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Five tips for new HOA board members

Five tips for new HOA board members

  • Posted: Jan 16, 2020
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Five tips for new HOA board members, From our friends at Vesta Property Services.

Welcome to the board! Being a new HOA board member, you are going to be wearing many different hats and stepping into a few challenging roles to help make sure your HOA is running smoothly. Now that you’ve been elected, the big question is…What’s next?

For many newly elected board members it is their first time in the position, presenting a pretty steep learning curve. Lucky for you, Vesta has a few tips to get you more comfortable in your new position.

Just follow these board member basics and you’ll have all the tools you need to become the best board member you can be! 

1. Understand your role

While you volunteered for this position, you also should realize that it is not to be taken lightly. The board is responsible for the management of all aspects of the association. You are a key element in ensuring that your association continues to operate and that all of the residents are happy with the HOA they chose to live in. Vesta has an article on understanding the roles of the HOA board that you can read here.

The best way to quickly learn how your association achieves these goals is to read your association covenants, by-laws and other governing documents. Don’t be afraid to ask veteran board members about their responsibilities and the minutia of the job. Often experience is the best teacher, so talking to seasoned board members is a great way to figure out what to do and more importantly, what not to do.

 

2. Team up with a great property management company that you can trust

If your board works with a property management company that you trust to do right by your community, you can use them as a resource to help you ease into your new role! Working effectively with your management company is a great way to make sure you’re getting everything you can out of what they offer.

Having a close relationship with your HOA’s CAM will open doors for you and the rest of your board that will lead to efficient and effective methods of management. As a part of their services, your CAM should be providing you and your residents with clear communication in enforcing your association’s policies and assisting with your budget, financials and even managing your vendors!

3. Participate

If you want your board to be effective, all board members should be participating, both during and between meetings. Make sure you’re going to every meeting you can, volunteering for projects and taking an active role in the management of your community.

Everyone on the board should be doing whatever they can to make every meeting count. When a meeting is run poorly, more issues are created than solved. While making sure your meetings are productive can be a tall order, it can really be as simple as following procedure, reading the agenda, keeping accurate minutes and reviewing what was discussed at the end of the meeting.

You can find some tips about leading productive board meetings here.

4. Communicate

Many of your neighbors will probably agree that communication between the board and community is vital to the success of a community. Transparency is necessary if you want to maintain a positive relationship between your board and your neighbors. Make sure you keep your community informed about issues, ideas and changes that are going on in the community you both live in.

5. Take advantage of the Community Associations Institute 

In their own words, CAI is an international membership organization dedicated to building better communities. CAI serves community associations by providing guidance through seminars, workshops, conferences and education programs for community managers and other industry professionals.

CAI offers many educational services including online training and in-person workshops that you can attend. Many property management companies also host board certification classes that you can attend

Volunteering for your community is rewarding and challenging; it’s important to take some time now to learn about your role as a board member and how to best serve your association. Following these guidelines is a great way to ensure your transition is smooth and that you enjoy your time on the HOA board!

 

 

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The Internet of things

The Internet of things

The telecommunications industry says the upgrades are needed by 2020 to meet the demand for faster internet speeds, smart cities, driverless vehicles, instantaneous 3D downloads, the “Internet of things” where machines talk to machines, and more.

The battle between infrastructure needed for fast digital service and property rights may soon come to communities across Palm Beach County. Right now, it’s playing out in Tallahassee courtesy of legislation before lawmakers.

“It’s a ticket for multi-billion dollar wireless communication companies to come into a city and do as they please in city right of ways,” said Riviera Beach Councilwoman Dawn Pardo.

The brewing fight is over technological advances. First there was 1G wireless technology, for “first generation,” and as telecommunications technology evolved, 2G, 3G, 4G and 4G LTE came to be. Now 5G, a fifth generation network technology allowing greater connectivity at higher speeds for many more devices, is on its way.

