By Tom Blakeman, April 29, 2020
Overview
There are many changes coming already from our new Board of Directors. Rightly so and sorely needed. A clean sweep with a new broom. Two public working sessions per month is a truly refreshing reintroduction of former standard practice. This is one of many ideas which our new leaders apparently have in mind. In their first public Board meeting, they scrapped the infamous Governance Committee. (more on this below)
They have a lot more work ahead to clean up carnage left by their recent predecessor Boards. But after that, what’s next? What other changes might our new Board consider? How about changing the concept of how we staff and operate our principal governing and advisory bodies – the Committees and the Board itself? Re-invent the system which Hot Springs Village has been utilizing, more or less, since it’s inception.
One key problem appears to be the composition of our Board and Committees. The same people tend to be involved over and over. Rinse and repeat. You might call them “retreads”. They rotate between serving on past Boards and then join one or more Committees. Or vice-versa. Hardly opportunistic for fresh thinking or new ideas.
Mr. Cunningham previously served on both the Appeals and Public Works Committees, then he became a Board member and now is “back in the saddle again” on the Public Services Committee. OK? Maybe, maybe not.
Mr. Dixon previously served years and years on the Architectural Control Committee. Then he convinced us to elect him to the Board. The result? He supported the ill-conceived CMP and ridiculous new 120 page Protective Covenants. Fooled me. Did he fool you?
The “retread” issue is problematic – kind of like career politicians in DC. There are other problems too. Should the Committees remain as they are? Who should they really report to? Could they be improved? How should the Board be set up? How many Members do we really need? Despite the good intentions and efforts of many who have served, the results of Board decisions and actions have not always been favorable. How can that be improved? Committee recommendations, good, bad or otherwise, often get forgotten or fall on deaf ears. How do we fix these many concerns?
A Little History (1)
1970: Only John A. Cooper employees and close business associates were available (allowed) to serve on the POA Board until 1974.
1973: By the year 1973, all members selected to serve on Standing Committees were residents.
1974: In December 1974, Article XII (Articles of Incorporation) was amended to increase the number of Directors to seven (7). Since that time consideration has been given to increasing the number of Board Members to nine (9), but action has never occurred.
1975: The terms of office of the Board of Directors was changed from four and six years to three-year staggered terms. This is where we are – more or less – today.
2000: In the middle nineties to 2000 the Board of Directors deliberately and aggressively took steps to move totally away from administrative functions and to focus only on policymaking.
(1) Taken from ‘A History of Hot Springs Village 1970 through 2006’
Committees
Definition of Camel: “A racehorse designed by a Committee”.
Committees are usually filled with competent, dedicated people, all with good intentions. They meet regularly, work hard, and often prepare solid recommendations. Sometimes though, their work is simply ignored or swept under the rug. Worse, their work and recommendations may also be suppressed by the Board and/or POA.
The recent marketing sub-committee fiasco is an example where suppression came into play. Luckily, the cover-up was exposed, and the sub-committee’s work was brought to light and recognized. How many other similar studies and recommendations were not?
In 2012, the RASP Committee (long since disbanded) recommended strongly against the Two-Tier scheme. What did the Board do with the RASP results? Simple, they ignored it. In 2013, the Board President (Mr. Keck) formed a task force (FFT) who met – in secret – for nine months and then endorsed the Two-Tier. That was apparently what the misguided BOD of the time wanted all along.
Used and chartered correctly, Committees should be of great benefit to an organization. On the other hand Committees may be of little value or may need to be repurposed. As an example, some questions might be worth asking about the HSV Golf Committee.
- What role does it play in stemming the ever growing golf losses? Maybe that isn’t in the Committee ’Charter’. If not, it should be.
- Do Committee members generally support the idea of attracting outside players to help pay the bills? Or do they oppose it?
- Given the financial magnitude of our Golf Program, should the Committee report directly to the Board? Currently, it reports to POA staff.
- What has it achieved towards fixing the chronic drainage problems present on every course? Were Committee requests submitted but not listened to?
- What was the Committee’s position on hiring Troon or implementing the “Flex Pricing” scheme? Two big failures. Were they even consulted?
