Quote:
Originally Posted by Velvet
Yeah, More or less I can. I taught grad school for a time. But does it matter really if they were 40 or 41? Or even 42? Huh? The thing is you’re trying to turn the topic away from the fact that the pools are not made to handle such an influx of numbers and they never had to in the past. So what’s changed? I regularly talk to people in the pool - there were several times - when I could get in, I was the ONLY resident.
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Many visitors (renters, but also just our adult children and grandchildren come at holiday/vacation times, it's a fact of life) at certain times. Here's how I chose to think about it when I am frustrated: What if every home (dwelling) rather for rent or not, was occupied 100% of the time 365 days a year, which is the way most neighborhoods anywhere are. But here, I feel fortunate that there are times of the year where the number of residents is very low compared to facilities (including department stores, clothing stores, grocery stores being noticeably less crowded. I personally hate the fact that there are rentals on our street, but I am not willing to volunteer my time to take on the magnitude of the process of first changing the state laws and then working down to the county level, and then dealing with the special governmental structure of unique developments like ours ! Those who can afford it, could try to find and move to a truly private community, but if you read widely, you'll find every state is facing the multitude of problems brought on by the investment rental (tulip mania like) craze that began slowly and quietly around 2008. The true solution is not to LET the "horse get so far out of the barn" he's so far away you will never catch and corral him".