Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
What do you do if 30 people show up at a time when there is no lifeguard on duty? Are you okay with that many people around a pool with no lifeguards?
What if an injury occurred and your HOA were sued for allowing so many people around the pool with no lifeguards? Does your HOA have the funds to handle a lawsuit like that?
There is always a life guard on duty if the pool is open.
The pool has a max capacity and if max capacity were to be reached, no one else would be allowed in.
The members of the association own the property.
So you always staff the pool for the maximum capacity? Your HOA must have a lot of money.
My HOA staffs according to how many people are expected at particular times, with one or two on standby if needed. We would need to know in advance if a 30 person party was being held, especially one with a lot of children. We would have more lifeguards scheduled for that time, especially since people at a party will act differently than people who are just at the pool in smaller groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
What do you do if 30 people show up at a time when there is no lifeguard on duty? Are you okay with that many people around a pool with no lifeguards?
What if an injury occurred and your HOA were sued for allowing so many people around the pool with no lifeguards? Does your HOA have the funds to handle a lawsuit like that?
There is always a life guard on duty if the pool is open.
The pool has a max capacity and if max capacity were to be reached, no one else would be allowed in.
The members of the association own the property.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Under no circumstance does any reasonable person think its reasonable for 1-2 "owners" to have 30 guests in a shared owner space. Imagine if every owner did that.
These people were WAY out of line and they either know it and don't care, or are THAT clueless about acceptable public behavior.
I have no doubt that the 30 of them who thought this was totally cool to do were making a huge disturbance at the pool.
The fine them and it's not the police's job to do that or another owner's job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
Then you should resign and let someone else step up to make sure the rules are followed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
What do you do if 30 people show up at a time when there is no lifeguard on duty? Are you okay with that many people around a pool with no lifeguards?
What if an injury occurred and your HOA were sued for allowing so many people around the pool with no lifeguards? Does your HOA have the funds to handle a lawsuit like that?
Anonymous wrote:
Yes, but if they weren’t following the rules, they needed to leave. Taking it up with the HOA isn’t going to do anything to help the situation in that moment. Fining the owner after the fact doesn’t help the here and now situation of there being too many kids in the pool- especially if no lifeguard is on duty. That would be a liability issue for the HOA if someone were to get hurt. And none of us want a child to be in a possibly dangerous situation around water.
My HOA’s pool staff call the police at least once every year or two when people who are there without permission refuse to leave. They have all been white kids, so no mention of racism was made.
And I wouldn’t even think of bringing 30 people to my pool without filling out the paperwork in advance. There’s no way it’s a good idea to have 30 people around an HOA pool with no lifeguards on duty. That is just a bad idea all around.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a pool association treasurer. We don't require advance permission to bring guests, even a lot of guests. We do charge per guest. And if you want to reserve half of the picnic pavilion for your party, you have to do that in advance.
We do reserve the right to ask anyone who is in violation of the rules to leave. Yes we would call the local cops if we asked someone to leave and they refused. Or at least, we would have in the past. Nowadays if the person is brown, no way I'm making that phone call.