A Home Owners Association (HOA) or Community Association is a nonprofit corporation or unincorporated association that manages or governs a joint owner development and operates in accordance with governing documents, whether the corporation or association is formally designated or commonly referred to as an HOA or community association. Examples include condominiums, townhomes, planned unit developments, stock cooperatives, and other projects where separately owned individual units or parcels exist in conjunction with a common area.
HOAs or Community Associations are responsible for maintaining, repairing, and certifying sidewalks when sidewalks are a "common element" or a "common area" in governing documents such as the Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CC&Rs). The individual unit owners--as a group--are responsible for maintaining repairing, and certifying sidewalks if the HOA or Community Association does not cover sidewalks as a "common element" or a "common area" in governing documents such as the Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CC&Rs), or the joint owner development is not managed or governed by a HOA or Community Association.
Each HOA or Community Association should bring all sidewalks adjacent to the development into compliance. The HOA or Community Association will receive a Compliance Certificate once all sidewalks within their maintenance responsibility comply through the regular compliance process. Compliance Certificates are valid for 5 years.
If you are buying, selling, or renovating a property in an HOA or Community Association, contact your HOA or Community Association to request a copy of the Compliance Certificate to use during title transfer.
If your HOA or Community Association does not yet have a Sidewalk Compliance Certificate, then a no-fee Compliance Certificate can be issued to you as the property owner from the OakDOT Permit Counter. The City may then inspect the sidewalks and issue Notices to Repair for damaged sidewalks to the HOA or Community Association. If a condominium is not part of a HOA or Community Association, the property owner is responsible for certifying the sidewalk themselves.