Constitutional Local Governments

INACTIVE BLOG. Please see HOA GOV for latest postings.

My Photo
Name:

I am a nationmally recognized homeowner rights advocate, and author of "Establishing the New America of independent HOA principalities."

Friday, March 17, 2006

Open HOA Questionaire for CAI

Dear Editor of Common Ground,

As I wrote to the legislators, I now address these questions to CAI as a public interest organization that repeatedly lobbies every state legislature, and ask that it respond to these important issues in its upcoming May-June article, "Fear and Loathing Inside the anti-HOA Movement."

HOA reforms needed to guarantee U.S. Constitutional protections
Replacing democratic local governments with authoritarian private governments: Is this good public policy?

At the heart of the matter is the continued replacement of democratic local government, governments subject to the U.S. Constitution and 14th Amendment prohibitions, with contractual, authoritarian private governments that are not subject to the prohibitions of the 14th Amendment.

The two broad prohibitions within this amendment are the equal application of the law and the due process clauses that are not applicable to private agreements. Or are they?

I ask the legislators, the public interest organizations and policy makers to consider the following questions:

1. Is it proper for the state to create, permit, encourage, support or defend a form of local government of a community of people, whether that form of government is established as a municipal corporation or as a private organization that is not compatible with our American system of government?

2. Is it proper for the state to permit the existence of private quasi-governments with contractual “constitutions” that regulate and control the behavior of citizens without the same due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th Amendment; that do not conform to the state’s municipal charter or incorporation requirements; or do not provide for the same compliance with the state’s Constitution, statutes or administrative code as required by public local government entities?

3. When did “whatever the people privately contract” dominate the protections of the US Constitution? The New Jersey Appeals Court didn't think so. Does "constructive notice", the "nailing to the wall", that medieval method of notice, measure up to the requisite level of notice and informed consent to permit the loss of Constitutional protections?

4. Please state what, if any, are the government’s interests in supporting HOAs that deny the people their constitutional rights?



George K. Staropoli, Pres.
Citizens for Constitutional Local Government

March 16, 2006