Quote:
Originally Posted by gryoung
Consider it an unsolicited gift with information of value to most residents and you're free to throw it away. You may also cancel all or some of your future monthly bulletins by emailing the POA. The POA also asks in each bulletin that if you know your neighbor is not present, to please pick it up and toss it. We have a similar problem with phone books.
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A "gift with information" is an understatement.
Many of us think the Developer has done an amazing thing building TV with such class and beauty, qualifying him as the most influential decision maker n our lives here. But by their impact and influence, clearly the POA is in second place. The Association has represented residents nobly and objectively. It's work became the framework for Districts 1-4 to take over infrastructure responsibilities smoothly, and through landmark legal action, recover millions of amenity fee dollars diverted inappropriately to the building of newer districts. This action made it possible to repave all of the cart paths north of 466 and put funding into the District 1-4 treasuries for other needed projects. Additionally, the POA has kept us informed about issues of which we otherwise would unaware. I'm not going to list those things here. Just go to the POA website and look at the long list of topics well covered in the archives of monthly newsletters.
The last thing anyone in TV should criticize is receiving a POA newsletter in their driveway.