To place the infrastructure needed for 5G service, a proposal pending in the Florida Legislature would limit state and local control of public rights-of-way where the 5G equipment is being installed.

 

SFPMA feels that with the proposal in the Florida Legislature with some changes is what we need to advance this to all of our Florida communities, this upgrade is for reliability “If you are stranded in an heavy traffic area or one that has many customers using services at one time it slows down and this brings problems” Can you get through in an emergency? We have members right now that offer Building Owners the ability to place towers, on rooftops and other locations with need to advance the networks. Many of our building members can make money each month by the placement of these on the properties and in the communities they own and manage. 

Senate Bill 596 sponsored by Sen. Travis Hutson, R-Palm Coast, and House Bill 687, sponsored by Rep. Mike La Rosa, R-St. Cloud, would create the Advanced Wireless Infrastructure Deployment Act and prohibit the Florida Department of Transportation and local governmental entities from prohibiting, regulating or charging for collocation of small wireless facilities in public rights-of-way.

Municipalities say the bill is one-sided, would take away their ability to control where 5G equipment is installed and totally favors telecommunications giants such as AT &T, Verizon and Sprint. The companies want the right to install their equipment on utility poles, light posts, signs and traffic arms in rights-of-way.

Pardo was one of about a dozen officials from cities and counties across Florida, including Miami, Fort Lauderdale and St. Petersburg, who spoke against the bill before the Senate Committee on Communications, Energy and Public Utilities in Tallahassee on March 7.

Pardo told the committee the bill would eliminate residents having a say in the location of 5G facilities.

Currently, Riviera Beach requires “stealth designs” that are unobtrusive, and has other rules as well. The city doesn’t allow the equipment within residential communities.

“We have a couple of these wireless companies proposing to put towers in residential communities without any input from the public. This is unacceptable. This bill allows companies to put as many towers as they want,” Pardo said.

The proliferation of poles and equipment on rights-of-way would jeopardize public safety, entice kids to climb up the poles and create more debris when a hurricane hits, Pardo said.

Riviera Beach has spent a “couple million dollars” to bury utility lines, Pardo said, adding, “Then the next thing you know, we have these 100-foot poles in the middle of the sidewalk.”

Both bills have passed their first round in the Senate Committee on Communications, Energy and Public Utilities and the House Subcommittee on Energy & Utilities.

While the bills deal only with “small cells,” the suitcase-size to small refrigerator-size building blocks of the 5G system, some companies are also submitting applications for poles as high as 120 feet.

The telecommunications industry says the upgrades are needed by 2020 to meet the demand for faster internet speeds, smart cities, driverless vehicles, instantaneous 3D downloads, the “Internet of things” where machines talk to machines, and more.

Houston-based Crown Castle, the nation’s largest provider of wireless infrastructure, sought to install 50 to 60 poles all over Riviera Beach, but in September 2016 the city passed an ordinance regulating them. The equipment boxes must be grouped together in a single location and spaced a minimum of 2,000 feet from each other unless technical documentation is provided by the applicant and approved by the city management. If more than six poles are to be located within one linear mile of a city block, the manager must notify the council.

Crown Castle installed four poles prior to the regulations. Mobility had planned to install numerous 120-foot poles, but Riviera Beach’s ordinance does not allow the poles to be over 35 feet. That’s got municipal leaders worried.

Eric Poole, deputy director of public policy at the Florida Counties Association, spoke about SB 596 before the committee. The committee passed the bill on preliminary reading.

“This bill is a one-way street. It says the telecommunications industry can come into any county and city and require us to give them a permit to co-locate one of their small cell packages on any of our utility poles, light posts, signs or traffic arm signals. We can’t tell them no,” Poole said.

Poole said he first became aware of the 5G issue about 10 months ago when a wireless infrastructure provider submitted an application in a Florida county he did not mention by name, and said it had the right to use the right-of-way. In the past, such installations were typically done on private property, not on public rights-of-way.

