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Sunday, November 14, 2010

Shed installation violation


Before reading on, please view and refer to the August 1, 2010 post on this website (with its picture), entitled, "Shed building season".
Recently, a homeowner installed an exterior shed without first obtaining the drawings form the property management company and without obtaining Board permission before commencing construction. Needless to say, the shed was not built according to the approved drawings.
The shed was removed and the expense was charged back to the homeowner. Please read the following excerpt from the Rules & Regulations:
9.1 Storage Sheds. A copy of the Board approved uniform patio storage shed design is available from the property management company. Installation of the storage shed does require prior Board approval.
9.7 The Board reserves the right to require the homeowner to remove any unapproved alterations and restore the Common Areas or Limited Common Areas to their previous condition at the homeowner’s expense. Violations will be handled according to the Declarations, Section 11.

Monday, November 01, 2010

Tree removal project


Kenthill Townhomes will be having two trees removed on November 1, 2010. One tree is located between Kenthill Townhomes Building B and Building C. The other tree, which is more closer to Easthill Apartments, is located at the east end of Kenthill Townhomes Building R, at the east end of Unit R-5. This tree is now in danger of harming the foundation (and maybe the nearby sidewalk). Our landscaping company typically comes to service Kenthill Townhomes on Wednesdays. They will be handling the raking and cleanup of the sawdust, etc., from this project.

Saturday, October 09, 2010

2010 Dry rot repairs continue


Dry rot repairs continue on the sides of certain buildings. This is a picture of the repairs occurring at Building E.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

New concrete wall


Easthill Apartments has completed their work on the new concrete retaining wall near the Cabana: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcCkt1g47-Q

Thursday, September 02, 2010

New delinquency fee

The following letter was sent to all 82 Kenthill Townhomes homeowners on 06-30-10. Just to be 100% clear, this new fee is in addition to the regular $15 late fee for paying late one's homeowners dues.

to: ALL KENTHILL TOWNHOMES homeowners
from: KENTHILL TOWNHOMES board of directors
subject: delinquency statement processing fee
date: JUNE 30, 2010

Due to the increased scope of work resulting from efforts in collecting on delinquent accounts, SUHRCO Residential Properties, LLC has instituted a Delinquency Statement Processing Fee. This Delinquency Statement Processing Fee is $15.00 per month for each month a First Notice or Second Notice is sent to any homeowner whose account is not paid in full. No Delinquency Statement Processing Fee will be charged on the initial delinquency statement.
Your Association Board of Directors has the authority to pass on the Delinquency Statement Processing Fee to each owner receiving a First Notice or Second Notice. Therefore, in addition to your Association’s established Late Fee, each delinquent account will be assessed the $15.00 Delinquency Statement Processing Fee.
In order to avoid this additional fee, please pay your account in full each month by your Association’s established grace period.
Please contact your Property Manager with any questions regarding the Delinquency Statement Processing Fee.
Thank you!

Sunday, August 01, 2010

Shed building season


Summer is when homeowners traditionally install new exterior sheds. Above are two examples. The shed on the right is built according to the drawings. The shed on the left is not built according to the drawings. The shed on the left is unacceptable. Please read the following excerpt from the Rules & Regulations:

9.1 Storage Sheds. A copy of the Board approved uniform patio storage shed design is available from the property management company. Installation of the storage shed does require prior Board approval.

9.7 The Board reserves the right to require the homeowner to remove any unapproved alterations and restore the Common Areas or Limited Common Areas to their previous condition at the homeowner’s expense. Violations will be handled according to the Declarations, Section 11.

Sunday, July 04, 2010

Water leak

This is what happens when there is a water leak upstairs.

Here is a 1:39 second video that was taken to document the damage (outside only): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22ILUqWSQGE

Here is a 4:20 second video that was taken to document the damage (inside only): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWy7Vfxzt8E

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Cabana repairs and painting


Dry rot repairs and a painting job have recently occurred at the Cabana. Per the Joint Access and Easement Agreements covering the shared maintenance of recreational items, signed when both Easthill Apartments and Kenthill Townhomes were built in the 1970's, Easthill Apartments will be paying for 60% of the invoice, and Kenthill Townhomes will be paying for 40% of the invoice.

Monday, June 14, 2010

2010 dry rot repairs (con't)


This is a picture of the dry rot repairs occurring at Building K.

Tuesday, June 01, 2010

2010 dry rot repairs (con't)


This is a picture of the dry rot repairs occurring at Building O.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

2010 dry rot repairs


Significant dry rot continues to be discovered at our buildings. In order to address this dry rot (where the roof line meets the vertical wood siding on the building), wood siding repairs are being accomplished at Buildings M, K, and O. This is a picture of the dry rot repairs occurring at Building M.

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Paint job in the future


The long term projects of Kenthill Townhomes have been reviewed. Kenthill Townhomes received a painting job in 2002 (it was of poor quality). Another painting project will need to be scheduled in the future, but sooner than within a 15 year time span (well before 2017).

