Open Letter to ArrowCreek Board and Golfing Community

By Peter Linstroth

Last time I checked, ArrowCreek is not the private playground nor the property of the golfing community. It belongs to all of the residents of ArrowCreek. If we happen to disagree with you, we all will have to agree to disagree. To hear people say, ’If you do not like it, move and get out” is very narcissistic.

To all of the golf members of ArrowCreek, I do not begrudge you from enjoying your activity and enjoyment of the ArrowCreek golf course and club.

Please do not begrudge me for not wanting to fund and support your activity.

To all of the investors of FOA, I wish you all the success with your investment.

Please do not begrudge me for not wanting to be an unwilling investor in your project.

  • Also, to you investors: Are you receiving a 10% return on your investment or are you receiving a 10% return of your investment? One letter makes a big difference.

I purchased my home in ArrowCreek to be near my daughter and her family. The golf course and club did not enter into my decision.

Supply and Demand

Currently golf participation is down over 40% and continues to decline. Basically this means the demand is lower and the supply of golf courses continues to remain the same. I drive by them and the courses have very few people playing.

If the current club cannot sustain itself on the current dues structure and lack of initiation fee, then the dues will need to increase and perhaps impose an initiation fee so the club can remain solvent.

If this is not possible because the club will not attract new members and keep existing members, it is not the responsibility of the ArrowCreek homeowners to subsidize the club.

It is also not the responsibility of the ArrowCreek homeowners to subsidize the FOA investment.

The defenders of the home owners’ subsidization will say home values will decrease without a functioning club. There has been a plethora of data and studies presented to contradict this opinion.

Home values are subject to economic conditions as was seen in the recession of 2008.

Home values are also subject to the uncertainty of a potential increase of over $80.00 per month for the Association dues. This potential increase must be disclosed to potential buyers and there is adequate proof buyers are shying away from the area. Potential buyers are interested in the community, not the golf course.

Entitled??

We seem to have a society of entitlement. Is socialism and entitlement alive and well in ArrowCreek?

Are members and investors entitled to their activity and a return on their investment, let alone a rate of return of their investment? If that is the case, please reimburse me for the money lost in the stock market these past few weeks.

Peter Linstroth

Posted in 89511, ACHOA, ACHOA BOD, ArrowCreek, ArrowCreek HOA, ArrowCreek411, Bail Out Golf Course, FOA, Friends of ArrowCreek, Golf at ArrowCreek, Golf Course Purchase, Golf Developments, Golf Industry, HOA, HOA BOD, Home Sales, Home Values, Investing, Mandatory Membership, Property Value, Real Estate Value | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Special Sept 16 2015 ACHOA BOD Golf Meeting

ACArrow2

Date: 9-5-15
NOTICE OF SPECIAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING AND AGENDA
TO DISCUSS GOLF PROPOSAL
FOR THE ARROWCREEK HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION

DATE/TIME: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 5:30 pm

Location: The Club at ArrowCreek – 2905 ArrowCreek Parkway

SPECIAL GOLF ACHOA Board Agenda

Posted in ACHOA, ACHOA BOD, ArrowCreek, ArrowCreek HOA, ArrowCreek411 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Apparently Homeowners Aren’t the Only Ones Disgruntled By the ACHOA BOD

Several ArrowCreek homeowners – including Concerned Neighbors of ArrowCreek (CNA) members (including the authors!) – received postcards in the mail yesterday from “An ArrowCreek Investor” so the ACHOA BOD had better realize that CNA’s posture reaches beyond the boundaries of the development. There are more owners than just CNA who are concerned about the ACHOA board’s approach to the golf course.

golfers

Backofcard

Posted in ACHOA, ACHOA BOD, ArrowCreek, ArrowCreek HOA, ArrowCreek411, CNA | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

27th Nugget Sparks Rib Cook-off

The 27th Best in the West Nugget Sparks Rib Cook-off was already well attended yesterday when I checked out ribs for lunch. I didn’t see my favorite BBQer from last year but the pickin’s were still very good! 24 of them to be exact!