The proposal states that if the local government doesn’t approve or deny the telecommunication company’s application within 60 days, approval is automatic. The maximum fee the companies can be charged for use of each right-of-way is $15.

Some local governments have declared moratoriums while they work with the industry, Poole said. He said his organization doesn’t want to stop smart schools, economic development and other advancements, but that the industry needs to respect home rule authority.

Advocates for the bill included representatives of AT&T, Sprint, Verizon, T-Mobile and other companies, as well as their trade groups.

Bethanne Cooley, legislative affairs director of CTIA, the trade association for the wireless communications industry, said networks need to be updated today to be ready for the next generation of wireless networks.

The fifth generation, 5G, will connect 100 times as many devices and be up to 100 times faster. It could create up to 3 million jobs nationwide over the next seven years, Cooley said.

A January report by the Florida Association of County Attorneys Cell Tower Right-of-Way Task Force states that numerous counties and cities in Florida have been confronted with applications from private companies wanting to place cellular telecommunications towers and small cells in the public right-of-way.

The companies are seeking to classify these cellular towers as tall as 120 feet as “utility” poles, but they are not, the report states.

The Telecommunications Act of 1996 and the Florida Statutes do not support a right of telecommunication firms to force local government to allow placement of cellular communication facilities in the local government’s own right-of-way, the report concludes.

Reposted by: SFPMA for the advancement of our communities. original published by; The Palm Beach Post (West Palm Beach, Fla.) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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Association Foreclosures Are Obsolete

Association Foreclosures Are Obsolete

  • Posted: Jan 10, 2020
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Association Foreclosures Are Obsolete

The Foreclosure Process and How HOAs Recover Money

In a condo or HOA the normal method to collect delinquent maintenance fees is to send an owner to the attorney. The attorney will then move the process through the courts. This means foreclosure for delinquent maintenance fees. The object is to foreclose and take “intervening title” on properties.

It’s “intervening title” because in most cases the unit still has a mortgage. Soon enough the lender is coming for their collateral. The association can hold title but they cannot sell the unit as it may have a debt attached to it. With luck the association can get this title without too much expense and rent out the unit. That is the only way the association can recover money if somebody does not bid the unit when it goes for sale.

The association foreclosure worked in the past but now it is becoming obsolete.

The rental revenue may cover losses for maintenance fees. It may also cover the rehabilitation of the unit, commissions and marketing of the unit to a renter. There are also the legal costs & fees that the association spent to get the title.

With luck the association can hold on to this unit long enough to recover their money. Its a hard way to recover delinquent maintenance fees. It is also an obsolete maneuver to foreclose to recover money.

This is how it has always been, especially during the real estate meltdown of the last decade. Now, the times they are a changing.

 

New Law Proposed in FL Removes Ability for Associations to Collect Rents

In Florida, an amendment to Florida Statute § 697.07 has been proposed. This new law will entitle banks to step in and take those rents. In essence this completely neutralizes the benefit of foreclosure for community associations.

Delinquent maintenance fees, legal costs, late fees, late interest will remain a loss. Only the lender will benefit when an association forecloses. In other words there will be no good reason for a community association to foreclose on a unit. They will not be able to monetize it should they prevail in court.

These are not isolated events but a trend. Banks may be slow learners but they will always make decisions that will benefit their bottom line in the end.

 

 

New Law Proposed in SC Removes Foreclosure as an Option for HOAs

In South Carolina a bill pre-filed this month would prohibit HOAs from foreclosing at all. This bill would strip this power from associations. “Real property used as a primary residence may not be sold if the action was instituted by a homeowners association attempting to collect unpaid dues, fee, or fines”, the proposed bill states.

These are not isolated events but a trend. Banks may be slow learners but they will always make decisions that will benefit their bottom line in the end.

Association foreclosures are likely to become less common nationwide. This is a good thing! Community associations and their attorneys have long abused this power. Small debts get inflated with legal fees, and the case gets moved to foreclosure. Ultimately this does little to benefit the association.