Friday, April 23, 2010

Tree trimming


Pre-arraigned agreements govern the division of expenses with respect to shared roadways and recreational facilities for Easthill Apartments and Kenthill Townhomes. Generally speaking, Easthill pays 60% and Kenthill Townhomes pays 40% of all shared invoices. Trimming of trees along shared roadways is considered a shared expense.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Free doors


Free louvered doors. These are from downstairs at my condo. The two on the left are from the downstairs storage area. The one on the right is from the downstairs closet area (the measurements are: 29 3/4” wide X 78 3/4” high). They are, “unfinished”. They would look even better, if they were stained (or even painted). I am at Unit J-4. Knock on my door or leave me a note, if you are interested. Otherwise, they’re going to be discarded.
[Update, 04-23-2010: Someone came and got them. Thanks].

Friday, April 02, 2010

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Beauty bark applied today

Barking will occur today. Please move any plants, etc., so that they do not get bark on them.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Handed out at the Annual Meeting, and discussed.

The following is an excerpt from the 2010 Annual Meeting Handout:

Kenthill Townhomes has had many difficulties and has faced several challenges in the last twelve months. The Board of Directors has been very busy addressing these various issues. Below is an abbreviated list of projects and ongoing projects accomplished in 2009 and early 2010. [Further details concerning these projects may be obtained by viewing the webblog at http://kenthillwebblog.blogspot.com].

1. Worked with certified public accountant to assist in the completion of the required 2008 audit; audit is pending but should be completed by the end of the year.
2. Continuing to work with our neighbors on all sides to regarding various issues including trespasser and fence problems.
3. In order to address dry rot problems (where the roof line meets the vertical wood siding on the building), wood siding repairs were accomplished. Since 2005, work has occurred at Buildings A, B, J, L, N, P, Q, R, C, E, D, and I.
4. Worked with plumbing contractors to address a number of significant (and costly) plumbing problems; these included major water leaks. Since 2005, repairs to water valves have occurred at Buildings A, B, C, D, E, I, J, L, and O.
5. Worked with contractors to have all chimneys inspected and cleaned as necessary.
6. Working with contractors to have all dryer vents inspected, cleaned, and repaired as necessary.
7. Continued repairs to outside water faucet hose bibs.
8. Cleaned gutters and downspouts on all 15 buildings.
9. Worked to address the ongoing issues surrounding delinquencies and foreclosures.
10. Coordinated with Easthill Apts. to assist contractors in the installation of new asphalt at the southeast corner of the complex.
11. Worked with contractors to install new gutters and downspouts on all buildings that have had new roofs installed since the Roofing Project began in 2003. New gutters and downspouts will be completed at the conclusion of each remaining roof installation from this point forward.

The long term projects of Kenthill Townhomes have been reviewed. Kenthill Townhomes received a painting job in 2002 (it was of poor quality). Another painting project will need to be scheduled in the future, but sooner than within a 15 year time span (well before 2017). The window replacement project has also been put on hold indefinitely. Beginning in 2003, we have been replacing roofs, two roofs each year. All scheduling of these projects are now under review. Over the past several years, we have found increasing amounts of serious dry rot on all of our buildings. As the Budget has allowed, repairs have occurred at Buildings A, B, J, L, N, P, Q, R. C, E, D, and I.

Each year since 2005, we include in the upcoming Budget the continued commitment to have two roofs installed each year (until all 15 buildings are completed) as well as the installation of gutters & downspouts at these buildings. As covered at the 2008 Annual Meeting, the Board has discussed plans to begin the replacement of all the windows in all the buildings (some already have been replaced by individual unit owners in past years), one building a year, until all 15 buildings are completed, at the conclusion of the Roofing Project. However, as mentioned above, these plans have been put on hold, as significant dry rot discoveries and their related repairs have taken precedence.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

2010 Annual Meeting

The 2010 Kenthill Townhomes Annual Meeting will be held at 7:00PM in the Cabana on March 22, 2010. Homeowners are urged to sign proxies if they are unable to attend. Homeowners may wish to re-read the December 2008 Newsletter (additional copies may be found on the doorstep of Unit J-4).

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

2010 Dryrot repairs


Dry rot repairs continue on the sides of certain buildings.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Re-printing of a newsletter

The following is a re-printing of a newsletter that was distributed in July of 2008:

JULY NEWSLETTER

An article appeared in the Seattle Times newspaper on April 27, 2008 which should be read and understood by all homeowners. [It is reproduced here in its entirety without editing and by permission from the Seattle Times]. In light of the passage of this new law by the legislature, the Executive Summary of the Reserve Study completed for Kenthill Townhomes in 2006 is included in this handout. Certain sections of the Executive Summary [which are in brackets] have sentences added for clarification. Also included is a reprinting of the cover letter from the Kenthill Board of Directors regarding the Executive Summary, dated September 7, 2006.

The Reserve Study is a very large document. Preparing it took many months and many hours of interaction, feedback, studying, and information gathering on the part of the vendor, countless contractors, and question and answer sessions with Board members. Having said that, the Reserve Study is only a guide. It is a very useful guide, but only a guide. It does not dictate, nor will it dictate, future actions and decisions. It came with useful tools which can be used to manipulate data to produce various current and future outcomes. The Board has spent many hours reviewing the document. It has proved to be very helpful in the short time that it has been implemented in assisting with composing a rough draft of future projects and issues which will need to be considered in the short term future and the long term future.