The Rib Cookoff runs all Labor Day Weekend through Monday.

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The Lantern Fest – Reno and Other Places

This sounds like a fun festival!

mygrandmasue's avatarMyGrandmaSue

LanternFestThis Lantern Fest sounds interesting to explore more. I learned that one will be held just outside Reno at the Fernley 95A Speedway
(1965 Highway 95A) on Saturday, October 17th. There are also others planned elsewhere in the US.


More information about the group is here:

ABOUT THE LANTERNFEST

At The Lantern Fest, thousands of revelers join together armed with lanterns for one unforgettable spectacle. There will be music, dancing, s’mores and, when the time is just right, we will light the sky with our highest hopes, deepest regrets, and fondest dreams.

These lanterns are 100% biodegradable. Not to mention after each release we have professional “Lantern Chasers” that will make those armored truck driving meteorologists look like your local news’ weatherman. These lantern experts collect 90% of the lanterns after the event.

Historically lanterns were used to symbolize good fortune, request favorable weather, or to celebrate the…

View original post 148 more words

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Monarch Butterfly & Native Plant Workshop

Sat, October 3, 1:00 pm – 4:30 pm
Where
Washoe Nursery, 885 Eastlake Blvd., Carson City, NV
map

Nevada Division of Forestry
Workshop Description
Explore the benefits of gardening with native plants and develop your own backyard habitat. Must pre-register; call Michelle Hunt at USFWS, 775-861-6341.
mbws
Poster

Posted in Fall Monarch Butterfly, Fall Native Plant Workshop, Nevada Division of Forestry, Washoe County | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Koppenhaver: Too Many Golf Courses, Too Few Golfers

Golfweek, 14 Feb 2015

Early in his annual State of the Industry presentation at last month’s PGA Merchandise Show, Jim Koppenhaver of Pellucid Corp. acknowledged that his candid analysis of the golf business sometimes draws blowback from various sectors.

“People say, ‘Jim, be more positive. People want to hear good news,’ ” Koppenhaver said.

The industry has enough cheerleaders, enough people who tout various participation initiatives despite the fact that rounds played continue to decline annually. What it needs is serious analysis that clarifies the problems and offers some hints on how to rectify them. That’s where Koppenhaver comes in.

Every year at the PGA Show, the most valuable thing I do is attend the presentation by Koppenhaver and his sidekick, Stuart Lindsay of Edgehill Golf Advisors. I’m obviously not the only one who values their opinions. I attended their morning presentation at the PGA Show, and it was standing-room only, with about 25 people lined up against the walls because no seats were available. I took that as an indication that people are looking for good information to help them cope with the industry’s seemingly perpetual stagnation.

(For those who missed the PGA Show presentation, Koppenhaver and Lindsay are offering webcast replays during this month’s Golf Industry Show. The webcasts are free, will run from noon to 1 p.m. CST on Feb. 25 and Feb. 26, and are limited to 100 concurrent participants. Registration is required; if you’re interested, go to pellucidcorp.com to reserve a spot. You can thank me later.)

In the spirit of being more positive, Koppenhaver estimated that course revenues grew 3.1 percent last year, after a 1.2-percent decline in 2013. The improvement appears to have been driven largely by higher food-and-beverage sales. Golf fees were basically flat last year – still a positive sign after a 3.1-percent decline in that category in 2013. Golf fees at resorts are holding steady, but lagging at municipal courses.

“We’re seeing a little bit of pricing power come back into the industry,” Koppenhaver said.

But that’s pretty much where the good news ended.

There’s a wealth of data and analysis in the presentation, but the key takeaway for me remains the same: Our industry has too many golf courses and too few golfers.

We continue to see progress, if that’s the correct term, on the supply side. The total inventory of U.S. courses has dropped each year since 2006, and the decline has accelerated the past four years, with an average of 137 closings since 2011. That might seem like a lot, but Koppenhaver estimated that the industry is still “about five years away from getting any kind of equilibrium.” In other words, his best estimate is that another 700 courses need to close based on declining consumer demand.

