Become our Member : JOIN SFPMA TODAY   LogIn / Register: LOGIN/REGISTER

SFPMA Industry Articles | news, legal updates, events & education! 

Find Blog Articles for Florida’s Condo, HOA and the Management Industry. 

The future of cities:  How are public space and social life going to change with Covid-19?

The future of cities:  How are public space and social life going to change with Covid-19?

  • Posted: Jun 29, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on The future of cities:  How are public space and social life going to change with Covid-19?

The future of cities:  How are public space and social life going to change with Covid-19?

The Covid-19 crisis will bring big social consequences, which will radically change both our human relations and the spaces these inhabit. As the concentrated manifestation of the contemporary world they are, cities are going to be hit by this shifting paradigm.

Urban spaces will have to readjust their design and their infrastructures to the new reality. Also our social interactions will change. We will no longer have so much interaction with others when we go out. Some cultures –the warmest ones– will even have to change more dramatically. We wonder: What will happen with the two or three kisses, traditional in some Southern European countries? Or with the shake of hands, used in Anglosaxon cultures? This situation of “physical distance” will lead us to develop a more virtual life, where online platforms will become, even more, the new public sphere.

How is the future in our cities going to be? How is this crisis going to transform our public space and social life in cities? We do not know yet. The only thing we can do right now is to assess what is happening and learn from the outcomes in order to make cities better in the future.

 

 

 

1 | Bringing People Together but Keeping Them Apart

A big part of urban planning’s history has consisted of managing our way out of infectious diseases and pandemics. Today, Covid-19 is challenging urbanization again, re-opening the debate regarding which city model is preferable: urban sprawl or urban densification. While densely populated and hyper-connected cities are more efficient and sustainable, they can amplify pandemic risk of transmission.

Thus, cities –especially densely populated ones– will need to create and adapt public environments and infrastructures to be livable, safe, agile and adaptable. Hence, tactical urbanism –short-term, low-cost, and scalable interventions– can play a big role in shaping and implementing pilot projects. Likewise, community involvement is essential as it allows for the acquisition of local knowledge while ensuring public compliance with policy decisions.

 

2 | Adapting Urban Environments to New Necessities

Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, both urban facilities —public transport, leisure, shops, etc.— and public spaces will have to adapt so all preventive measures are fulfilled. 

Indoors, regulations will be more rigorous: cleaning and disinfection will be done with higher frequency, new measures such as hand sanitizers use or shoe sole cleaning will be implemented, and their capacity will need to be reduced to comply with physical distancing. Additionally, protective equipment —masks, gloves, screens, sensors, etc.— and access control methods will be installed to avoid any risk of transmission and infection.

 

3 | Housing as a Right & Multifunctionality as a Must

Stay-at-home policies are exacerbating inequalities as large parts of the worldwide population live in slums or do not have a home at all. To top it off, common places to find shelter or bathrooms —libraries, gyms— are closed. Consequently, as the coronavirus spreads, these groups are the most vulnerable.

This leads to the conclusion that, after Covid-19, the design of indoor environments will have to change. If people are to spend more time indoors, homes will need to accommodate more uses. Apartments will have to be properly ventilated and better lit in order to improve living conditions and avoid entirely sealed buildings recirculating pathogens through their systems. Shared spaces will need to be rethought as well. 

 

4 | Adjusting Everyday Life to the “New Normal”

The pandemic affected almost every aspect of people’s life, and at the moment, going back to old habits does not seem a possible scenario. So what will the “new normality” look like?

Local and international mobility will be monitored and controlled, while cities are already trying to reorganize flows, reschedule working and school activities to avoid concentrations during rush hour. We will have to get used to new routines and social behaviors, which could radically change our way to use the public space.

The psychological effects of stay-at-home policies and physical distancing will be strong, especially in those cultures where gatherings and open-air activities are at the core of social life. Everything considered normal until a few months ago could dramatically change, not only because of the new rules and restrictions, but also because of people’s fear to physically interact with others.

 

5 | Physically Apart but More Connected than Ever?

The “new normal” will also have a direct effect on the use of urban spaces, in a context where there will be a drastic shift from developing social life outdoors to being more confined. A higher consumption of Internet-based activities (online shopping, telemedicine, macro-events, arts and leisure, etc.) will become more usual. Despite the big challenges this shift will bring, it also represents an opportunity for all these activities to reinvent themselves by means of innovation and new technologies. 