- What is the Committee composition? Is it all “Annual” players? Are there “Daily Pay” players as well? What about non-residents? What about non-golfer property owners? Think about it. “Annuals” view golf differently than others. And, many non-golfer Property Owners seem to think we have too many courses and should close a few.
Committees can be used as weapons also. The ill-conceived and infamous Governance Committee noted earlier was a prime example. This small, secretly operating group, which came to be known as a ‘Board within a Board’, operated autonomously. It essentially controlled what the official Board could do. If there was something the “ceo” wanted or didn’t like? Bingo! Her Praetorian Guard would fix it. Gone with the wind now – thankfully.
A conversation should be going on for all the Committees. Are their ‘Charters’ appropriate? Do they have a tangible and measurable set of goals and responsibilities? What are they really accomplishing? Are they effective? Are they listened to? Other similar questions should be asked – and answered. No changes needed? Fine. Otherwise, changes need to be made. The Village cannot continue to keep on going on “like we’ve always done”. It’s not been working.
Board of Directors
Much of our Boards’ time over the last 10 or 15 years has revolved solely around changing all or most of our governing documents – or trying to. Rearranging deck chairs while the Titanic was sinking. Remember the big Declarations Vote? What a waste of everyone’s time and resources that was! How much Committee time, not to mention Board Member time, and cost (a total we’ll never know) was wasted on that?
Now we have a situation where our new Board of Directors must spend even more time reversing all of the mistakes and bad policy decisions of the recent past. Our various governing documents must be changed back to a sensible form. Dreamers’ follies such as the CMP must be repealed. Luckily the property owners voted not to allow the frequency of Declarations changes to be reduced from seven years. Had that happened there would now be even more mess to repair.
Boards of the last 10+ years or so were also greatly consumed with trivia. If you don’t believe that just go back and read all the old Board Minutes. They are loaded with recognitions, awards, citations, commendations, birthday greetings, proclamations, parliamentarianism, ‘pomp and circumstance’. And then there were all those unanimous votes. Unanimous on almost everything! Where was the diversity of thought, the independent convictions, the alternative ideas, and the real debate? It’s hard to find.
We often hear about how we have a “small Board” with little time and too much to do. Our Directors are not paid. But, we are told they often work 30 and 40+ hour weeks. Nobody, especially retired people, needs or wants to be overworked. Directors don’t even get a discount on Golf or the Fitness Center. We are told they do get all the grief, complaints, and harassment they can handle and then some. All pain and little reward have to be a big factor why most people are not interested in serving. There have been cases where no one stepped up to run in an election for a Board seat.
Mr. Medica just completed two Board tours of duty. He volunteered and was appointed to his second tour in 2017, with no election. Wasn’t anyone else interested? Apathy at work? The “retread” syndrome? Maybe he had been doing such a fantastic job that no one dared oppose. Could be. He was Board President when Ms. Nalley was made “ceo” in 2016.
Property owner apathy has been a big problem. The party line is we just can’t get volunteers to run for office. It’s a thankless job they say. But what if the workload was different? What if Directors could actually control some (no, not all) of the day to day workings of the POA? What else could make a difference? Just dreaming up Policy changes – most of which in the last few years weren’t needed – that gets old. Reading red-lined documents is tedious and tiring. No one enjoys endless meetings with fluff and busywork like those proclamations.
Our current “corporate” model (some would say dictatorship) has been a huge mistake. We don’t need a “ceo”, unnecessary layers of management, and fancy titles. We don’t need a stifled Board. Our Directors should all have the freedom to publically voice dissent on Board actions or call out management errors outside of a “Closed Executive Session”. Few people want responsibility with little voice or control or influence, not to mention the potential liability that comes with serving.
Ideas & Solutions
Revitalize the Committees: Our Committees should have more power. A Board Member should also be the Chair Person on the key Committees instead of just being a “liaison” or a “member”. That Board Member should take ownership of their Committee. Or, maybe we don’t even need Committees at all, or at least only very few of them. On the other hand, if we don’t have Committees, then how is all the ‘work’ to be spread around? Let’s take a long, hard look at all of our Committees and then decide.