Eliminating foreclosures will limit community association’s power to collect delinquent assessments. Fortunately, there are other alternatives to recovering delinquent maintenance fees.

 

The Real Estate Meltdown is Over, But We’re Acting Like It’s Still Going On

People are fallible and don’t always manage their financial affairs well. Such people need a wake up call, NOT their home confiscated.

In 2009, during the height of the real estate meltdown, many properties did not have equity. Originally purchased by “Flippers and investors,” many were simply abandoned. Banks were stalling foreclosure and these properties were sitting there rotting. In those times it made good sense for the association to rush to the courthouse and foreclose on delinquent units.

Today most homes have equity and are appreciating in value. It’s unlikely the current owners would let the property be taken from them if they can avoid it. If equity outweighs the debt it would be foolish to lose a property. Most units delinquent in their maintenance payments will pay without legal intervention.

 

A Viable Alternative to Foreclosure Is Available for Smart Community Associations

Eliminating foreclosures will limit community association’s power to collect delinquent assessments. Fortunately, there are other alternatives to recovering delinquent maintenance fees.

Retaining a collection agency that specializes in community association debt is becoming an increasingly popular option.

Many collection agencies work on a contingency basis, while Lawyers get paid regardless of the outcome of the cases they take. This means collection agencies are much more motivated to seek a timely resolution.

 

Less Negative Impact on Community Members

Strategies employed by debt collectors have a much lower impact on your community. With a strategy of engagement and education, these agencies are looking to resolve issues and improve communications within the community. This is done with the use of proper notifications, outbound calls, credit bureau reporting, letters sent to mortgage holders, placing of liens, and other techniques.

Frankly, association foreclosure on delinquent owners is obsolete. Even without the change in the laws this method to collect on delinquencies needs to be reconsidered.

It’s time for management companies and boards of directors to think how the future collects and engage specialized collection companies to collect delinquent condo and HOA debts.

 

 

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Starting January 1, 2020, officers will start to issue citations….Florida texting law

Starting January 1, 2020, officers will start to issue citations….Florida texting law

Be prepared, Florida friends! While the new  took effect on July 1, 2019, law enforcement has only been issuing warnings. However, starting January 1, 2020, officers will start to issue citations. Check out our blog post for further details about the law.

New Florida Texting Law Effective July 1, 2019

By Ana Cristina Rossi, Esq.

Put your phone down while driving! We all know how dangerous it is to text while driving and the Florida legislature has done something about it. Florida joins 43 other states which allow law enforcement to pull over drivers for texting while driving.

The new law, which was signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis on May 17, 2019, went into effect on July 1, 2019. In explaining his support for the bill, Gov. DeSantis stated that Florida had almost 50,000 motor vehicle accidents in 2016 which were caused by distracted driving and 233 of these accidents resulted in fatalities.

Here Are Answers To Questions People Have About The New Law: Republished with permission from Cohen Law Group

How does this new law change the prior law on texting while driving?

The new law now makes texting while driving a primary offense, meaning that law enforcement can pull you over if they suspect that you are texting on your phone while operating a vehicle. Previously, texting while driving was a secondary offense, meaning that a driver could only be cited for texting while driving if they were pulled over for another offense.

 

What’s the penalty?

For a first offense, the fine is $30 and for a second offense, the fine is $60. You will also be responsible for paying court costs.

A first offense will be treated as a non-moving violation; a second offense will add 3 points on your license.

 

Can you use your phone while you are stopped at a traffic light?

Yes, the new law permits drivers to use their phones in a motor vehicle which is stationary.

 

Can law enforcement confiscate your phone if they see you texting while driving?

No, law enforcement are trained to detect the signs of texting while driving and are not permitted to confiscate or otherwise access your phone without a warrant.

While the law took effect on July 1, 2019, law enforcement will only be issuing warnings until January; after that, officers will start to issue citations.

Ana Cristina Rossi, Esq.

Learn more about Ana Cristina here!