The counterside of this new virtual life’s technological high dependence will widen social inequality. As not everyone counts with appropriate Internet connection and digital devices, this crisis is an opportunity to rethink the future feasibility of telematic education and work models improvised during quarantine. In the applicability to the “new normal”, it will be essential to set up regulations that guarantee social inclusion.

 

6 | Building More Resilient Communities

The health crisis has clearly revealed the vulnerabilities of the most disadvantaged groups. The need to respond to their necessities during the lockdown has demonstrated to be even more pressing than before. Many municipalities developed plans to support low-income families, elders or precarious workers, but at the same time bottom-up mobilization of neighbors’ associations and self-managed organizations revealed to be very important assets for local communities.
 
Nevertheless, as the lockdown ends, the structural socioeconomic problems that the coronavirus has revealed will stay. This demonstrates the importance of establishing safe ways to assist elderly people and to protect precarious workers or domestic caregivers, as well as supporting parents in reconciling their professional and personal life. Achieving this will represent a major step towards a more resilient society.

 

Social inequalities and class differences have manifested more obviously – with “essential” workers having to go out to work; housing conditions being very different for everyone during the confinement or the impossibility to access new technologies for several social groups. Issues that have made even more clear the fact that we live in an unequal society that is susceptible to collapse in front of any crisis.

If in the last decades the way how governments and corporations gather data from individuals for Big Data purposes has been on the agenda of all discussions, the Covid-19 crisis will widen the debate. The need for more discipline and new regulations can inevitably lead towards a situation of social control. In this new context, there will be a need to find a balance between establishing safety, health and well-being for everyone, but respecting the individual and collective freedom at the same time.

However, despite the impact Covid-19 is going to have in cities, we should really consider this crisis as an opportunity to rethink our cities and create more resilient communities and livable environments.

 

 

By 

Tags: , ,
Webinar: Digital Vote Creation & Management Tools Demo by BeckerBALLOT.com

Webinar: Digital Vote Creation & Management Tools Demo by BeckerBALLOT.com

  • Posted: Jun 22, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on Webinar: Digital Vote Creation & Management Tools Demo by BeckerBALLOT.com

Webinar: Digital Vote Creation & Management Tools Demo by BeckerBALLOT.com

Technology is an unavoidable and critical part of any business. As such, why not consider implementing a state-of-the-art online voting platform to your associations portfolio of services?

BeckerBALLOT.com is the perfect solution to help you streamline operations for your community, is extremely easy to setup, and it will give you the added advantage of increasing both your relevancy and residential appeal, thereby setting you apart from your competition!

 

TUESDAY JUNE 23 @10:30AM

REGISTER: https://beckerballot.com/upcoming-events/

Here’s what you will learn during the webinar:

–Walk through of BeckerBALLOT.com and its administration section/voting portal
–See examples of how others have successfully utilized the platform to benefit their communities
–View a demonstration on how to upload users, how to set up a vote, how to cast a vote, and more
–Learn about the functionality and ease of use
–Find out about flexible pricing options
–Participate in a Q&A with our customer support team to answer any questions you may have.

 

 

Tags: , ,
FORECLOSURES AND WHY OUR CONDOS AND HOAs MAY BE IN TROUBLE

FORECLOSURES AND WHY OUR CONDOS AND HOAs MAY BE IN TROUBLE

  • Posted: Jun 22, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on FORECLOSURES AND WHY OUR CONDOS AND HOAs MAY BE IN TROUBLE

FORECLOSURES AND WHY OUR CONDOS AND HOAs MAY BE IN TROUBLE

By Eric Glazer, Esq.

So here is what you need to know in a nutshell:

  1. Mortgage defaults are soaring.  In fact, homeowners stopped paying mortgages in record numbers in April.  It was the largest one month increase ever recorded.
  2. Under Florida law, that spells financial disaster for our condos and HOAs.

Keep this in mind as you read this.  Florida law protects the banks.  When a bank forecloses on a condo unit or a home, several things normally happen:

  1. The owner is also not paying the condo or HOA assessments;
  2. The bank foreclosure takes many months and even years;
  3. Even when the bank finally finishes their foreclosure and owns the home or unit, they owe the condo or HOA very little and the association just lost a lot of money.