Expand our Board of Directors: That’s right, nine (9) or eleven (11) Directors (all voting) should be implemented as was proposed in the past. We need more fiducially obligated Directors, elected by the Property Owners, operating openly at public Board meetings and working sessions. More ‘heads in the game’ – more hands to do the work – more accountability – less workload. An equal and important benefit would be increased input on all Board decision making – less likelihood of a ‘faction’ controlling decision outcomes.
Change our Directors’ Duties and Limitations: Go back to a real ‘Working Board’ as it appears to have been prior to 1995. Revert back to doing real administration (a.k.a. management) as opposed to only policymaking. Retrieve some of that power that our Boards have so largely ceded to POA staff over the last 20 or so years. And, let them speak out! This idea of the Board “having only one voice” needs to be scrapped.
We Should Pay Them: You got it! A stipend or honorarium – just like the directors of most public companies receive. After all, a majority of people don’t want to work for free. Directors are being asked to give up their retirement after a lifetime of working. Provide some incentive other than the altruism of serving. We could save several hundred thousand dollars if we eliminate just a few of the “glorified” “executive” staff positions which we now have. We could then pay Directors $40K yearly each (no benefits) and still come out way ahead.
Give Them Help: Provide the Board with one or two executive assistants to help with research, run the errands, prepare ‘Motion Memos’, take and record the notes, minutes, and so forth. These assistants would report directly to the Board, have no other duties, and, of course, no Board voting rights. Having ‘Board Staff’ would also remove distractions from the operating staff. Who knows, our operating staff might then get more real and quality work done. We don’t need more failed gate projects, geothermal fiascos, or budget-busting DeSoto Club redos.
Change the Term of Service: Give our Directors each a four year term and go to an every other year election cycle. This would cure many issues: 1) saving costs on all too frequent elections, 2) wasting time gearing up for and holding those elections, 3) continuity and the turnover problem. Term limits should also be invoked. As noted earlier, over the years we have had many who have continually been on the Board or on one Committee or another, or many, for years and years. End “rinse and repeat”.
Require Expertise: We should designate certain Board seats to be filled by those with certain real qualifications such as Marketing, Engineering, Information Technology, Golf, Finance, etc. The last thing we need to repeat is having another Board Member declare in an open Board Meeting: “It’s all Greek to me!” An “expertise” based system would help foster real accountability. This is something we have apparently never had on any Board, not to mention with our paid staff. Those designated “expertise” seats should have direct access to their Staff counterparts, the Accounting Manager, and the General Manager.
To the Naysayers
These proposed solutions would help solve many of the problems we currently have. They would especially help the issue of too few Property Owners wanting to volunteer. But no doubt many readers will scream objections to all. The following is offered:
- There is no law that controls how many Board Members we may choose to have. The number can be changed by a vote of the Board. A revision to our Bylaws and Articles of Incorporation would be needed.
- There is no law (Federal, IRS or State) that prohibits paying a stipend to a Board Member, even for a Non-Profit Corporation. As above, this can be a Board decision with a revision to the Bylaws and Articles.
- If a Board Member wished they could waive or donate their stipend. Some of our wealthier Property Owners might not need it or want it. More power to them. The example cited of $40K annually is about twice the 2020 minimum hourly wage for a 40-hour week. Obviously, lesser (or greater) amounts could be implemented.
- There is also no law that prohibits a Board of Directors from having more day to day control. Our Boards of Directors apparently had it in the past. Why not again?
- Why would anyone want to serve on the Board if they are going to be overworked?
- Why would people serve on a Committee if their work, time and efforts are ignored or if they have little or no power?
- Why would anyone want to be on a Board if a “ceo” controls the whole show?
- Why would anyone volunteer to be ‘overworked’ or ‘ignored’ or have personal liability or feel that they had little authority, especially with no compensation?
- Please click here to visit Inside Charity- 6 Reasons to Pay Board Members for some commentary on why paying Board Members may be a good idea. The article includes the following six reasons:
- Compensation promotes professionalism rather than amateurism.
- Compensation attracts the most qualified and able individuals.
- Compensation awards, in a tangible way, valuable personal time and contributions made for the cause.