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Community Associations Threatened With Website Litigation Under the ADA

Community Associations Threatened With Website Litigation Under the ADA

  • Posted: Dec 30, 2019
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Community Associations Threatened With Website Litigation Under the ADA

In the last few months, a growing number of community associations across Florida are being threatened with litigation because their websites are allegedly not friendly to visually impaired users.

  • So what does pizza have to do with a community association website?

Frankly, not a darn thing. It appears that the lawyers and firms threatening these specious lawsuits are conveniently conflating the obligations found under Title III of the ADA for places of public accommodation with the different set of obligations found in the Fair Housing Amendments Act (FHA) for housing providers.

Or, these lawyers are simply trying to avoid application of the ADA altogether since most private residential communities are not considered places of public accommodation. The ADA requires that every owner, lessor or operator of a “place of public accommodation” provides equal access to users who meet ADA standards for disability.

These lawsuits are attempting to apply the ADA standards for websites to housing providers impacted by the FHA.

These threatened website lawsuits are uniform in style (mostly forms sent in mass) and generally allege that a “tester” was unable to navigate an association’s website, resulting in a discriminatory impact on those who are visually impaired.

The suits allege that community association websites were not accessible to visually impaired persons thus violating the FHA. Community associations are considered housing providers under the FHA and, as such, must make reasonable accommodations for residents and guests with verifiable disabilities.

This is true in the realm of service and support animal requests and these new website lawsuits attempt to expand that obligation to include visually impaired visitors to an association website. It is curious that these testers did not reach out first and request that the allegedly deficient websites be modified for a visually impaired person to more easily navigate the site. Instead, demands are being summarily sent to community associations statewide who have websites in an attempt to reach a quick settlement.

The demand letters offer a conditional release for payment of “reasonable attorney fees” because the attorney sending the letter claims the firm is entitled to compensation for work completed to investigate, research and determine the community association’s noncompliance.

Of course one cottage industry begets another. In addition to a handful of law firms who believe they can generate some revenue with these tester lawsuits, we now also have a number of companies advising communities that they can make their websites compliant for fees ranging anywhere from $2,000-$5,000 and annual hosting around $300-$1,000 per year.

In actuality, the cost depends on the content and functionality of the website including the number of features that must be optimized for the visually impaired. There are also some solutions that are free depending on the website platform.

Many of the demands and threatened lawsuits appear to lack any merit and seem to be merely an attempt to obtain a quick settlement payment from community associations or their insurers.

Many of the communities who have been threatened have website features that are password-protected, are accessible only to owners, or don’t have the features that are the subject of the complaint, so the allegations appear to be specious.

While we can debate the merits of these tester lawsuits and even seek legislative clarification in the upcoming 2020 Legislative Session, in the interim, associations with websites need to speak with experienced counsel to confirm whether or not their association’s website must have the necessary software for disabled users.

This confirmation is particularly important if your community uses its website to list properties for sale or lease. As for the attorneys who have decided to send out these blanket demands without the benefit of further investigation, let’s hope they have a change of heart when associations push back.

Donna DiMaggio Berger is a board certified specialist in condominium and planned development law, a shareholder at Becker Law and the executive director of the Community Association Leadership Lobby.

 

 

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Accidents do happen even on the Holiday, If You Have Been Injured in a Slip and Fall Accident…..

Accidents do happen even on the Holiday, If You Have Been Injured in a Slip and Fall Accident…..

  • Posted: Dec 17, 2019
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If You Have Been Injured in a Slip and Fall Accident
Follow These 7 Important Steps

Find us on the Members Directory on SFPMA – The Maus Law Firm

1) Seek Medical Attention

This is your first step. Always to seek medical attention to ensure your injuries are documented. Schedule a Fort Lauderdale slip and fall attorney consultation as soon as you are well enough to visit.


2) GET PHOTOS

Facts are important. Document the location of the fall, store employees near, and the condition that caused you to fall.

