Anonymous wrote:I would be team HOA on this one. Sounds like an eyesore and potential hazard.
But I also think you are doing more harm than good for yourself. You are potentially trapping and keeping alive virus particles in the plastic that wouldn't survive in fresh air and sunlight. Leave packages outside. Take off and bag your clothes inside your house.
Anonymous wrote:People love to disparage HOAs, but this story is exactly why I'm happy to live in a neighborhood that has one. Our previous neighborhood didn't, and this type of project would have fit right in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's not ingenious, OP.
Well, I disagree.
Nobody in my house brings any virus laden clothes or shoes inside the house, and all groceries and other packages can be disinfected inside the structure as well.
Disinfection of packages, groceries, etc is unnecessary. You’re delusional paranoiacs with a hideous eyesore on your house. Take it down.
Not true. Bring it into your own house if you want to. I'm making sure I don't.
Haha!
OP you created a CONTAMINATION unit outside your front door! Imagine a UPS worker or grocery delivery person coughs in there. The virus can live on plastic for several days. Then you come along and actually take off your clothes out there! Ha! It’s like you have your own virus incubator. You’ve exposed all your skin - BUT you put sanitizer on your hands.
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Anonymous wrote:First step, file an appeal. Explain that this is a temporary structure during the stay-at-home orders. When the governor reopens the state, you will take it down. This will buy you some time until the HOA can review the appeal and craft a response. They cannot do anything to you while an appeal is in process. By the time the appeal is processed and you have a response, the situation may change.
If the situation has not changed, then that means that it will still be a very long time until there are any LARP activities. Find another storage space for your LARP costumes for the duration of the pandemic response (where you will not be using the costumes) and move the disinfection station into the garage.
There is no time where you will need both the LARP costumes and the disinfection station. If you need the station, then there will be no LARPing. If you can go out LARPing again, then you won't need the disinfection station.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's not ingenious, OP.
Well, I disagree.
Nobody in my house brings any virus laden clothes or shoes inside the house, and all groceries and other packages can be disinfected inside the structure as well.
Disinfection of packages, groceries, etc is unnecessary. You’re delusional paranoiacs with a hideous eyesore on your house. Take it down.
Not true. Bring it into your own house if you want to. I'm making sure I don't.