San Diego Union-Tribune

ACCLAMATIO­N, SELF-CAMPAIGNIN­G AND VOTING

- BY KELLY G. RICHARDSON Richardson, Esq. is a Fellow of the College of Community Associatio­n Lawyers and Partner of Richardson Ober DeNichilo LLP, a law firm known for community associatio­n advice. Submit questions to Kelly@rodllp.com. Past columns at www.

Q:Starting in 2022, all HOAs have the option of utilizing the acclamatio­n procedures in Civil Code 5103 when “the number of qualified candidates is not more than the number of vacancies to be elected.” My question: Do CCRs have to be changed before the HOA can implement the acclamatio­n process?

A.Y., BAKERSFIEL­D No, the CC&Rs do not have to be changed (unless they specifical­ly bar acclamatio­n). The new Civil Code Section 5103 is a boon for most associatio­ns, but there are several procedural requiremen­ts that must be followed to preserve the option. For example, the election process must begin 60 days earlier, since the first membership notice regarding acclamatio­n must be 90 days before the deadline for nomination­s (Civil Code Section 5103(b)(1)). There is a second notice between seven and 30 days before close of nomination­s, and

A:a prompt response is required to each nominator and nominee.

Updating HOA election rules and incorporat­ing the process required by Section 5103 is a good idea. That amendment need not pursue the two-step, 28-day notice process required for most rule changes, because rule changes that “merely repeat the existing law” are exempt from the process pursuant to Civil Code Section 4355(b)(5). So, this amendment could be accomplish­ed in one open board meeting with the normal agenda notificati­on.

Q:

I’m wondering if a homeowner can request all members’ contact info from the manager in order to send out a “vote for me” email to everyone? Thank you for all you do! I’ve learned so much from your column and it’s the first thing I read in the paper.

L.L., PALOS VERDES A:

Under Civil Code Section 5200(a)(9), members can request and receive a copy of the names, addresses and email addresses of any member who has not opted out of allowing that informatio­n to be shared. Civil Code Section 4515 protects the right of members to campaign, and the middle 30-day period provided for by Civil Code Section 5115(b) seems to be intended to allow the nominees to campaign before ballots are sent out. Therefore, yes; any homeowner can do what you describe.

Q:

We tried to get a bombastic braggart off the board by a vote. He interrupts and has even stood and approached board members threatenin­gly. He has told homeowners to shut up. We even called the police once to get him to stop his antics. To accomplish removing him we had a special meeting. We had a quorum, but according to the attorney’s formula, he got to stay. I just can’t believe the recall formula that our attorney had us use is fair. I would appreciate your opinion on the recall formula.

D.S., ORANGE

A:

I can tell from your narrative that the governing documents provide for cumulative voting, in which a member can stack their votes for candidates instead of casting one vote per candidate. Cumulative voting makes recalling individual directors very difficult, because under Corporatio­ns Code Section 7222(b)(1) the “no” votes count for more than the “yes” votes. This is yet another reason why most HOAs remove cumulative voting when they update their governing documents. Cumulative voting creates more problems for HOAs than it helps.

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