So why does Florida law allow the condos and HOAs to get slaughtered?  Under Florida law, if the bank winds up owning the home or unit — even if the association has not been paid in years – the bank only owes the association the lesser of one year of assessments or 1% of the mortgage debt.  In sum, it is usually a fraction of what is owed to the association.

 

So why is the law written this way?  Clearly to protect the banks.  The theory is….. if we pass a law and make banks responsible for payment to the association for all of the unpaid dues of the owner they just foreclosed on, banks simply will not lend money to people who want to buy in a condo or HOA.  Maybe that’s true.

If however such a law did exist, all it would mean that banks would have to protect themselves a little more.  They already protect themselves when it comes to real estate taxes.  You know how they make you escrow a year of real estate taxes in advance?  That’s done because real estate taxes have a greater priority than mortgages do.  If the taxes don’t get paid, the county can wipe out the mortgage and the bank would be owned nothing.  So in response, the bank makes you pay the real estate taxes in advance so they’re covered.

Condo and HOA assessments can be treated the same way by the banks if it were necessary but, as you can see, the politicians make sure they the money owed to the county is given SUPER PRIORITY over all other obligations on the property.  Taxes are first in line.  Their money is guaranteed. To the contrary, they don’t care about the money owed to the associations.  I the law were changed, the bank can easily make a borrower escrow a year of assessments if they want to buy that condo or home  so just in case all goes bad, the association is covered. Maybe they can charge an extra quarter of a point in interest as well.  At least  people on fixed incomes won’t have to cover the delinquencies of their neighbors.

So now you know why you get the short end of the stick when foreclosures increase and the economy tanks.  Next week we will tell you what to do about it.

Suffice to say……..there may be a rough road ahead.

 

 

Tags: , ,
New Guidelines for Community Associations – Stricter Disciplinary Civil Penalties of Noncompliance Now In Effect

New Guidelines for Community Associations – Stricter Disciplinary Civil Penalties of Noncompliance Now In Effect

  • Posted: Jun 22, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on New Guidelines for Community Associations – Stricter Disciplinary Civil Penalties of Noncompliance Now In Effect

Florida’s Department of Business and Professional Regulation Issues New Guidelines for Community Associations

Stricter Disciplinary Civil Penalties of Noncompliance Now In Effect

 

Board members and property managers of condominium communities need to be aware that the State of Florida’s Department of Business and Professional Regulation issued revisions to rules pertaining to violations and penalties, 61B-21, Condominium Resolution Guidelines for Unit Owner Controlled Associations,

The disciplinary guidelines detail minor violations and penalty guidelines within Chapter 718, F.S.  If a violation is deemed minor, the division will send a Notice of Noncompliance to the association. A community association’s failure to timely comply with the Notice of Noncompliance may result in sanctions, including civil monetary damages and enforcement. For the violations not deemed minor by the division, there is no longer a notice/warning requirement and, if found guilty of the violation, the Association may be fined pursuant to the new standards in the rule.   Rulemaking Authority 120.695, 718.501(1)(d)6., (f) FS. Law Implemented 718.501(1)(d)6. FS. History–New 6-4-98, Amended 10-23-18. 

 These disciplinary guidelines were enacted to inform affected parties about the range of penalties which may be imposed for violations, pursuant to subsection 61B-21.003 detailing penalty guidelines in the following categories: Accounting Records, Assessing, Board, Budgets, Commingle, Common Expenses, Conflict of Interest, Converter Reserves, Debit Card, Elections, Estoppel Certificate, Final Order, Fiduciary Duty, Investigation, Property, Records, Reporting, Reserves, Special Assessment and Website.

 

“It is important for community associations and the governing boards to understand the consequences and potential monetary ramifications they will face if they do not abide by these new guidelines,” said Frank J Mari, Director of State of Florida Property Management Association. “Ignoring or not fully compiling with the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation’s rules, as well as Chapter 718, Florida Statutes, in a timely manner can have a detrimental effect on an association’s financial standing.”