And that’s the bigger problem. For all of the industry rhetoric about “growing the game,” there’s little or no evidence that we’re doing that.

Consider that in November 2000, PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem, normally the most cautious of men, set the fanciful goal that by 2020, there would be 50 million American golfers playing 1 billion rounds annually. In 2000, about 518 million rounds were played in the U.S., and there was some reason for optimism given that rounds had grown 15 percent over the previous decade. But that was the high-water mark. In 2014, about 451 million rounds were played in the U.S., bringing us back to the 1990 level.

Perhaps most troubling is that the pipeline is drying up. The data indicates the biggest participation declines in 2013 (the most recent data available in this category) were among ages 7-17 (9.6 percent) and ages 18-34 (8.4 percent).

We’re just not relevant to millennials,” Koppenhaver said.

The total number of golfers is down to an estimated 23 million, from nearly 30 million in 2000. The decline is being driven by men giving up the game and, it seems, people who played infrequently.

The rare demographic group that is growing is golfers 65 and older. That’s an affluent demographic, but not one with a lot of legs.

So try as he might to offer some upbeat news, Koppenhaver had to level with his audience, most of whom operate courses.

There’s nobody out there who’s going to save us,” he said. “We have to save ourselves.”

There you have it, ArrowCreek owners. To “protect our property values” our board and has spent nearly 18 months plotting to invest in a sick, dying, hobby. That is their “vision” to “control our own destiny.” (These quotes are from Board and committee leaders.) I say, “prove how this plot protects anything!”

Posted in ACHOA, ArrowCreek, ArrowCreek HOA, ArrowCreek411, Bail Out Golf Course, Golf, Golf Developments, Golf Industry, HOA, Koppenhaver, Millennials, PGA Show | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Un-Neighborly Behavior, HOA Meetings and Town Hall Meeting

By Ellie

If there have been poisonous words or un-neighborly behavior, I agree we can all share the blame. We have had FOA members at HOA meetings pointing fingers and shouting at those voicing different views last year. We have had cheering and applauding mostly “pro purchase” comments at HOA meetings until one resident stood up during a recent meeting and bravely asked for it to stop. To all of our credit: it has stopped.

What apparently has not stopped is the idea that some believe they have the right, or are entitled to determine for others what amount of increase in HOA fee is cheap, and how they should spend their money. Nobody has that right, and definitely nobody should have the right or is entitled to suggest that if I do not agree to financially support the golf club and do not agree to void basic agreements made when purchasing a home in AC, that I should not live here. ArrowCreek is a community built around a private, non-residential entity, the golf courses. Property owners agree to pay HOA dues and have a right to expect reasonable raises in HOA dues as outlined in the CC&Rs, not increases of 50% or more.

The problem with the whole process regarding the acquisition of the golf courses is that freedom of speech has been suppressed, unnecessarily inciting volatility within our community. This site is the only forum where we all have the same rights to voice opinions. At the board meetings people with opposing views can only speak for three minutes during the public comment section while the board’s selected speakers seemingly have unlimited time and opportunity to present any and all ways and reasons to promote and rationalize the purchase of the golf courses. Unless I missed it, there has been no presentation of any independent evaluation of the pros AND cons regarding the acquisition of the GC, or the option of doing nothing. We have not heard of any objective financial analysis with worst case scenario considerations that any business would conduct before committing itself. Without that we would need to trust an all-volunteer board when making a decision with significant consequences.

The fact finding process or “due diligence” conducted by the board and its committees has been qualified by their goal. I would argue that it’s not so much the different interpretation of the facts that have been presented by the board and its presenters, as suggested by Mr. Meyer, but rather the lack of unbiased, comparative specific facts that is deplorable. We are about one year down the road since this issue was first brought to the attention of the homeowners and an additional 8-10 months of this issue being worked on behind closed doors with managing partners of the FOA prior to that. What do we really know at this point?