 

3) DO NOT GIVE A RECORDED STATEMENT – YOU ARE NOT REQUIRED TO GIVE A STATEMENT.

They’re taking a statement to help their position – NOT to help YOU.
Our Fort Lauderdale slip and fall lawyers advise clients that if the business or insurance company contacts them, refer them to us. The calls will stop.

 

4) REQUEST AN INCIDENT REPORT

Businesses and insurance companies are infamous for the defenses they use when a person gets injured on their property.

 

5) REQUEST IN-STORE VIDEO SURVEILLANCE BE PRESERVED

This should be done in writing, and as soon as possible. Most businesses’ video recorders will tape over whatever is recorded after time.

 

6) GET WITNESS NAMES AND CONTACT INFORMATION

There is strength in numbers.

 

7) DOCUMENT YOUR INJURIES

Don’t wait!

Get the Help You Need from a Top Fort Lauderdale Slip and Fall Attorney
You deserve an experienced lawyer in slip and fall accidents and premises liability cases. Speak to a Fort Lauderdale slip and fall attorney in our office to have your questions answered.
Call 1-855-999-5297 today or visit us at www.mauslawfirm.com

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Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009

Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009

  • Posted: Dec 09, 2019
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Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009

Resurrected and Here to Stay

by KBR Legal/ Jeffrey Rembaum, Esq.

On May 20 2009, just after the peak of the national foreclosure crisis, a federal statute was enacted to help protect a residential tenant who was renting a unit subject to foreclosure from being evicted without being afforded a reasonable amount of time to find alternative housing.

The federal law was known as “Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009”.  It generally provided that a bona fide tenant was authorized to remain in a residential unit that was acquired by a new party through foreclosure for the balance of the unexpired term of the lease, unless the unit was acquired by a party that intended to occupy the unit, in which case the tenant was authorized to remain in the unit for ninety days after receiving a notice to vacate.

For purposes of the federal law, a “bona fide tenant” was a tenant who was not the mortgagor or the parent, spouse, or child of the mortgagor and who was under a lease that was the result of an arms-length transaction where rent was not substantially lower than fair market value.

The federal law assured that residential tenants would have a reasonable amount of time to plan and find alternative housing after the unit they were renting was foreclosed and acquired by a new party. However, it also assisted community associations in finding desirable tenants to rent units they owned through the foreclosure of the association’s assessment lien for a fair market value, which then helped the association recoup unpaid assessments and bad debt otherwise attributable to the unit.

The protections of the federal law were intended to “sunset”, which is a term meaning ”to expire”, on December 31, 2012. However, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) later extended the sunset date to December 31, 2014. Once the federal law finally expired on January 1, 2015, tenants of residential property in Florida no longer had any special protection from eviction by parties acquiring such units by foreclosure.

Then, approximately six month later, the Florida legislature adopted its own version of the law as part of the Florida Residential Landlord and Tenant Act. Specifically, section 83.561, Florida Statutes, became effective on June 15, 2015, and provides that “if a tenant is occupying a residential premises that is the subject of a foreclosure sale, the purchaser named in the certificate of title is permitted to give a tenant a thirty day notice to vacate and the tenant must comply”. Therefore, as of June 15, 2015, residential tenants had a much shorter timeframe of thirty days’ notice to vacate a unit acquired by foreclosure.

 

Finally, on June 23, 2018, the federal Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act became effective again. It no longer contains any sunset or expiration date; so it is here to stay. Since a federal law will supersede a Florida law when it is more stringent, the provisions of the Federal Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act giving tenants more time to vacate residential property after it is acquired by a new party through foreclosure will apply to transactions in Florida despite the shorter timeframe provided by state statute.

