How a Neighborhood gets VMs and Alternates

How does a Neighborhood get a Voting Member and Alternates? First, what is a "Neighborhood"?

The Summit HOA is divided into 28 Neighborhoods; i.e., areas or "districts" for voting purposes. Each of 2,480 homes in The Summit has a homeowner. Each homeowner has a vote, but he doesn't vote for Directors of the HOA. His vote is for a member (another local homeowner) for his Neighborhood's "Neighborhood Committee".

Every year the homeowners are supposed to elect three homeowners to that Committee. One of the three becomes the Voting Member; the other two are Alternates. They serve for one year. The Committee is not perpetual.

The Summit probably has NO valid Voting Members or Alternates. Why? Because no Neighborhoods that I know of have held Neighborhood Meetings or Neighborhood Elections.

If there are no valid Voting Members, then there is no one to vote legitimately for Directors in the November election of new Board members. Probably none of the current board members were legitimately elected, because there are no legitimate Voting Members.

What kind of pickle does that put the Summit Community Association, Inc. in?

It's not all that hard to understand the By-Laws or to comply with them. Why doesn't the Board do so?

If the Board can explain why it doesn't need to follow the By-Laws, I shall be happy to publish its explanation here.

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