By-Law Compliance Letter
By-law Compliance Letter
ENCOURAGING BY-LAW COMPLIANCE AND BUILDING OUR COMMUNITY
To: All Residents of Lakewood Trails
From: Lakewood Trails Owners Association Board of Directors
Date: May 1, 2020
Subject: ENCOURAGING BY-LAW COMPLIANCE AND BUILDING OUR COMMUNITY
Background
Lakewood Trails has become home to many families over the years since our first residents moved in. Each year has brought additional families, each with their own reasons for choosing Lakewood Trails as the place to make their home. Many of us were attracted to the area because of its location, its “child-friendly” environment and its recreational facilities. Many of us were also attracted to the area because of its commitment to the environment and its sense of community.
The reason that Lakewood Trails is so unique is in some respects a direct result of the original vision that was Lakewood Trails – a new community vision that each of us “bought into” (literally and figuratively) when we purchased our property here. This vision is part of the Lakewood Trails “package” and is variously set out in writing in the subdivision agreement, the development of marketing materials and our respective property deeds. Whether related to recreational facilities, common area maintenance or environmental concerns, these are the “written” attributes of Lakewood Trails and therefore need to be maintained. They need to be maintained, however, in a manner that allows a key “unwritten” attribute of Lakewood Trails – the sense of community – to be fostered.
The Role of the Lakewood Trails Owners Association (LWTOA) Board of Directors
The care and management of the Lakewood Trails community now rest with the Lakewood Trails Owners Association (LWTOA), of which there is annually elected a board of directors. The LWTOA Board of Directors, a group of volunteers from our neighbourhood, is committed to listening to the suggestions and concerns raised by residents of Lakewood Trails and to looking for ways to ensure that, as we grow in size, our sense of community grows along with that size.
Now that much of the development of Lakewood Trails is complete, the LWTOA Board is increasingly responsible for ensuring that each of us enjoys our properties to the fullest extent possible, while at the same time recognizing the rights of our neighbours. Where the enjoyment by one property owner negatively impacts the enjoyment of another (or others), it is the responsibility of the LWTOA Board to, at a minimum, take steps to protect the rights that are outlined in each of our property deeds.
The balancing of the dual responsibilities of community building and the protection of property owner rights is a difficult one to strike. When one property owner makes a complaint against another about an alleged breach of the Lakewood Trails written rules, a resolution of the issue that maintains a “community” relationship between the property owners is often difficult to attain. While it would be easy to set up a “police state” mentality to the enforcement of by-laws, rules and regulations, we need to balance the rights of the individual as against the fostering of a community atmosphere.
Concerns over Lawn Treatment
A number of concerns have been brought forward over the past few years that relate to the use of our properties. Specifically, there have been a number of questions and concerns raised over the use of pesticides and non-organic fertilizers by homeowners. The use of fertilizers and lawn chemicals (other than as approved by LWTOA) is expressly prohibited in each of our deed restrictions. LWTOA has approved the use of organic fertilizers and the spot use of pesticides.
These restrictions and the LWTOA exceptions, in addition to being in our deed restrictions, have formed part of the marketing materials for the development for many years. However, they are not merely “rules for rule’s sake”. The restriction on pesticide use is based on the widespread recognition that many pesticides are highly toxic and have been linked to many health-related problems, including cancer. As a result of the way in which children “use” a lawn, this concern is particularly prevalent among children. Our community is a thriving, family-oriented place, with many young children. We need to ensure that our policies and practices are such that we do not put our children and ourselves at risk.
The restriction on the use of non-organic fertilizers is based on a growing appreciation of the extent to which the use of such non-organic fertilizers can cause damage to our lakes. Whether or not our home is located directly on one of the lakes within Lakewood Trails, each of us benefits greatly from the access to (and appearance of) these lakes. Organic fertilizers contain water-insoluble nitrogen. In non-organic fertilizers, the nitrogen is water-soluble. With rains or the application of water, these water-soluble chemicals flow through our properties and become part of the groundwater which, in turn, all flows into the lakes. Where these waters contain high levels of nitrogen, the lakes will be adversely affected, causing increased vegetation and decreased water quality.
As a result, each resident of Lakewood Trails can have an impact on the quality of the water in our lakes. The direct impact of the quality of our lake water on homeowners who do not live beside a lake may not appear to be significant right now. However, if our lakes become a collection of weeds and other vegetation as a result of high levels of groundwater chemicals, some of the positive “aura” of our community will be lost (as will, presumably, some of the market value of each of our properties).
Causes for Concern
The concerns that have been raised with respect to the use of fertilizers and pesticides fall into two categories: those applied by third-party lawn service providers and those applied by the homeowner himself or herself.
Where a homeowner engages a third-party lawn service to care for their lawn, it is important that the homeowner make the service provider aware of the restrictions within Lakewood Trails. However, unfortunately, this often is not enough, as these service providers may use non-organic fertilizers and/or pesticides while at the same time informing the homeowner that only organics are being used. This has become a popular tactic among these service providers and one of which all homeowners should be aware of. In addition to the fact that the subdivision rules are being broken, this use of chemicals without homeowner knowledge could put in the immediate area under a significant health risk (particularly with the use of pesticides).