If an association fails to comply with a Notice of Noncompliance, a civil penalty will be imposed between $5 and $10, per unit, for each minor violation. The penalty will be assessed beginning with the middle of the specified range and adjusted either up or down based upon any aggravating or accepted mitigating circumstances. The minimum total penalty to be assessed shall be calculated according to these guidelines or $500, whichever amount is greater. In no event shall a penalty for a minor violation exceed $2,500, the statutory maximum for a single minor violation. For all other violations (those not deemed to be minor), the penalty imposed is between $10-$30 per unit for each violation and the statutory maximum is $5,000.00. For both types of violations, multiple counts of the violated provision or a combination of the listed violations are added together to determine an overall total penalty.

 

SFPMA – State of Florida Property Management Association is an Organization in Florida that Advocates Educates for Members in the Condo, HOA and Property Management Industry. On behalf of our Industry Members our goal is to keep the industry informed and Provide information for their protection. We have on our Website sfpma.com resources where Board Members, Property Managers can Learn, Network, Engage and Find Top Companies that work in the industry – Search for companies on our Members Directory

Legal Sponsors: KBRLegal.comPompano Beach and Palm Beach offices. are the Legal Sponsors for our Association we value the important information and articles they provide for our industry.

 

 

Tags: , , ,
Are Florida’s Board Member Courses….. Enough Education?

Are Florida’s Board Member Courses….. Enough Education?

  • Posted: Jun 22, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on Are Florida’s Board Member Courses….. Enough Education?

This weekend a Question was given to us, In this was the lengthy details of a Board that was acting like dictators imposing fines even circumventing the Florida Laws.

Now to be fair if Condo or HOA Docs already include Violations and Fining in their Buildings or on their properties then a Board may violate an owner or owners for the violations. Most do not! even with this every Board must abide by what is written in the Laws of Florida. Below and part of this article is an Article our Friends at the Cooperator published and hit the nail on the head with Boards Power and we feel Lack of Education! 

Condo owners often complain that their board doesn’t do enough, or that the board members aren’t involved as much as they would like in the administration and maintenance of their building. While a disinterested or apathetic board is certainly a problem, going to the other extreme can be just as bad…or maybe even worse. Board members who let their power go to their heads can be a liability to their building community on many levels, but of particular concern is a board that oversteps its bounds and intrudes on the privacy and agency of individual residents.

Understanding the boundaries and limitations of your power is something that every board member needs to realize or else trouble—including legal problems—can result.

Another Question came in: This Board ruled that Washers and Dryers are no longer allowed in the units, Even though there are areas in every unit where water hookup and venting has occurred in the past? The owner stated that there was NO owners vote and this was never placed into the Condo Docs….He did find, The Board made a deal with a company to place machines on each floor of a 14 story building and the board wants owners to use these machines to bring in money to help pay for these! So the board took a secreat Vote and approved this spending money of the owners with no vote!  He asked us is that legal?

 

Knowledge is Power

Balancing what is right and what is expected can be tricky for boards — so much so that sometimes, board members and non-board members alike wonder why people bother to serve in the first place.

“I always tell my fellow board members and clients that if you’re going to be on a board, you are basically a sacrificial lamb,” says Luigi Rosabianca, managing partner of the Manhattan-based law firm Rosabianca & Associates PLLC. “You don’t get paid for it, but by doing so you are providing a service to your building. It’s not only a way to protect your investment, but also your quality of life—but [board members] have to learn what being on a board means, and not to overstep their bounds.”

What can a board member really do about an ongoing noise complaint, for example? What sort of majority is needed if a vote in enacted to change something within the condo or co-op? Can a board impose rules regarding security or visitors?

Questions like these can usually be answered by reading the co-op or condo’s official governing documents, says Al Pennisi of the law firm of Pennisi Daniels & Norelli LLP in Rego Park. “The powers are designated in the corporate documents—the certificate of corporation and the bylaws—and some of the additional powers are listed in the offering plan and amended in the offering plan when it’s a co-op conversion. Primarily, it’s the corporate documents and enhanced by case law.”

It’s essential that anyone who is elected to their board read and understand what they can and cannot do as a board member.  “You need to do it with all the knowledge necessary,” Rosabianca says. “The first thing you need to do is read the offering plan or prospectus as well as the bylaws, which very specifically outline what the board’s powers and limitations are.”

In addition to the documents, a new board member can also get advice and instruction from those already involved in the process. “When someone new comes on, they get instruction from owners, management companies and other board members if they aren’t educated about those sort of things,” says David J. Byrne, a shareholder attorney with the law firm of Stark & Stark, with offices in New York and in New Jersey. “In a practical setting, they don’t always read the documents they should.”