- Compensation promotes more risk-taking. (Hmmm. . . might have to think on this one)
- Compensation stimulates better attendance at board and committee meetings.
- Compensation holds board members more accountable for performance.
About the Author
The author has been a full-time resident homeowner in Hot Springs Village since January 2016. He is retired. His background includes:
- Bachelor of Science Degree – Engineering
- Masters Degree – Business Administration
- Licensed Real Estate Broker (Texas)
- Over 20 years experience in various corporate positions
- Over 20 years as owner of his own business
Among other interests, the author likes golf, fishing, and is a do-it-yourselfer. He enjoys fixing things. His professional work experiences include business management and operations, real estate sales and marketing, design and project engineering, economic analysis, business writing and review, and interpretation of contracts (no, he’s not a lawyer).
The observations, ideas, opinions, and recommendations in this report are solely those of the author and no one else. They are the result of personal observations over the last 4.5 years of being a Village resident. They are the result of attendance at many Board Meetings (over the last 4.5 years) along with the careful reading of all Board minutes, Board Packets, many Committee minutes, and other POA publications and documents going back over the last 12 years.
The author has also studied in depth all governing documents including the Declarations, Articles of Incorporation, Bylaws, Policies, CMP, and Protective Covenants. He has attended many Village Board and Management presentations including those regarding Budget, Golf, Marketing, Declarations Vote, CMP (including all charrettes), and others.
The author has had occasional limited discussions over time with various Villagers regarding some of the observations, ideas, and recommendations presented. However, in preparing this report there has been no consultation with, input from, buy-in from, approval of, discussion of, or any other interface with any Board Member, Committee Member, or Executive or Staff Person, whether past or present, regarding anything written herein.
The author has not served on the Board of Directors or on any Committee of Hot Springs Village. He has been active in previous commentary regarding many aspects of Village golf, marketing, finances, operations, and management, both written and verbal.
If not obvious from the report, the author is totally supportive of all four of the recently elected Board Members as well as the currently presiding Board Chair. Furthermore, the author believes that significant changes need to, in fact, must occur soon in Village Governance and Management. This includes those noted in this report and those currently being proposed and implemented by the Board Members just noted.
Please take time to read these ideas and opinions with an open mind and take them in the spirit with which they are being presented:
The Best Interests of the Property Owners of Hot Springs Village, AR.
By Tom Blakeman, April 29, 2020
***
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Phil Lemler
04/29/2020 — 9:47 am
Excellent Tom … and great suggestions/analysis!
Andy Kramek
04/29/2020 — 10:12 am
Well thought out and hitting all of the right notes. The Village, if it is to survive, needs to change the way it is run and get rid of the ‘old boy network’ mentality (or maybe that should be ‘old girl’!) that seems to have become so prevalent. No more “To get ahead, get behind the CEO”!
Julie
04/29/2020 — 10:39 am
A fine piece – but enough with the committees…there are way too many and they have too many people on them. Not to mention the legacy do-nothings you mentioned…don’t need them…don’t want them…can’t stand them.
Reduce, eliminate, strip down…that should be the mantra…take back control…no more of this horrible mismanagement spread like manure
on a pasture.
One of the most successful years ever in HSV was when a board member took over the management of the place…remember? Jerry Kosolgow. That is the level of board involvement we need…daily…and in depth…trust me on this folks…as it is true and very apparent….things have not run as smoothly since…not be a long shot….replace the little “ceo” ASAP. Eliminate the position. Then only hire a business manager – the whole job description needs to be reworked from the ground up. Seriously….what a huge, huge mistake the old boards made in allowing this little “ceo” situation morph into an utter disaster. These people should be ashamed beyond belief but they are too narcissistic to realize what they have done.
We need to keep stirring the pot…and siphoning off the debris…and removing the slag…and cleansing the POA from the dirt and filth that it now is…filled with baby Napoleons…these people have to go….they contribute nothing to HSV. Nothing.
And, as you pointed out, we need to stop listening to anyone and everyone who ever supported the stupid, crazy, half-baked, ill-thought, insane CMP. And I mean everyone.