Bringing “the golf club and the HOA together some way” as suggested, has excluded the non-purchase option. I have not heard an official explanation as to why the ArrowCreek golfers are not considering following the example of the Montreux golfers who own their golf club. Leaving the golf courses in the hands of the FOA or another owner/buyer is the only option that would preserve freedom of choice for ALL homeowners. HOA ownership of the AC golf club would force those opposed to the purchase to become co-owners and share the burden of financial and legal liability. According to updates provided during the latest HOA meeting, forced social club membership is being put aside for now. The club committee is now looking into ways of funding the club while limiting the HOA fee to $300, and finding someone to lease the golf club and assume part or all of the financial responsibility. Somehow, homeowners will not shoulder any “open ended” financial commitment. With these options, may be no vote will be required to subsidize the club. More details to follow. It looks like fitting a square peg into a round hole is not too much of an effort to make to hammer out a deal with the FOA. Forced ownership or mandatory financial subsidy, is undemocratic, and those favoring these options disrespect other people’s rights and opinions about the benefits of owning or supporting a golf club, and are in that sense selfish as Mr. Krachun feels. Give me another word, and I will use it.

In pursuit of the golf course purchase there has been lack of transparency, denying homeowners the opportunity to provide input regarding important decisions. The HOA board started negotiating with the FOA early in 2014 when the golf course owner filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy, signed a non-disclosure agreement with the FOA and Arnold Palmer before the August 2014 HOA meeting outlining the options regarding the golf course purchase, and signed a brief at the bankruptcy hearing supporting the FOA as a bidder all without consensus from the AC homeowners. A letter of intent was signed late in 2014, at a time when there was growing evidence that not all homeowners agreed with the purchase of the golf courses. It appears unless one has unlimited time to attend every committee or HOA meeting, the average resident is only made aware of decisions at the time of their ratification or when reading the AC Newsletter. This may be all right for the day-to-day HOA business, but crucial decisions entailing fundamental changes to our community should all be made after obtaining public consensus. A complaint regarding the decision making process is being investigated. The board has not openly discussed several other complaints of violations of NRS regulations brought before them, specifically the one that would violate the 2/3rds vote requirement in our Articles of Incorporation should our community be changed from a non-profit to a for profit community. Instead, the board used its power and our financial resources to hire a lawyer to find out how we can purchase the club, change the CC&R’s, and avoid having to recognize our Articles of Incorporation in the voting process.

Many adjectives would easily come to mind describing this way of conducting the HOA’s business, but not open, fair, or neutral.

Let’s have a town hall meeting.

Thank you.

Ellie

Posted in ACHOA, ACHOA BOD, ArrowCreek HOA, ArrowCreek411, Articles of Incorporation, Assessment, Bail Out Golf Course, Changes to HOA By-Laws, Changes to HOA CC&Rs, CIC Governance, Communication, Communication Committee, Friends of ArrowCreek, Golf, Golf at ArrowCreek, Golf Course Purchase, HOA, HOA BOD, Mandatory Membership, Opposing View, Property Value, Town Hall Meeting | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Cinderella At Bartley Ranch

Some ArrowCreek residents might be interested in this performance (reposted from Somersett United):
Cinderella At Bartley Ranch.

Posted in ArrowCreek411, Siberian Fire, Snakes, Somersett, Youth Gun Club | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Synopsis of ACHOA BOD Meeting Held 18 August 2015

By Ron Duncan

Here’s an independent view of the ACHOA BOD meeting held 18 August 2015 from a pair of eyes and ears not confused by the straight jacket of ACHOA group think.

The meeting began at the usual 5:30 PM start time but without the usual Club crowd…Must have been all on vacation. Following the call to order and the Pledge of Allegiance, we got down to business.

