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RESCUING YOUR BOARD MEMBERS FROM E-MAIL HELL
By
Ann Rankin, Law Offices of Ann Rankin

“I’m in trouble at
work! The Board business is taking up all my time! The
homeowners send me emails 24/7 and they all want an
immediate reply!”
“Answering homeowner
emails is a constant task, and none of the owners are
ever satisfied with my responses!”
If you’re a board
member of a common interest development association, the
above complaints may sound all too familiar.
What is wrong with
this picture and what can you do about it?
Problems with
Board E-Mail Communications with Members:
Here’s a list of
legal and practical problems with Board Member replies
to E-Mail communications with homeowners:
1. If the Board
Members make a practice of replying to e-mail
communications from Members, they will soon be inundated
and will have difficulty prioritizing tasks or getting
anything else done. Board Members are volunteers; most
of them didn’t sign up to be on duty 24 hours a day, 7
days a week when they ran for office. As soon as the
other homeowners find out how time-consuming the Board’s
job has become, on account of the proliferation of
e-mails and demands to reply to them immediately, no one
else will want to run for the Board, except perhaps for
a few masochists.
2. Replying to
e-mails may create a situation in which a particular
Board Member is making a unilateral decision without
Board deliberation, voting, or appropriate minutes. This
circumvents the Board process. Such decisions may not
have the support of other Board Members, and may
sometimes be ill-considered, but they may bind the
Association if the board member had apparent authority
to make the decision.
3. When Board Members
make decisions by e-mails, rather than in open board
meetings, it circumvents the intent of the Open Meeting
Act, Civil Code 1363.05, which requires the Board to
circulate an agenda prior to each open Board Meeting; to
allow association members to attend the open board
meetings, and to allow members to address the Board on
matters of association business. If everything is done
behind the scenes via email, the Members are deprived of
their rights under the Open Meeting Act.
4. The practice of
the Board immediately replying to e-mails from members
creates unrealistic and never-ending expectations from
members. Can you imagine Board Members of
publicly-traded corporations spending hours a day
replying to e-mails from shareholders? Neither can I.
What Can Board
Members Do to Get Out of E-Mail Hell?
I have advised some
Associations whose Board Members were roasting in E-Mail
Hell to adopt an Operating Rule to solve the problem.
Such a Rule does not fall within the parameters of those
that must be circulated among the Members under Civil
Code 1357.100 et. seq. An example of the proposed Rule
follows. If you’re in E-Mail Hell, I recommend you try
it. This proposed Rule assumes that you have a property
manager. If you’re self-managed, you can still adopt the
Rule but you’ll have to require that the Members send
their emails to one or more Board Members who will
periodically collect, organize and prioritize them and
put them on the agenda for the next Board Meeting if
appropriate.
SNAKE PIT HOA RULE
REGARDING COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The Board of
Directors of Snake Pit Homeowners’ Association hereby
adopts the following Rules pursuant to the Association’s
Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions,
as follows:
1. Findings.
a. The Board of
Directors consists of unpaid volunteers who donate their
time to the Association.
b. The Board of
Directors is required by law to create an agenda for
each Board Meeting, to follow the agenda, and to make
decisions only at Board Meetings and only after giving
all Board Members the chance to deliberate, undertake
necessary study and other due diligence, and make a
reasoned decision.
c. The Board of
Directors members, as fiduciaries, need to prioritize
their time at Board Meetings in order to be sure to
attend to the most important issues at hand.
d. The Open Meeting
Act, Civil Code 1363.05, requires that Board decisions
be made at open meetings, except for issues that are
allowed by statute to be discussed in executive
sessions. All Association Members are required to be
provided with an agenda of each open Board Meeting and
are required to be able to listen to Board
deliberations, and to provide input to the Board during
the Open Forum time.
e. A number of
Association Members are in the habit of sending e-mails
directly to Board Members’ personal e-mail accounts, in
between Board Meetings, and requesting the Board Members
provide an immediate response. If the Board Members were
to do so, it would preclude their being able to
deliberate upon the issues at hand in an open Board
Meeting. Also, if the Board Members replied to e-mails
between meetings, this would deprive the other Members
of the opportunity to listen to Board deliberations on
the issue at hand and to provide input during the Open
Forum time. Further, this practice could preclude Board
Members from prioritizing their time as they are
required to do as fiduciaries.
f. The Association
employs a managing agent whose job it is to work with
the Board to prepare agendas, to carry out Board
directives, and to provide the Board with correspondence
and with other materials requiring matters that may
require attention of the Board and Board decisions.
g. Counsel for the
Association has pointed out that the Association is a
corporation, and that it is not usual for corporate
board members to be expected to reply to e-mails from
their constituents outside of Board Meetings; also that
making decisions outside of regular or special Board
Meetings may violate the Open Meeting Act.
h. The Board wishes
to adopt a procedure that will enable the Board Members
to prepare appropriate agendas for Board Meetings with
the assistance of the manager; that will allow the Board
Members to discuss all Board business except for those
subjects that may be decided upon in executive session
at open board meetings, and that will allow Board
Members to appropriately prioritize their time.
NOW THEREFORE, the
Board enacts the following Operating Rule:
a. All Member
communications requesting Board action or response are
to be directed, in writing, to the property manager. The
property manager will periodically notify the Board
Members of the issues, and will assist them by
organizing the communications and preparing an
appropriate agenda for each Board Meeting.
b. Board Members will
no longer reply to e-mails between Board Meetings, and
may block e-mails sent by Members who attempt to
communicate with them directly;
c. All Board
decisions will be made at Regular or Special Board
Meetings. The meetings will be conducted as required by
the Open Meeting Act. All Board Resolutions will be
voted on by the Board Members, constituting at least a
Quorum, sitting at Regular or Special Board Meetings.
The following matters may be discussed by the Board in
Executive Session: Litigation, formation of contracts
with third parties, personnel issues, member discipline,
and member requests for payment plans for delinquent
assessments.

This article is
general in nature. It is not a substitute for qualified
legal advice. Contact an attorney with expertise in
common interest development law if you require specific
legal advice.
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