You have to send them a reminder notice when the dues are due. If they refuse, you may initiate legal proceedings against them.
An owner, a board member, the association manager, or perhaps a local realtor can help you make the contact you want.
Yes. A private organizatin or club can make rules for it members
It all depends. If the governing documents for the association and state law indicate that assessments -- you call them dues -- are automatically liens against the title, and have a priority position ahead of any mortgage lender, then filing a lien means that the unpaid assessments can be paid first from any proceeds of sale.
You will have to pay union dues. But then again you will make more money being in a union, which more than cover the cost of your dues.
The National Association of Home Builders is a trade association that helps to promote policies that make housing a national priority in the United States. Its members include home builders and remodelers. It maintains a directory that helps consumers find a builder who is a member of the NAHB and a member of their local home builders association. See link: http://www.nahb.org/
Call American Automobile Association they will give you a trip tic if you are a member AAA.
You are not forced to pay union dues if your dept. is a union dept. You are automatically in the union and the dues are optional. Contact your union rep and tell him to cancell your dues. I don't know what state you are in but in Ks. you are not forced to pay these dues.
You can attend your Local Union meetings for starters. Also your union should be sending a yearly report of money collected and how it was spent (make sure they have a current address for you).
Review the documents you signed when you purchased your home. If your home is within an association boundary, you, too, are responsible for the maintenance, preservation and protection of all the real estate assets that the association owners own in common. This is a legal obligation. You are automatically a member in this case. The association is not a club; membership is not optional. Best practices dictate that you contact your board of directors or your managing agent, and inform them of your mailing address, your date of purchase and inform them that you are expecting to pay your assessments as a new member of the community. It's unfortunate that your association hasn't yet welcomed you into the community otherwise, and at least informed you of your assessment obligation.
You have to pay because if the owner of moshi monsters just let people be moshi members for free then they wouldn't make any money, so in order to make money they charge people to become a moshi member!
Of course--if the association likes to pay attorney fees and court costs to the property owners whose land title was slandered by the lien. If the association is not in the deed of the property, then the association has no authority to compel payment of dues. For the same reason, those property owners have no authority to enjoy property and facilities owned by the association. Check with a title company to see if the association is in the deed of the delinquent properties.Another PerspectiveSometimes early property owners adjacent to lake communities will voluntarily join the association and thereby make the facilities appurtenant to their own lots and make their property subject to its rules and regulations. Also, adjacent tract owners may voluntarily make their lots subject to the rules and regulations in order to maintain the community at a high standard and attract buyers. You need to consult with the attorney who represented you when you purchased the property to determine if your property was ever made subject to the rules and regulations of the leisure community. That information would be disclosed by a comprehensive title examination.
It can place a lien on your property that must be paid from the proceeds of the sale.Also, the buyer's bank will require a title examination to disclose any liens, encumbrances or defects in the title. One of the responsibilities of the buyer's attorney is to make certain there are no common charges or municipal charges due. The seller must clear up any liens or encumbrances that are reported.