WHAT IS CAI?
Welcome to the CAI Corner! CAI, or the Community Association Institute, is a global organization with over 64 local chapters, whose membership includes thousands of community association stakeholders, including homeowners, managers, and business partners. CAI offers its membership a variety of educational, professional development, and networking resources. To learn more about CAI and how to become a member, you can find that information on www.caionline.org. Once you join CAI, you are assigned a chapter. RB has memberships with the DC Metro Chapter (https://www.caidc.org/), the Chesapeake Chapter (https://www.caimdches.org/) and the Central Virginia Chapter (https://www.cvc-cai.org/).
This page is dedicated to providing updates on CAI’s latest initiatives and communications that we consider important to our association clients.
UPDATES
WMCCAI Virginia Legislative Committee, Legislative Update, Wednesday, October 16, 2024, 4:00pm
Join WMCCAI's Virginia Legislative Committee and members of CAI's Virginia Legislative Action Committee to learn about new laws and regulations in Virginia. Ask your questions and get information to bring back to your community to ensure your compliance with the new laws. Hear how you can get involved and make a difference.
The session will include a networking hour following the presentation.
Event details:
ACT NOW - Lend Your Voice, Tell Housing Commission No New Landscaping Rules, Sept 12th 2024
The Community Associations Institute Virginia Legislative Action Committee (VALAC) needs your help! The Virginia Housing Commission is meeting on August 20th to continue discussions started in the General Assembly on HB 528 - Property Owners' Assoc. Act; managed conservation landscaping, unreasonable restrictions prohibited this past legislative session. This legislation would have prohibited associations from restricting owners from installing managed conservation landscaping, unless explicitly stated in the declaration. We need you to sign our petition to let the Commission know that HB 528’s language, as currently written, is harmfully vague, and that associations should have the authority to reasonably regulate landscaping practices and preserve community aesthetics and property values!
The LAC opposed this bill as originally drafted when discussed in the General Assembly earlier this year, as it would override freely negotiated private covenants. Most covenants, even the modern ones, do not address managed conservation features or plans (to permit or prohibit), because this is a newly defined concept/term under the Virginia Code - the bill needs to clarify the protection of existing covenants and allow for flexibility on association rule making authority.
Additionally, there is a lack of meaningful ability to reasonably interpret and approve or enforce landscaping guidelines by volunteer board/committee members. Volunteer boards and committees will greatly struggle to review requests and enact/enforce rules related to these features because the definition of the conservation plan and what are “unreasonable rules” are defined too broadly in the bill.
This bill is another example of an attempt to impose a one-size-fits-all approach to regulating community associations. Because this law would apply to all communities, small and large lots, densely populated or not, urban and rural, associations must have flexibility to independently and reasonably evaluate what they consider to be appropriate rules for their community.
Please, join the LAC in expressing concerns about the language of HB 528, and sign our petition today!
CLICK HERE TO SIGN OUR PETITION!
Tell Congress - Exempt Community Associations from the Corporate Transparency Act Now, Sept 12th 2024
- Business name.
- Legal name of board members, birthdate, home address, an identifying number from a driver’s license, state ID, or passport.
- Individual with substantial control. The same information (name, birthdate, home address, identifying number) of person (s) who exercise substantial control over financial reporting for the community association corporation. It is unclear whether a community manager and/or management company qualify as an individual with substantial control. This is yet to be confirmed. CAI will continue to evaluate this and provide guidance accordingly.
- Changes, corrections, and additions to the filing must occur within 30 days of when you become aware of the change (i.e., board member moves, is replaced, etc.).