The recent massive Point at Poipu special assessment and the fallout from it has exposed contradictions in Hawaii's laws regarding timeshare management's responsibility to provide HOA board candidates or other concerned timeshare owners with membership lists with addresses to allow them to run a proper campaign for a board seat, and not have information controlled only by management. Legislation has been introduced to clear this up that management is required to produce such lists, so that HOA board elections can be run in a proper democratic manner and all candidates can address their issues to the members.
Needless to say, the usual suspects among the special interests which have a vested interest in continuing developer / management dictatorship on HOA boards is resisting. It is no surprise that Timesharing Today magazine reports that developers and management companies have testified against this legislation. It is also probably not surprising that ARDA, which is a mouthpiece for developers also testified against.
The surprising thing in the report, thought was why a timeshare exchange company would also be up testifying against homeowner democracy, because that is exactly that one exchange company did. That exchange company was RCI. Why does RCI feel threatened by homeowner democracy in HOA boards? Are they afraid that more representative HOA boards will mean more dual affiliation with II or outright jumping ship to II, or democratic HOA boards promoting their competitors in the independent exchange companies? Obviously no other exchange company feels threatened by homeowner democracy because no other one was in bed with the developers on this issue.
Needless to say, the usual suspects among the special interests which have a vested interest in continuing developer / management dictatorship on HOA boards is resisting. It is no surprise that Timesharing Today magazine reports that developers and management companies have testified against this legislation. It is also probably not surprising that ARDA, which is a mouthpiece for developers also testified against.
The surprising thing in the report, thought was why a timeshare exchange company would also be up testifying against homeowner democracy, because that is exactly that one exchange company did. That exchange company was RCI. Why does RCI feel threatened by homeowner democracy in HOA boards? Are they afraid that more representative HOA boards will mean more dual affiliation with II or outright jumping ship to II, or democratic HOA boards promoting their competitors in the independent exchange companies? Obviously no other exchange company feels threatened by homeowner democracy because no other one was in bed with the developers on this issue.
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