Condos and co-ops have different rules, and their boards have very different powers. Even comparing co-op to co-op or condo to condo will find differences, so just because you served on the board of one building doesn’t mean your current board will operate exactly the same way. Your powers and limitations will be most likely be different on any board you serve.

“The power a board has in a co-op is different than that of a condo,” Pennisi says. “Co-op boards do have more power than condo boards because they control the use of the apartments, they control the sales and leases where in a condo, the unit owner can sell at his or her discretion. Condo boards have less power but both boards can make and enforce rules and regulation pursuant to the documents.”

 

 

Barging In

One of the chief complaints among residents who think their board has overstepped its bounds arises when someone—a super, handyman, or other building staff member—enters their home without permission, usually to check out something like a leak or electrical problem.

“With condos and co-ops you have classic communal living—and with communal living there are certain sacrifices that have to be made,” Rosabianca says. “You are conceding that your neighbors have certain rights to access common elements in the building, and that [building staff] may periodically need to access to your unit.”

Let’s say there is a leak in unit 4F that will affect the owner’s quality of life downstairs in 3F in not taken care of. If the owner in 4F can’t be reached to let building staff into the unit, it is reasonable to expect that the super or repair person will access the apartment to deal with the situation—with or without express permission from the owner of 4F. Upsetting as it might be to think of strangers entering one’s home without permission or supervision, that access is considered reasonable if it’s deemed necessary under the circumstances.

“I always use the ‘reasonableness standard,’” says Rosabianca, “which is vague, but most management companies are really well versed and know what to do and what not to do in situations like these. As a rule of thumb, you should ask, ‘Is this in the best interest of the building?’”

According to Pennisi, co-op documents require you to give the board access to your apartment to make repairs—but that’s not usually the case in condos.

“If there’s a leak in the walls [of your condo,] they just can’t go in and break the door down,” he says. “It has to be a bona fide emergency. If water is leaking under your door and the super or manager has tried calling you and they can’t get in touch with you, they have right to break in and make repairs. I always tell my boards to bring a witness and go in with a camera and take pictures of what the apartment looked like. Don’t go by yourself in case something is stolen and it’s your word against theirs.”

 

Feeling Secure

Security in buildings has become a tricky issue in recent years, and since most governing documents were written prior to current concerns about terrorism and other threats, boards sometimes enact security measures that some residents feel may go a bit too far. But does having an especially robust security program in a co-op building ever cross the line from “overzealous” into “invasion of privacy?”

“There could be ‘too much’ security in a practical way or an economical way but not really from a legal point of view,” says Byrne. “The boards probably have a pretty broad discretion to set rules on security, so although it might seem like they are overstepping their power, they aren’t really.”

Some boards feel it’s necessary to have cameras all over their building, a thorough ID check for all visitors, and building access controls that residents may feel are going too far. Some buildings require key code access or card access, and some use cameras to record people coming and going. While it’s fair to say that most residents get a certain peace-of-mind from knowing access to their building is tightly controlled, others find it intrusive, says Pennisi.

“People say, ‘You have no right to take my picture coming and going,’ or they object to having their Social Security number used as an ID” Pennisi continues. “But a number of courts have ruled that [building rules] supercede the individual’s right, because [buildings] have the right to know who’s coming and going. You can’t publish their information or show the videos, however. That would be going too far.”

 

Keeping Things Personal

When it comes to what boards and managers can do with any personal information they collect on building residents, civil rights and privacy laws have the final word. In short, boards and management are prohibited from making any of that information public.

Unfortunately however, “Things happen like that all the time,” says Rosabianca. “People make mistakes …most of the time it’s just errors, rather than fraud. I’m on a couple of boards where they distribute board applications to all board members, and they include a lot of personal details. You’d like to think that your board members are responsible with the information and will shred the information afterwards.”

If materials are being handled properly, Rosabianca continues, one copy of your personal information should be kept under lock and key at the manager’s office—and no one on the board should be distributing that information, or keeping copies for themselves. Some boards are even policing themselves in this respect by blacking out certain information on sensitive documents they see in the course of carrying out their duties to the building.

