Metro District' Tag

HOA’S $50 PARKING FINE BALLOONS INTO THOUSANDS

December 22nd, 2012, 12:01 pm by

                                                                           UPDATE — UPDATE —- UPDATE

In 2009, I introduced Side Streets readers to Ron Pace under a headline: “Pace is loose!”

In the column, I reported that a judge had described him as loud, profane and even annoying.

But the judge had sided with Pace in his battle over neighborhood covenants and assorted other issues with the Woodmen Hills Metro District, which has been a mess for years with its seemingly constant bickering, infighting, recalls and failed efforts to expand powers and fees.

At the time, Pace declared he was sick of the fighting. The disabled vet vowed to sell his house on the sixth fairway of the Antlers Creek Golf Course in unincorporated Falcon, northeast of Colorado Springs, and move.

I figured it would be the end of the story.

As usual, I was wrong.

Pace, 48, never did sell.

Instead, he stayed and remained a vocal critic of Woodmen Hills officials. He fought them over the way they enforce rules, conduct district business and more.

He probably should have moved. If so, he’d have saved thousands.

Pace and his wife are facing about $5,000 in legal fees  after he lost a fight over a restraining order filed against him in 2011 by a homeowners association manager who felt threatened by him.

But that’s only the half of it.

Pace and his wife again are preparing to go to court  in February over a $50 parking violation issued by the Filing 11 HOA that has ballooned to $4,600.

“My truck was parked on the side of my house like I’ve parked it since 2006,” Pace said. “They said it was eight to 18 inches past the front corner of our house and that’s not allowed.”

Seems outrageous to think any HOA would fine someone over such a petty infraction.

On Monday, Jan. 14, 2013, I heard from a Woodmen Hills Filing 11 HOA official who explained the HOA board’s side of the story.

Chris Galloway, vice president of the HOA, said the property manager noted the parking violation during a semi-monthly enforcement survey of the neighborhood.

Galloway said Pace was not singled out and easily could have remedied the violation without any fine.

“The first time we send a courtesy letter saying please take care of this,” Galloway said. “Then we send a warning letter. Finally, we send a third letter which is a fine ranging from $25 to $50.”

So how did it reach $4,600?

Galloway said Pace declined to deal with the HOA management company after his restraining order defeat. Instead, he called the HOA’s attorney directly.

“They warned him he’d incur attorneys fees personally,” Galloway said. “He circumvented the system.”

Of course, Pace sees it as a vendatta and, when we spoke in December, he declared: “This is retaliation.” Typically, he barked it, punctuated with profanity.

It’s this type of gruffness that has made some people who manage Woodmen Hills and serve on its board scared of Pace. They feel threatened by him. And he is prone to making veiled threats.

In his defense, some HOAs get out of control. Power-hungry board members sometimes punish people they don’t like and, as the judge in 2009 said, Pace isn’t always very likeable.

Once this latest mess is resolved, he has vowed again to leave.

“As soon as my kid graduates in the spring, I’m outta here,” he said. “I’ll be happy to leave.”

For everyone’s sake, I hope so.

Life is too short to spend it worried whether your truck is parked 18 inches too far from the house.

Follow this link to my Nov. 18, 2009, column about Ron Pace and Woodmen Hills.

To read an associated blog post about that column, click here.

For more information about Woodmen Hills, read this blog.

 

===================================================

 

WILL WOODMEN HILLS COVENANTS EVER BE ENFORCED?

October 23rd, 2011, 11:31 am by
Woodmen Hills is a subdivision of about 2,200 homes in Falcon, an unincorporated community northeast of Colorado Springs along U.S. Highway 24.

.

NO, is the answer to the headline if a determined group of Woodmen Hills residents get their way.

The Woodmen Hills Metro District wants the El Paso County Commission to give it the authority to enforce covenants in filings 1-10 of the subdivision in unincorporated Falcon, northeast of Colorado Springs.

Only the 900 homes in filing 11 have a homeowners association enforcing covenants. The other 1,200 homes, in filings 1-10, have covenants attached to their homes but no active HOA to enforce them.

And that’s the way many seem to like it.

When the metro district began enforcing them in 2008, resident Chuck Warne led a group of residents who sued to stop.

 

.

A recreation center in Woodmen Hills.

In May 2009, a district judge slam-dunked the  Metro District.

Then, in June 2010, the Court of Appeals upheld the judge’s decision.

Case closed, right? Ha!

The metro district is determined to get authority to resume policing violations of covenants — rules governing parking, landscaping, fences, trailers and such.

On Thursday, they tried to convince the El Paso County Commission to give it the authority as part of a new “service plan” it is seeking.

The proposed service plan also would allow the district to raise its maximum debt authorization to $53 million from its current $16.2 million cap. And it would give the district a maximum mill levy of 60 mills. I found it interesting the covenant issue generated the most controversy.

Residents lined up to denounce the metro district and its previous efforts at enforcing covenants and to plead with the five commissioners to strip the provision from the service plan.

Among those testifying was Chuck Warne, who moved to Woodmen Hills in 2003 and sued in 2008 to stop the enforcement.

“You’ve got a very small group of people trying to impose their will on the majority of people,” Warne said. He said if residents want covenant enforcement, they can do it themselves.

“It’s up to the residents themselves if they want covenant enforcement,” he said. “They can create an HOA under their home rule powers. We don’t need the Metro District involved. They don’t listen to the people. They don’t care.”

Larry Bishop

Before Thursday’s hearing, Metro District manager Larry Bishop said many residents want covenants enforced and his board is responding to that demand.

“There’s a misunderstanding about whether the metro district is going to become a dictatorship and force covenant enforcement down peoples’ throats,” he said. “Voters will decide. It will be a simple ballot question: Shall covenants be enforced in this filing?”

I’ve spoken to folks in Woodmen Hills who would welcome the proposed vote in May 2012 and the enforcement of covenants.

They say there are too many RVs and trailers parked on the streets and other issues.

But it was enforcement horror stories that got the attention of commissioners Amy Lathen and Darryl Glenn last week.

“We’ve heard outrageous examples of abuse,” Lathen said, adding that she’s never gotten a request for enforcement from Woodmen Hills residents. “But I’ve heard many complaints.”

The commission delayed action until December. I’m guessing whatever the decision, the fight will go on.

Here’s a link to an independent Woodmen Hills Info website.

To read briefs filed in the appeal, click here.

Follow this link to the Court of Appeals decision upholding the judge’s decision.

The attorneys for the metro district wrote this letter explaining their position.

==============================================================