Right around this time of year, I start receiving calls and emails from board members and community association managers confused about what information needs to be disclosed to the owners. I’m not talking about information that needs to be disclosed in response to an owner’s request; I mean information that the association hasGo to Resource
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In our prior blog we discussed the Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act (“Act”), which protected renters of foreclosed properties from immediate eviction. Although the original Act was terminated on December 31, 2014, it was resurrected earlier this year under a larger deregulation bill, and ultimately signed into law by President Trump on May 24,Go to Resource
We are excited to announce that we have added Jeff Smith as a new partner to the Altitude Community Law team. Please join us in congratulating him!
Right in the middle of hurricane season, the National Flood Insurance Program (“NFIP”) was set to expire. With nothing more than a few hours to spare, on July 31, 2018, the U.S. House of Representatives reauthorized the NFIP for four additional months, through November 30, 2018. Expiration of the NFIP would have leftGo to Resource
In prior blog posts we discussed House Bill 18-1342, which proposed that all pre-Colorado Common Interest Ownership Act (“CCIOA”) communities, i.e. communities formed prior to July 1, 1992, comply with the budget veto process found in Section 303(4)(a) of CCIOA. Section 303(4)(a) was, previously, only applicable to post-CCIOA communities. HB 18-1342 has beenGo to Resource