Though rare, there have been cases where board members have—either through negligence or ignorance—acted improperly with building information or money. Michael Crespo, president of Citadel Property Management Corp. in Manhattan, says he recently dealt with an unscrupulous treasurer.

“We recently had a situation where, in an effort to clear up the books of a building we’d just begun managing, we asked the board’s treasurer if it would be OK to send out two deposit checks that had been collected for [construction] work and move-in fees several years prior,” he says. “The deposits were clearly for a one-time item, and there really was no reason to keep holding on to them—they were just throwing off the balances, and we wanted to clean it up. The board’s treasurer suggested that we do a journal entry and make them ‘disappear.’”

Crespo says that after explaining that these were real deposits that were owed to shareholders, “The treasurer continued to press the issue and explained that he had done this type of thing at his job all the time. In either case, I explained that we know the difference between correcting a journal entry and sweeping someone’s money under the carpet. Needless to say, the shareholders in question (who were also on the board) wanted their money. We ended up cutting them a check.”

 

FIND EDUCATIONAL COURSES, MEETINGS, SEMINARS EACH MONTH ON OUR CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS

Power Hungry

While the vast majority of board members take their position in stride and are solely interested in doing what’s best for their building community, some board members do let authority go their head. Most managers and board attorneys have at least one or two stories about boards imposing ridiculous rules on their residents—regardless of whether they actually have the authority to do so.

“Boards do sometimes abuse their power,” Byrne says. “I’ve encountered boards that don’t actually have published rules, yet think they do. There are boards that set unreasonable restrictions on things, or think they have the power to charge residents fines when they don’t.”

Other examples of boards overstepping their bounds and abusing their position include members trying to get family members elected to the board or overseeing applications for people they know, or giving work contracts to friends or family.

“Those are the type of ‘wink-wink’ things you see,” Rosabianca says. “You really want to avoid these types of conflicts. If you are on a board, you should be above the fold. You shouldn’t be soiling your hand.”

Keeping a board in check and on the right side of propriety and the law could be something as simple as pointing out that more rules are not always better.

“We simply like to remind the boards that we deal with that when they implement excessive amounts of rules that infringe upon their neighbors, these rules will often come back to bite the people who created them,” Crespo says. “We’ve seen it time and again: a board puts practices into effect that are very difficult to enforce, and which the very people who implemented them are the ones who end up violating them the most. This is where we like to be the voice of reason. We ask that boards be realistic and use discretion, and ask if they would like these rules enforced upon them.”

 

An owner cannot be fined without first being given the opportunity to be heard. Before a fine is issued, the following must take place:

Steps for a Violation

  • Association/management identifies the violation.
  • Notice of violation sent to owner/resident via a hand delivery or certified mail.
  • Notice must contain the following:
  • Description of the violation
  • Authority in governing documents to cite the issue as a violation.
  • A picture may also be included in the notice.
  • The required time frame to correct the violation.
  • Disclosure of his/her 14-day right to be heard before the fining/grievance committee.
  • Alert fining committee of the violation sent and schedule a hearing.
  • Attend hearing and be prepared to listen to the owner’s stated defenses and/or explanation.
  • Send notice of final decision to owner/resident.
  • In this situation, it would seem that the association skipped or ignored the legal right of an owner to be heard before a fine is issued. The fine is not a legally imposed fine unless the above steps are taken.

 

We need more Education where Board Members who are controlling the best for each and every owner should have to be Licensed the same way as Building Managers are, or financial money managers! What to you think? 

 

 

Tags: , ,
Florida Rising Magazine – New Publishers for 2022

Florida Rising Magazine – New Publishers for 2022

  • Posted: Jun 22, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on Florida Rising Magazine – New Publishers for 2022

Florida Rising Magazine

Dear Reader,

publication coverRe: Florida Rising Magazine

To inform everyone involved:

In 2022 we contracted an outside company as per our board. to take over publishing the magazine.

Since 2014 our very first year, SFPMA had been publishing this in house and published the first week of each month.

Frank J Mari / Executive Director

Publisher of The Florida Rising Magazine

 


Viewing the digital publication doesn’t require special software and loads quickly in your web browser. Just click on the publication cover or link above to begin reading now!

 

 

 

Tags: , ,
SAFETY & HEALTH PRODUCTS – Condo & HOA’s  Masks are to be worn in all common areas! 

