Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yikes, people. Kids in pools are are HUGE liability issue, and minority children has less swimming skills. If I lived there, I'd have called the police, too. It could save a life.
That's a racist thing to say. The pool we go to is primarily minorities. We are one of the few white families.
DP . You don't understand the meaning of the word racist and you're an imbecile to cite your meaningless anecdotal experience as proof of anything. You're part of the problem. Oh, and what PP said about a correlation between minorities and inability to swim is a FACT, and a problematic one at that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest of one of the members, they had a right to be there.
Not if the owner had not made the proper advance arrangements for a party. If permission has not been granted for a party, then they do not have the right to be there.
That's a violation of the HOA rules. It is not criminal. If I don't get permission to paint my house, can you call the police and have me arrested?
What? It's private property, which makes it trespassing. Why are you so intent on protecting criminals?
Private property with joint ownership. The HOA owns the property. The condo owner, a member of the HOA, who invited the child over to use the property is not creating a trespass situation. There are no criminals.
If the condo owner did not have previous permission to have a party group in the pool area, they did not have permission to be there. How is this so difficult to understand? If you don’t have permission to invite people, then you are not allowed to invite people. And if you do, they are then trespassers.
This is a safety issue. A large group of children around a pool without appropriately trained supervision is, sadly, too often an accident waiting to happen. If you pay attention to the news at all, you are aware that children have drowned in pools even with lots of adults around. So to have a lot of kids around a pool with no lifeguards and only a few adults is not the safest thing to do.
So the police broke up the pool party immediately for safety, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yikes, people. Kids in pools are are HUGE liability issue, and minority children has less swimming skills. If I lived there, I'd have called the police, too. It could save a life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest of one of the members, they had a right to be there.
Not if the owner had not made the proper advance arrangements for a party. If permission has not been granted for a party, then they do not have the right to be there.
That's a violation of the HOA rules. It is not criminal. If I don't get permission to paint my house, can you call the police and have me arrested?
What? It's private property, which makes it trespassing. Why are you so intent on protecting criminals?
Private property with joint ownership. The HOA owns the property. The condo owner, a member of the HOA, who invited the child over to use the property is not creating a trespass situation. There are no criminals.
If the condo owner did not have previous permission to have a party group in the pool area, they did not have permission to be there. How is this so difficult to understand? If you don’t have permission to invite people, then you are not allowed to invite people. And if you do, they are then trespassers.
This is a safety issue. A large group of children around a pool without appropriately trained supervision is, sadly, too often an accident waiting to happen. If you pay attention to the news at all, you are aware that children have drowned in pools even with lots of adults around. So to have a lot of kids around a pool with no lifeguards and only a few adults is not the safest thing to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yikes, people. Kids in pools are are HUGE liability issue, and minority children has less swimming skills. If I lived there, I'd have called the police, too. It could save a life.
That's a racist thing to say. The pool we go to is primarily minorities. We are one of the few white families.
DP . You don't understand the meaning of the word racist and you're an imbecile to cite your meaningless anecdotal experience as proof of anything. You're part of the problem. Oh, and what PP said about a correlation between minorities and inability to swim is a FACT, and a problematic one at that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yikes, people. Kids in pools are are HUGE liability issue, and minority children has less swimming skills. If I lived there, I'd have called the police, too. It could save a life.
That's a racist thing to say. The pool we go to is primarily minorities. We are one of the few white families.
Anonymous wrote:Yikes, people. Kids in pools are are HUGE liability issue, and minority children has less swimming skills. If I lived there, I'd have called the police, too. It could save a life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest of one of the members, they had a right to be there.
Not if the owner had not made the proper advance arrangements for a party. If permission has not been granted for a party, then they do not have the right to be there.
That's a violation of the HOA rules. It is not criminal. If I don't get permission to paint my house, can you call the police and have me arrested?
What? It's private property, which makes it trespassing. Why are you so intent on protecting criminals?
Private property with joint ownership. The HOA owns the property. The condo owner, a member of the HOA, who invited the child over to use the property is not creating a trespass situation. There are no criminals.
Anonymous wrote:So in the end did she get charged with trespassing?
The police must have eventually found the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Yikes, people. Kids in pools are are HUGE liability issue, and minority children has less swimming skills. If I lived there, I'd have called the police, too. It could save a life.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest of one of the members, they had a right to be there.
Not if the owner had not made the proper advance arrangements for a party. If permission has not been granted for a party, then they do not have the right to be there.
That's a violation of the HOA rules. It is not criminal. If I don't get permission to paint my house, can you call the police and have me arrested?
What? It's private property, which makes it trespassing. Why are you so intent on protecting criminals?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest of one of the members, they had a right to be there.
Not if the owner had not made the proper advance arrangements for a party. If permission has not been granted for a party, then they do not have the right to be there.
That's a violation of the HOA rules. It is not criminal. If I don't get permission to paint my house, can you call the police and have me arrested?
Anonymous wrote:Hundreds of responses justifying this horrible choice. Wow. We really, really want to find something, anything but racism to justify this woman's behavior. Got it.