9/14/2024 11:58:33 AM
Reply
or ReplyNewSubject
Section 6: ECC/ARC/CPI Subject: Political Signs Msg# 1211501
|
||||||
Looking back, I found my commentary from May 2021. You may find it interesting, especially when it comes to public comments made by board members Perrone and Rogers at the time. Those board members apparently had no idea what OPA's attorney advised the board some seven years earlier in 2014.
At any rate, you will note that in the commentary I reference Joe Moore addressing Maryland sign law at a board meeting back in 2014. Similar to yours. Joe does, however, address the issue of the number and sizes of political candidate signs that owners may place on their lots and suggests OPA cannot control this. Do you have a similar view on number and size, or do you think a Maryland HOA can control those? Here is the commentary from 2021: Signs of the Times Association member Nate Douty wrote to the OPA Board of Directors back in late 2019 expressing concern about campaign signs for candidates for public office on lots in Ocean Pines, as to size, how many, and how long they can remain in place. Apparently, his primary concern related to signs for a presidential candidate on a property for years. He was not inquiring about signs for OPA board candidates as it seems OPA can regulate these in any way it pleases via ECC/ARC Guidelines, although apparently there is even some question about that topic. Back to the issue of public office candidate signs - Larry Perrone told Douty OPA had "no authority to intervene" with regard to presidential candidate signs displayed on a lot for years. He wrote, "OPA’s bylaws are only enforceable for our elections." First off, any OPA sign restrictions are based on the Declarations of Restrictions, not the bylaws. Secondly, OPA does indeed have the authority to "regulate" signs displayed for candidates for public office, but Perrone even goes so far as to tell Douty, "A legal opinion is not needed." In other words, Perrone read the laws and made a legal determination. Then board member Camilla Rogers, an attorney, responds to Douty, writing, "I have reviewed (the HOA Act), and have also put this out to my Real Property list serve (sic). While I respect Mr. Douty's position, the interpretation is correct as Mr. Perrone has stated which is the intent of this statute. While I have not reviewed applicable case law, the plain meaning of the statute is clear." First off, Camilla Rogers is not OPA's attorney and, as a board member, should not be offering legal opinions on any OPA issue. Secondly, Rogers writes, "I have sent the question out to other members of my legal list serve (sic) and have learned a lot. The statute only applies to the candidates for the offices that are internal to Ocean Pines." That interpretation is the exact opposite of what the HOA Act states! Rogers also said, "However, I believe that your issue went a little further and you were also concerned about the size of all signs for political office. My feeling is that they should be reasonable." Back in 2014 I asked then Maryland State Senate member Jim Mathias if he would ask the Attorney General for an opinion on the issue of public office sign regulation in an HOA like Ocean Pines. Jim instead suggested he would contact OPA's attorney, Joe Moore, and ask Moore to look into the issue and provide a report to the Board of Directors. Moore did so at a public board meeting on May 24, 2014. The minutes of that meeting include the following: "Joe Moore - Political signs Discussion - Mr. Moore explained Sen. Mathias contacted him because Joe Reynolds said OPA has a limit on the number of campaign signs allowed on a property of a public election. Mr. Moore read Section 11 B-11.02 of the Maryland Act. OPA can restrict candidate signs on common areas and display no more than 30 days before and 7 days after a primary or general Public election but cannot limit on size, quantity, etc. on private property. OPA however can regulate its own election candidate’s signs. Mr. Terry thanked Mr. Moore for his attendance today." Note: the correct HOA Act reference in the minutes should be 11B-111.2. The discussion is also available on video. So... where are we today? Clearly, if Moore's opinion as OPA legal counsel was correct, the two board members responding to Douty with their own legal opinions are wrong. OPA does indeed have the legal authority to regulate when public office campaign signs can be placed and when they must be removed. At this point, sans any board revision of the Guidelines, it could be argued that signs supporting a candidate for public office can go up at any time and remain on OPA private lots for only seven days after an election. With regard to OPA board elections and candidate signs, based on the current Guidelines, an argument can also be made that ECC/ARC must approve every board candidate sign placed on a private lot! As one informed source explained, "The DR prohibition on signs without approval prevents the Elections Committee, Board, GM or anyone else from issuing guidelines for such signs. The signs are prohibited without ECC/ARC approval." The Bylaws and Resolutions Committee has urged the board for many years to clarify the Guidelines with regard to signs. To no avail. Board members offering questionable legal opinions only compound the problems. |
||||||
|
||||||
For reference, the above message is a reply to a message where: The Supreme Court says they are protected speech - except there seems to be some proviso related to properties in HOAs that allow some restrictions on when signs can go up on private lots and when they must be removed. One basic point that bears mentioning -- it is governmental entities (states, counties, municipalities) that cannot infringe on free speech and other constitutional rights. Stated differently, the constitution protects citizens from government action, not from private action. Civil rights laws (statutes) provide protections that are enforceable against private actors in certain contexts (housing and related services, employment, access to facilities, education, etc). But again, private entities like an HOA do not violate the constitution when they regulate speech. This is a distinction that many people don't appreciate when they cite the constitution as a prohibiting regulation of political or other speech by an HOA where they live, or by a private company that may be their employer. In the absence of the Maryland statute that prohibits HOAs from restricting election signs in the period 30 days before and 7 days after an election, OPA could (particularly in light of the sign restriction in the DRs) ban election signs outright, and there would be no free speech/constitutional violation there, because the OPA is not the government. |
Calendar |
OPA Board Meeting - Golf Clubhouse
1/25/2025 - 9: A.M. |
OPA Board Meeting - Golf Clubhouse
2/22/2025 - 9:00 A.M. |
OPA Board Meeting - Golf Clubhouse
3/29/2025 - 9:00 A.M. |
OPA Board Meeting - Golf Clubhouse
4/26/2025 - 9:00 A.M. |
OPA Board Meeting - Golf Clubhouse
5/24/2025 - 9:00 A.M. |