 

Kaye Bender Rembaum, Attorneys at Law

Palm Beach Office
Gardens Professional Center
9121 N. Military Trail,
Suite 200
Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410
Phone: (561) 241-4462
Fax: (561) 223-3957
Broward Office
1200 Park Central Blvd. S.
Pompano Beach, FL 33064
Phone: (954) 928-0680
Fax: (954) 772-0319
Tampa Office
1211 North Westshore Blvd
suite 409
Tampa, Fl 33607
Phone: 813-375-0731

 

 

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Sponsorship for Our “Industry News Blog”

Sponsorship for Our “Industry News Blog”

  • Posted: Nov 19, 2019
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Starting today, We have 10 spots open for sponsors to advertise your company in our Email Blasts!

Weekly News Feed: Sent on Tuesday and Friday @9am

Our Offer:

– Your logo is placed on the Mailing linked to your website.

– What you get is your companies logo is sent in the Blog “Industry News Blog”  2x each week to over 127,000 Emails.

– Pricing is: Paid yearly Act today and get this @$500.00 for the full year) save 200.00

-You will get to send us articles or announcements we will place in the blog news and send to everyone. these are articles we feature for all advertisers.

We Send every Tuesday and Friday @9am weekly.
There are only 12 spots open for this. Sent via our Mail Chimp Acct to our industry.

Call and lock your company in and sponsor these sent to our industry readers and subscribers:

561-756-3540
Email us: membership@sfpma.com

SFPMA

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We are Running a Florida Rising Magazine – Cover Picture Contest.

We are Running a Florida Rising Magazine – Cover Picture Contest.

  • Posted: Nov 13, 2019
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We are Running a Cover Picture Contest.

Submit to this page Florida Pictures for consideration. We will select the winner to be the DEC 2019 Cover

– If your picture is Selected We will Place your company on a Full Page ( With a Great Bio and Article, Letting our industry know more about You!)

  • Think of Pictures showing Condo & HOA along with Property Management In Florida!
  • With Voting Season coming – December we will learn more about Voting for Officers, How it is Accomplished, Some stories on how things go bad, and new companies ready to help with Voting for your Condo and HOA’s
  • Please include your Info: so we can contact you, most will be from a FB, LI or Email – we can IM you with our decision..

This closes on 27, November 2019. So we can have a few days to place the company information

You can also send the pictures in an Email: FloridaRising@sfpma.com

 

   

   

   

Best of Luck to the Winner..

SFPMA

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Please make a lifesaving donation to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society

Please make a lifesaving donation to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society

  • Posted: Oct 26, 2019
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Please make a lifesaving donation to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society

Every single penny counts in fundraising for this lifesaving organization. Whether you can donate $1 or $1,000, be certain that your generous contribution will change, and hopefully even save, lives in your community.

To make a lifesaving donation, click here:
https://pages.lls.org/ltn/ncfl/Orlando19/CohenLawGroup

 

My family, my team at Cohen Law Group, and I sincerely thank you for your continued support and lifesaving generosity.

Many of you know how important the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) is to me, my family, and everyone here at Cohen Law Group. For years, you have aided our efforts in raising funds to give back to this lifesaving organization for which we are eternally grateful.

My own family was affected by Leukemia. We are not the only family to experience this journey but we hope, that through supporting LLS, we will be one of the last. This year we were honored to receive artwork from Kay Colton who, at only age 11, is a Leukemia survivor. Kay’s family and my own are just two examples of the thousands upon thousands of lives LLS has impacted.

Last year, we raised over $8,000 for LLS! Today we are asking for you to join us once more in our goal of raising $10,000 and beyond.

With the Utmost Gratitude,
Harvey V. Cohen, President

Here’s how your donation to LLS helps.

  • LLS is committing $25 million to childhood cancer research over the next five years.
  • LLS helped advance 34 of the 39 blood cancer treatment options approved by the FDA in 2017 and 2018.
  • In 2018 alone, LLS provided over $2.5 million in direct financial assistance, helping more than 900 patients in the North & Central Florida Chapter.

This lifesaving work is possible because of the generosity of communities like ours across America. There is still so much to accomplish in defeating blood cancers once and for all and so we hope that you are able to make a donation of any amount to our fundraiser today.

 

Supporting our Members

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