To support such a hash indicates no thought process or even a modicum of common sense. Quit letting these fools make a mockery of the Village. The CMP is a complete and total waste. Get rid of it and its supporters. Nothing else makes sense.
It does not have any value whatsoever to HSV.
None.
And we have to eliminate all the double-speak . It is truly just like 1984. Insane. Nothing is ever what it means…the people who promoted these phony job titles and all the crazy foreign language terms to describe simple meetings are complete and utter fools.
The neighborhood names are a great example. What fool chose them??? Crazy. Absolute insanity. Absurd beyond belief.
All of it has to go….all of it….we need an operation fresh start….and I mean it.
Minn Daly
04/29/2020 — 10:45 am
Tom, your article is exceptional! Difference for me is Committee concept. HSV has way to many committees. My hope is that our NEW BOD eliminates some of them. Thank you for all of your great ideas. Minn Daly
Linda Van Scotter
04/29/2020 — 10:35 pm
Bravo!
Vicki
04/29/2020 — 10:58 am
I agree that Board Members need to compensated and have felt this way prior to the above. We do not need a “ceo, cfo,” or multiple figureheads presently in place. The BOD needs to determine direction going forward, and then decide what positions need to either be eliminated or repurposed. Those salary dollars can go to the Board. I also agree that each Board Member should chair a committee and report back to the BOD. This way the BODs will know what is going on in each committee increasing transparency! No one should wonder what’s going on and where the money is going! Time to know where the bodies are buried!
steve bylow
04/29/2020 — 11:22 am
Tom – many excellent points.
Another Tool for the Board to consider is the use of a Task Force to attract talented folks to a specific short-term initiatives.
Like any high performing team – each Task Force would need:
1. Clearly defined scope
2. Members with relevant skills and experience
3. No filtering of recommendations
Steve
Blaney D.
04/29/2020 — 11:35 am
I’m thinking Mr. Blakeman wants to be a “paid Board Member” and you know what: I’d vote for him! And if they offered a $40K stipend, I’d be running in the next election! And if I didn’t get elected, I’d happily assist Mr. Blakeman as his personal “executive assistant”, if he got elected, which I am sure he would!
Nice work Tom! You know me, but I would never ever disclose my identity on this suicidal firing line they call, Hot Spring Village People!
asdfasdf
04/29/2020 — 12:02 pm
Good ole Joe & Cheryl – at it again – censoring anything and everything that does not line up with their way of thinking.
I know you’re reading this Joe & Cheryl and I want you to know that many of us long time Villages are of the opinion that you two people have done more to discredit the reputation of HSV than 10 Lesleys!
OK – go ahead and delete this.
HSVP C
04/29/2020 — 1:12 pm
Hello Blaney, I bet you are wrong about Mr. Blakeman. If Mr. Blakeman should ever need an assistant, I doubt if he would have anything to do with the likes of you. An executive assistant needs patience, good manners and a polite and calm demeanor- none of which you exhibit.
Also, I leave to go run an errand and come back and you are so impatient that this hasn’t been published you choose to attack this website in another comment. People can see right through your agenda. You have lost your posting privileges here because you are an abusive troll. And which name is it? Blaney D or asdfasdf? Don’t bother to come back.
George Phillis
04/29/2020 — 2:23 pm
Excellent post by Tom Blakeman. It is refreshing he has pointed out, quite well I may add, what is wrong and included suggested solutions. It is clear the new board is going to invest more time and work to clean up the pitiful mess created by the CEO and past BOD’s…….more so than any other board in the history of HSV. It is a monumental task. They have stepped into a full time job. It is up to us to support our new board and be patient.
There are obviously matters which must be dealt with post haste. In my opinion the first item on their agenda should be the process of terminating the CEO as quickly as possible. The CEO has, through her incompetence and iron fisted control, created more divisiveness and turmoil in the history of the Village. Add to that the past boards, who failed to fulfill their fiduciary responsibilities to the property owners, have placed the Village on the brink of a financial disaster. Replace the position with a GM who answers to the board of directors. I believe the first step to this process has been implemented……..hiring a competent legal firm with lawyers who have the expertise to legally rid HSV of what has been a disastrous path.