That said, this is the law in Washington State now.
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Sunday, April 27, 2008 - Page updated at 12:00 AM

Permission to reprint or copy this article or photo, other than personal use, must be obtained from The Seattle Times. Call 206-464-3113 or e-mail resale@seattletimes.com with your request.

New state law requires condo associations to report money set aside for long-term maintenance
By Elizabeth Rhodes

Seattle Times business reporter

Attention, condominium shoppers: Washington soon will become one of a half-dozen states requiring condo associations to provide a financial-wellness check that can predict whether the place is a potential money pit.

The check, called a reserve study, estimates how much money an association must set aside to pay for expensive long-term maintenance, such as repaving a parking lot, replacing a roof or rebuilding rotting decks.

Although many associations require reserve studies, many have ignored their own requirements, local condo experts say. That will have to change June 12, when updates to the state's condo law take effect and associations must prepare and annually update such a study and make it available to buyers.

Calling it the "biggest thing to happen since the Condominium Act of 1990 was passed," longtime condo attorney Kris Sundberg says the new provisions will address "the dirty little secret of the condo world: Most condos are severely underfunded."

However, what the law does not do is to require that associations actually save the money their study finds is needed to cover future maintenance. Laws in a few states, including Hawaii, do.

"While this law may not put Washington in the vanguard, it clearly puts them toward the top of the list in being progressive on the issue," says Frank Rathbun, of the Community Associations Institute, a national nonprofit educational organization for homeowners associations and their members.

The reserve study must be done by a professional and can be waived only if it would "impose an unreasonable hardship," something the law does not define. Still, the associations group, condo attorneys and property managers call the change necessary, if somewhat overdue, for a growing segment of the housing market. A quarter of King County home sales are condos, and many buyers are homeowner novices.

"It will act as consumer protection for a lot of potential buyers and give them a better perspective of the true costs of ownership in a condominium association," says Marshall Johnson, president of The CWD Group, which manages about 90 condo associations in Seattle and Bellevue.

Sundberg, of Mercer Island, says that's been sorely lacking.

"We're seeing a substantial increase in litigation from unhappy purchasers who bought a condo then found out there's a huge special assessment being levied," he says. These irate buyers "go after the board, the manager, the real-estate agents, the seller," he says.

Considered a one-time cost to pay for major repairs, a special assessment is what associations turn to when they haven't built sufficient long-term savings in what's called a reserve account.

The account is separate from the annual budget, which pays for regular, ongoing expenses such as insurance.

When a special assessment is levied, owners are billed for their portions.

"We regularly see assessments in the $60,000 to $80,000 range per unit," Sundberg says. "Most condominium associations have neither a current reserve study nor adequately funded reserves."

That wouldn't surprise Jim Talaga, president of Association Reserves Washington, a reserve-study provider. Many 20-year-old communities have had little serious maintenance, he says.

An older 50-unit building could face $200,000 for a new roof and $70,000 for new exterior paint — with no money set aside to pay for them.

A first-time reserve study, on the other hand, costs about $2,500, although that depends a lot on the size of the community, Talaga says.

Matt Reed had first-hand experience with the reserves issue when he served on the board of a South Everett condominium. His underfunded complex faced at least $1 million in serious repairs because of delayed maintenance," he says.

The root of the problem, Reed says, was a membership of mostly first-time owners who hadn't made the mental transition from apartment dweller to homeowner.

"They were trying to defer all the responsibility and remain renters," he says.

After the board voted to levy a substantial special assessment, a group of angry owners successfully voted to override it, and the work went undone.

Faced with an emotionally draining stalemate, Reed sold his condo and bought a house.

The new law will make it harder for condo associations to conceal from buyers a lack of long-term financial planning. Those that use the hardship exemption to forgo a reserve study must disclose that to prospective buyers along with this warning:

"The lack of a current reserve study poses certain risks to you, the purchaser. Insufficient reserves may, under some circumstances, require you to pay" a special assessment.

Sundberg thinks having that in print may dissuade some buyers and lenders from investing in underfunded condos.

It will also affect their prices, Johnson predicts. "The unit that has minimal reserves is going to be cheaper than one with high reserves, so what they're saving by not putting into reserves will be lost in the price they get for it," Johnson says.

Once associations realize the true cost of scrimping on savings, reserve accounts will grow and the problem will correct itself, Sundberg says.

Meanwhile a real concern for associations is finding a qualified pro to do a reserve study. Several firms exist locally, but demand may overwhelm supply as associations attempt to comply with the new law.

Condo lawyer Brian McLean, of Leahy.ps in Kirkland, worked on the law's passage. He recommends that associations address this issue in their next budget cycle, research whether a reserve specialist is available and find out what the cost will be.

"This is a great planning tool, but no one wants this to cause a sense of undue urgency," McLean says. "I'm comfortable saying everyone has time to do this and do it right."
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