SAFETY & HEALTH PRODUCTS – Condo & HOA’s  Masks are to be worn in all common areas! 

  • Posted: Jun 19, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on SAFETY & HEALTH PRODUCTS – Condo & HOA’s  Masks are to be worn in all common areas! 

SAFETY & HEALTH PRODUCTS – SFPMA

One of our Members has a Great Company Selling Safety Products. We are standing behind them….in support for our industry.

Condo & HOA’s  Masks are to be worn in all common areas! 
You must have a mask on if you go into any Store or Business!

https://bithermometer.com/?ref=sfpma

Condo & HOA’s  Masks are to be worn in all common areas!

Due to the numbers of Covid19 cases increasing and the lack of compliance with face masks , particularly in condominiums our city has declared that masks are mandatory in all common areas within buildings.Supported by the city manager and approved by the entire commission. This is not an issues of rights it is for everyone’s protection.

 

Protect Your Family
-No Contact Technology decreases the chance of viral/bacteria spread through contact.
-Get a more accurate reading using Body Infrared Technology.
-Increase recovery time by getting the valuble medical insight fast.
-Decrease chances of viral & bacterial spread with quality medical grade masks & supplies.
-Masks have been proven to deter airborn viruses by filtering air before it reaching your face.

 

 

Tags: ,
FHA EXTENDS FORECLOSURE AND EVICTION MORATORIUM FOR SINGLE FAMILY HOMEOWNERS FOR ADDITIONAL TWO MONTHS

FHA EXTENDS FORECLOSURE AND EVICTION MORATORIUM FOR SINGLE FAMILY HOMEOWNERS FOR ADDITIONAL TWO MONTHS

  • Posted: Jun 18, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on FHA EXTENDS FORECLOSURE AND EVICTION MORATORIUM FOR SINGLE FAMILY HOMEOWNERS FOR ADDITIONAL TWO MONTHS

FHA EXTENDS FORECLOSURE AND EVICTION MORATORIUM FOR SINGLE FAMILY HOMEOWNERS FOR ADDITIONAL TWO MONTHS
Extension Through August 31, 2020, Provides More Security for Homeowners Impacted by the Coronavirus Outbreak

 

HUD No. 20-081
HUD Public Affairs
(202) 708-0685

 

WASHINGTON – Today, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) announced a two-month extension of its foreclosure and eviction moratorium through August 31, 2020, for homeowners with FHA-insured Single Family mortgages. This extension provides additional security and peace of mind to homeowners that they will not lose their homes while they are trying to recover financially.

FHA’s Single Family foreclosure and eviction moratorium extension applies to homeowners with FHA-insured Title II Single Family forward and Home Equity Conversion (reverse) mortgages, and continues to direct mortgage servicers to:

  • Halt all new foreclosure actions and suspend all foreclosure actions currently in process, excluding legally vacant or abandoned properties; and
  • Cease all evictions of persons from FHA-insured Single Family properties, excluding actions to evict occupants of legally vacant or abandoned properties.

“While the economic recovery is already underway, many American families still need more time and assistance to regain their financial footing,” said HUD Secretary Ben Carson. “Our foreclosure and eviction extension means that these families will not have to worry about losing their home as they work to recover from the financial impacts of COVID-19.”

“FHA is committed to working with borrowers impacted by COVID-19 and this second extension of the foreclosure and eviction moratorium is another sign of the unprecedented steps HUD is taking to assist those impacted by this terrible pandemic,” said Acting Federal Housing Commissioner Len Wolfson.

Homeowners with FHA-insured mortgages should continue to make their mortgage payments during the foreclosure and eviction moratorium if they are able to do so, or seek mortgage payment forbearance pursuant to the Coronavirus Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES) Act from their mortgage servicer, if needed.

Pursuant to the CARES Act, FHA requires mortgage servicers to:

  • Offer borrowers with FHA-insured mortgages up to a year of delayed mortgage payment forbearance when the borrower requests it. FHA does not require a lump sum payment at the end of the forbearance period
  • Assess borrowers who receive COVID-19 forbearance for its special COVID-19 National Emergency Standalone Partial Claim before the end of the forbearance period. The COVID-19 National Emergency Standalone Partial Claim puts all deferred mortgage payment amounts owed into a junior lien which is only repaid when the borrower sells the home, refinances the mortgage, or the mortgage is otherwise extinguished.