Some matters will require an exorbitant amount of time and work while others solved relatively quickly. In saying that the new board will have many irons in the fire which will require a full time effort and I thank them for their willingness to take on the challenge. I truly believe they will not let us down. Let’s not let them down. Support them and be patient.
Mr. Blakeman’s term “retread” is a good one and does point out a fatal flaw in a governing body process with “career politicians”, even to the level of board and committee positions. There must be a statute of time between when an individual moves from one position to another.
Mr. Blakeman pointed out the fiasco with the Governess committee. It truly was a “weapon” used by the CEO. Committees are necessary however an organization doesn’t need an inordinate number of standing committees. Ad hoc committees are a great way to address a specific issue. A committee is formed for a specific task or objective and dissolved after the completion of the task or achievement of the objective. I’ve served on several boards and using ad hoc committees works very well.
As for the number of board members. Remember “too many cooks spoil the broth.” It is a tricky balancing act as to the appropriate number for a board. I’ve served on boards with as many as sixteen and as little as five. My thought is nine a maximum, however I have reservations about that many for HSV. I’m fine with seven board members and the two non-voting positions of treasurer and secretary. True, it is difficult to find individuals to serve on a board, let alone qualified ones. If board members are to receive financial benefits then they’d better have legitimate qualifications. Eventually the restructuring of the mess we have now will lead to a smoother more efficient style of management not requiring the burning of the midnight oil. I do agree board members need some compensation for their work. However in my opinion 30k-40K a year is high. Maybe a combination of a stipend and perks such as discounted or free golf, and free use of facilities that require a membership.
Way too much authority and control was given to one individual…the CEO. This happened do to a multitude of reasons. The apathy of the Villagers (residential and non-residential) allowed unscrupulous individuals to obtain a death grip on control of the Village (for their own gain)….which is a whole other story I’ll not get into at the present time. It’s not completely the fault of the sleeping Villagers. The takeover was also orchestrated by a number of individuals, not withstanding the CEO herself. Never again should such control/power be given to one individual or entity such as a committee. Yes, committees should have more power however there must be a system of checks and balances to prevent what has been the equivalent of a dictatorship in the Village.
POA staff should not be involved in management….period.
There needs to be ironclad rules/regs regarding how POA money is spent. Certainly a cap on the amount of POA money spent on any project……other than normal everyday operating expenditures. Maybe a committee with the sole purpose to review and approve/disapprove any expenditure over a certain amount. Also consider a secondary signator who actually approves the expenditure (after approval by committee) or might ask questions regarding the matter before paying the bill. The payment is done using on-line banking. I’m familiar with this process and it works quite well. We must have a system to prevent such atrocities as the $500,000 spent for the CMP. Another example is the 1.2 million dollar pool project which was forced upon the Village when the financial situation of HSV was, and still is pathetic. It is still questionable if any other bids were taken before the project was awarded to a specific company. A standard of procedure (SOP) must be required for every major project before it is approved. The SOP should require bids for every project when applicable.
There are too many overpaid directors, managers, and middle managers in the scheme of “management” here in HSV. It must be greatly streamlined.
I’ve only touched on a few of the fine points/ideas expressed by Tom. I’ve always appreciated his editorials as they are intelligent, well thought-out and have great validity to the subject at hand.
Nancy
04/29/2020 — 2:42 pm
Great points and well written – thank you!
My only concern is the part where you said ‘diversity’. While I wholeheartedly agree (and happen to be a prime example of diversity in the Village), I can say diversity isn’t something I’ve seen much of nor that is often welcomed with wide open arms. New ideas from those who have not lived here for 5, 10 , 20 years are often scoffed because they don’t know the Village ‘history’. Different ideas aren’t popular because they may not be what the Village has done for the past 20 years. I sincerely hope this changes for the very reasons you mention and people here realize that despite having different perspectives and ideas they desire the same thing as their fellow residents which is to keep Hot Springs Village the outstanding community it is today.
Patrick Mc
04/29/2020 — 3:57 pm
Here’s a Suggestion Buyout Lesley Nalley Contract that made her the richest CEO in the State of Arkansas. Until she is gone nothing will change
Gene Garner
04/29/2020 — 4:23 pm
Interesting article Tom but here’s a thought. Instead of committees to inform and guide the BOD how about hiring a professional management company that oversees the day-to-day operation of gated communities.