To assist homeowners in their understanding of these issues and in the selection of appropriate lawn care service providers, the LWTOA Board will this spring make available information on lawn care service providers. The information will also include a list of the types of questions a consumer of these services should be asking to ensure that chemical fertilizers and pesticides are not being used. It is hoped that this information exchange will help eliminate the situations where residents are unknowingly in breach of the Lakewood Trails rules.
In other cases, it has come to the LWTOA Board’s attention that certain homeowners are aware of the service provider’s non-organic fertilizer or pesticide use or are themselves applying such fertilizers and/or pesticides in a seemingly reckless disregard to the by-laws and deed restrictions. This type of breach of the rules is obviously more disturbing and warrants stronger action by the LWTOA Board.
Until now, we have tried to address these matters on a one-off basis, without any real policy or guidelines as to how we ought to approach these property owners and what sanctions (if any) ought to be applied for abuse. Without these policies and guidelines, it is difficult for the LWTOA Board to intervene and to cause changes in behaviour because appropriate communication channels and adequate sanctions (where necessary) have never before been developed.
New Policy
The LWTOA Board is now introducing a new policy – the “Policy for the Encouragement of Compliance with By-Laws and Deed Restrictions”. The current LWTOA By-Laws give the LWTOA Board the right to suspend the membership of any homeowner who breaches the Deed Restrictions or other rules of LWTOA. The new policy is intended to explain to homeowners the various steps that the Board will take to try to rectify alleged breaches.
At the centre of this new policy is a spirit of communication. It is hoped that, with proper communication and the willingness to discuss matters, a significant number of potential disputes and/or issues will easily be rectified at the stage at which they are simple “misunderstandings” and will not become a full-blown dispute. While the right to suspend is still there, it is felt that the spirit of community (and the end result) will often be better served if the Board takes a more measured approach.
As a result, any breach or alleged breach of the By-Laws and/or Deed Restrictions (related to environmental issues or otherwise) will now be handled as follows:
- Any homeowner who is aware of or who suspects that another homeowner is in breach of the Lakewood Trails By-Laws and/or Deed Restrictions should contact a member of the LWTOA Board.
- Concerns can be lodged on a confidential basis, if desired, in which case the identity of the homeowner bringing forward the concern will not be passed on to anyone else (including the LWTOA Board and the other homeowner).
- The LWTOA Board member will bring the complaint forward to the LWTOA Board, who will consider the concern.
- The LWTOA Board will appoint one of its members to approach the homeowner who is allegedly in breach for an initial discussion to determine whether the complaint has merit.
- The LWTOA Board member will report back to the LWTOA Board as to his/her discussion, the agreement/disagreement of the homeowner with the concern, the degree to which the concern appears to be valid, and, if apparently valid, the degree to which the offending behaviour is likely to continue.
- The LWTOA Board will consider this additional information and, if necessary, engage in further individual discussions with the homeowners (the one lodging the concern and the one about which the concern has been lodged).
- The LWTOA Board will review all available information and make a determination as to the merits of the concern that has been lodged. If the concern is found to have merit, the LWTOA Board member will discuss the conclusion with each of the homeowners and will attempt to gain comfort as to the intention of the homeowner to now comply with the By-Laws and/or Deed Restrictions. This discussion will be followed up in writing with a letter from the LWTOA Board, indicating the required changes that must be made to the use of the property. A copy of this letter will be maintained with the LWTOA Board minutes in case of any need for follow-up.
- It is hoped that this will be the end of the matter. If for some reason the homeowner does not comply with the By-Laws and/or Deed Restrictions within a reasonable period of time, the LWTOA Board will consider whatever additional sanctions need to be introduced. These sanctions will depend on the severity of the breach, the number of other homeowners who are or could be negatively impacted and the type of negative impact that is or could be experienced (i.e. health and safety versus esthetics). Sanctions could include, for example, the suspension of membership rights, the placing of community notices or the referral of the matter to legal counsel to seek injunctive relief and/or registration of caveats on title.
- As has always been the case, any regular meeting of the LWTOA Board is a public forum and any homeowner may attend these meetings to discuss his or her concerns.
Conclusion
Each of us has our own reasons for living in Lakewood Trails. As we grow as a community, we need to ensure that the unique qualities that attracted us to the area are maintained, and our community culture is enhanced.
We hope that the new policy above will help us to achieve an appropriate balance between the rules that exist and the need to apply those rules in a community setting. The LWTOA Board is committed to working with the homeowners to ensure that their concerns are addressed, but will use this new policy to encourage and ensure appropriate communication between concerned homeowners, using the LWTOA Board as a “sounding board”, investigator and, in certain cases, adjudicator.
What will continue to make Lakewood Trails a special community is our ability to communicate and to foster an understanding of and respect for those who live around us. In that way, we will be sure that each of us will be able to enjoy Lakewood Trails in our own way while making sure our neighbours are able to do the same.