 

WHAT NOT TO PUT DOWN YOUR GARBAGE DISPOSALS by Ron Giles of PRS

WHAT NOT TO PUT DOWN YOUR GARBAGE DISPOSALS by Ron Giles of PRS

  • Posted: Jun 17, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on WHAT NOT TO PUT DOWN YOUR GARBAGE DISPOSALS by Ron Giles of PRS

WHAT NOT TO PUT DOWN YOUR GARBAGE DISPOSALS

by Ron Giles of PRS

After many uses, garbage disposal blades need sharping. Just a hand full of ice can do the job. Another tip is put the drain plug in the garbage disposal. Fill the kitchen sink full of water. Turn on the garbage disposal and pull the plug.

 

1. Grease or oil. Just because it is out of sight does not mean the garbage disposal “disposed” of it. Usually, it solidifies and begins to build up in your pipes. Not good.
2. Vegetable peels. You might get away with it from time to time, but odds are, eventually this one will catch up with you–and leave you a soupy backfilled mess in your sink. Garbage disposals do not do too many peels–they’ll spit them up like an unhappy infant.
3. Egg shells. Believe or not, the membrane on the inside of the egg can wrap around the blades and wreak havoc. Better just to compost them.
4. Coffee Grounds. These seem like they go down fine, but over time, the little grounds build up like sediment in the pipes, causing all sorts of trouble.
5. Pits or seeds. Think: peach pits, avocado pits, cherries, etc. I am sure this one goes without mentioning, but it will basically rattle around in there like a pinball of destruction.
6. Bones. I know, again, duh.
7. Anything in bulk. Feed your disposal small meals, let it grind it up, then add more.
8. Garbage. Think: cigarette butts or paper. It is not really designed for those sorts of things and will get testy.
9. Rice and pasta. I did not know this. Basically, every time you turn the water on, the pasta and rice will continue to expand–even after your supposedly ground it up.
10. Stringy veggies. Think: celery, artichokes, carrots, corn husks, or even some types of lettuce. The stringy parts can wrap around the blades, causing resistance on the blades.
11. Potato Peels. These suckers can cause a soupy mess in your disposal down the road—even if you think you can get away with dumping them down the drain from time to time. The same goes for other starchy vegetables and beans.
12. Harsh Chemicals. Do not mistake your kitchen sink for a chemistry laboratory. The grinding components of most garbage disposals are made of galvanized steel which can corrode when contacted with strong chemicals like bleaching powder and such cleaning agents.
13. Onion Skins. The onion skin can get caught in the blades, but the worst thing is the will cause clogs down the pipes.
14. Pumpkins. Anyone who carved a pumpkin for Halloween knows how sticky they are. When thrown down a garbage disposal though they are juicy and slimy they will stick on to the grinding blades and form a clog. The only way to get rid of a pumpkin clog is by dismantling the pipes and cleaning it.
15. Corn Husk. Corn husks are some of the most fibrous items you can find in a kitchen. They are extremely difficult to grind and should never ever end up in a disposal.
16. Seafood. While you may feel confident that seafood like shrimp can be disposed of safely in a garbage disposal that’s not the case. Instead of going down the pipes they will form a white little ball that will clog the disposal. No matter what magical remedies you try dismantling the pipes is the only option that will work.

 

 

 

Tags: , , ,
WEBINAR: GUEST RESTRICTIONS AND SCREENING by Kaye Bender Rembaum Today at 1pm Register Now..

WEBINAR: GUEST RESTRICTIONS AND SCREENING by Kaye Bender Rembaum Today at 1pm Register Now..

  • Posted: Jun 16, 2020
  • By:
  • Comments: Comments Off on WEBINAR: GUEST RESTRICTIONS AND SCREENING by Kaye Bender Rembaum Today at 1pm Register Now..

WEBINAR: GUEST RESTRICTIONS AND SCREENING by Kaye Bender Rembaum

by KBRLegal.com

Date/Time
Date(s) – 2020-06-16
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Location
Pompano Beach Office

Course #: 9630142 | Provider #: 0005092  |  1 CE Credit in HR or ELEOne registrant per form will be accepted.
Limited to the first 100 to register

REGISTER HERE

Online bookings are not available for this event.

 

Tags: , ,