There are many HOAs/POAs that use professionals to guide their Boards, even as far as the hiring and supervising of the General Manager. They have a vested interest in our succeeding, if the Village doesn’t do well we don’t renew their contract and we look for a better fit.
These companies have the personnel, experience and a strong financial interest in making sure we thrive and in the end it may be a lot cheaper to hire them, then go thru another destructive five years we’ve just experienced.–Gene
Doug
04/29/2020 — 5:09 pm
Some great ideas and thought by all. I would like to add one more to be considered. How about looking at how some successful communities similar to ours are structured and operate. There are plenty of them out there.
Kilroy
04/29/2020 — 6:56 pm
Tom Blakeman. The best of new ideas I have yet to hear. You make one think.
You are transparent. You are a visionary. You better be careful. You might get drafted, that is if you’ll work cheaper than our……..well anyone would do that, wouldn’t they?
Dan
04/29/2020 — 10:24 pm
We elected this new board knowing they would change HSV and they knew what they were getting into without getting paid. So why try to change, it’s like shutting the barn door after the horse gets. Save money, cut staff, close golf courses, but pay board. No sense.
mike
04/30/2020 — 5:36 am
Dan, read again. He didn’t say close golf courses.
He is not talking about paying this board right now.
Tom has some good ideas that merit consideration for
our future. He would make a great GM.
Tom Blakeman
04/30/2020 — 7:24 am
Of course they knew Dan. The point here is ideas for the future. Ideas to make HSV better down the road so we do not repeat our inglorious past.
Speaking of ideas, thanks to the many commenters for theirs. My hope in writing this was to start an ongoing conversation and that seems to be working.
Dan Hitch
04/30/2020 — 5:41 pm
Tom, will a person doing a job out of their heart for the betterment of a place, or health, or neighborhood do abetter job?
Will a person taken the job for pay or not want give up his time if not paid who will do the best job!
Tom Blakeman
05/02/2020 — 6:13 pm
The proof is in the pudding we are eating now out of the “hearts” of many over the last 10 years doing what you apparently believe was “a better job”. Doesn’t taste too good.
As I think I already said in the paper: What we have been doing hasn’t been working. Therefore, time for new thought, new ideas, new approach.
I don’t claim to have all the answers. What are your ideas?
Dan R Hitch
05/03/2020 — 1:45 pm
This board was elected by majority of the votes that were cast. Congratulations
All elections are won by votes that were cast in
the majority.
So all past boards were won by the majority of votes cast.
HSVP C
05/03/2020 — 1:48 pm
Dan, that is very true. It is a shame that some of the Directors in the past did not stay true to their platform. Therein lies the problem.
Jim Langford
04/30/2020 — 12:01 pm
Great white paper Tom. Jim
Linda Anderson
04/30/2020 — 9:38 pm
TOM, You have left no stone un-turned when looking for the Best for HSV. THANK YOU. However, at this time, our wonderful Board has a lot to deal with and are committed to : CHANGE that must take place in order to take away the power and corruption still prevalent. Dealing with the leader of the swamp-the CEO. Take a look at the standing Committees- now there are listed 9 Committee’s when past committees were only 4. This represents more powerful committee’s which represent the POA influence. We need committee’s with members only to represent the property owners. The last vote of the old guard requires a board member to be on each one of these committee’s. As if the Board did not have enough to do. Also, our CEO says she and her staff would be confused if the CMP were removed. Let’s not forget that our highly paid CEO took the job saying a CMP will be implemented and suddenly it appeared. To verify this is a letter circulating that says that Twiggs worked on a plan for 3 years and he and Nalley worked together for several months before she was given the “forever” contract with acceptance as CEO. This is the smoke and fire that led the way to the CMP development with so much spending and debt. This was all planned. Our Board is now prepared and the suggestion to help the Board with research to confirm what needs to be clarified would be great.
John Duncan
05/18/2020 — 11:57 am
Tom, I read your piece and thought I’d read a department review by Jack Welch. Great words. Thank you. John Duncan