Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Ann Zabaldo (zabaldo![]() |
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Date: Wed, 6 Nov 2013 06:01:11 -0800 (PST) |
See below ... Best -- Ann Zabaldo Takoma Village Cohousing Washington, DC Principal, Cohousing Collaborative, LLC Falls Church VA 703-688-2646 On Nov 6, 2013, at 7:43 AM, Diana Carroll wrote: > > Yes in theory someone could live here and not be a member - not pay dues, > not work. Regarding dues: If they own they are legally required to pay > condo fees, and those are much higher. Our cohousing dues are on a > sliding scale with the min being about $5 a month so that's never been a > deal breaker for anyone. Diana -- what are you "dues" used for? Why is this a separate fee from the condo fee? Do other communities have dues separate from condo fees? From other comments in your email, it seems as if your community draws a line between HOA dues and the need to maintain the physical plant and cohousing activities which might be more "social" in nature. Is this a correct interpretation? What are some of the items that your dues cover that are not covered in your regular HOA budget? I'm interested in this because the single biggest difference I can see between standard condos and cohousing is the where the emphasis for having cohousing is in the first place. We build cohousing because we want the social ties and relationships not generally found in standard condos. Yet ... like all standard condos our cohousing community puts its budgeted money into maintaining the built environment with very, very little into more "social" activities and resources including training for facilitation, conflict resolution, communication skills, etc. Often we even create user groups to fund activities that a portion of the group wants to do but the whole group won't fund. It's a very interesting set of circumstances. I find this bifurcation especially in the organizing stages of cohousing. The group spends vast amounts of time focussed on the physical design issues and very little on the skills that will actually be more useful long term e.g. learning to live w/ each other. I'm sure this is because design seems "real" and social skills seem not so immediate. As a resident living in cohousing the last 13 years I wish we had spent and would now spend more time learning to listen to each other and less time focused on sewer ejector pumps. And before you pillory me ... sewer ejector pumps are REALLY important and I would want to live w/out them but we can hire someone to do that ... Back to my original question ... what do you use your cohousing dues for? > > _________________________________________________________________ > Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: > http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/ > >
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals), (continued)
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) Mary Vallier-Kaplan, November 5 2013
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Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) R Philip Dowds, November 5 2013
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Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) Diana Carroll, November 6 2013
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) R Philip Dowds, November 6 2013
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) Ann Zabaldo, November 6 2013
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) Diana Carroll, November 6 2013
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) R Philip Dowds, November 7 2013
- Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) Diana Carroll, November 8 2013
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Re: Members and rentals (was Short-term Rentals) Diana Carroll, November 6 2013
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