Homeowner comments: I spoke briefly identifying that there was concern about the allocation of $25K for a new web site and $300 for an addition to the Reserve Study to “break out inside vs. outside ArrowCreek Parkway.” I also mentioned the Complaint registered against the ACHOA BOD and our committees for holding Non-public meetings. After those comments, President of the ACHOA Sam Fox, addressed the complaint and basically said they had not violated the law and I should expect a letter from our ACHOA lawyer regarding the Boards position. (The letter was indeed received on 18 August at 2:58 PM after I’d shut down to pick up my wife for the meeting. We could go on for pages about the lawyer’s response to a non-issue but that wasn’t the purpose of the Board meeting, so we’ll save that for a later discussion.)

That opening was followed by the ArrowCreek Club Committee (ACCC) and Communications Committee updates. Mr. Rich Kenney presented for the ACCC a fascinating discourse, which he also presented as hard copy to the recording secretary “so his words would not be confused.”

He went on to state that there are three principles guiding discussion with the FOA. First, dues will not be increased beyond $82 per month. [COMMENT: This would amount to $1,068,624 per year. For what purpose? Subsidize the golf course? If not a subsidy, why is this particular amount even being considered? Just to keep raised dues under $300?]

Second, No Mandatory membership [COMMENT: Then what do we get for our $82 per month ‘contribution?’ Property value ‘stability?’ Prove it.]

Third, No open ended financial commitment. [COMMENT: So, what does this mean in plain English if we aren’t buying anything?] He also mentioned, several times, that he believes this will protect our property values with a vague reference to the Realtor forum. [COMMENT: PROVE IT! There’s been NO factual evidence presented in any forum that supports this belief. So, the challenge is to those who continue to espouse this ‘belief’ to provide factual, repeatable evidence from Northern Nevada to support this belief.] The audience listened politely and asked a few questions before moving onto the Communications Committee presentation by Mr. Norm Reeder.

The Communications Committee is looking into what and when to hold the next informational meeting. There are apparently several topics under consideration not the least of which is a discussion of CC&R and By-Law changes to remove the developer perspective from the documents. That then transitioned to the financial report.

The financial report was reported by Mr. Alan Liebman. Alan presented the numbers and the ACHOA is in ‘Good’ shape financially. He attempted to present the budget management approach as being ‘like’ accrual accounting. Unfortunately, when talking to former CFOs, this is a definite non-starter. In fact, initial program/project engineers use the technique of equally spreading funding across twelve months and then accounting for variances due to the erroneous spread of spending. After a year or two as a program/project manager one learns to spread the expenditures across the twelve months based on the anticipated time of spending the money. It makes absolutely no sense to have snow removal monies allocated for June through October. Then we moved on to the reserve discussion.

The Reserve Committee update, presented by Mr. Gary Smith, was most fascinating. He again presented the need for an electronic sign at the entrance for announcements of community interest, the upgrade of one of the tennis courts with 10 ft fencing, $25k for a new website and lastly $300 for reserve study work to allow the ‘golf portion’ of the reserve study to be broken out (inside vs. outside AC parkways?). Several people questioned the need for the electronic sign and the projected cost. In addition there was discussion of the $300 for the reserve study when there isn’t any golf related deal on the table. Also, questions related to upgrading the residents center kitchen were asked. The response was, with the supposed purchase of the golf course, there wasn’t a need or ‘clamor’ to make that change. [COMMENT: For those who do not belong to The Club and wish to have neighbors and friends enjoy a party at the Residents Center, a fully functional kitchen would definitely be an upgrade for our amenities. Clamor? No need to clamor if it was already approved for 2015!?] Reports proceeded from there with the next one of consequence being Governing Documents.

The Governing Documents Committee has updated the CC&Rs and By-Laws to conform with current NRS wording and deleted the developer language. Ms. Rakusin presented some of what the committee considered major minor changes and asked for a community review of their draft documents. [COMMENT: There are at least two changes that deserve careful scrutiny. First, the elimination of reference to some amenity language will further disconnect the CC&Rs and By-Laws from our Articles of Incorporation rather than bring them into synch. The second, is a proposed change to the voting requirements to defeat a proposed budget. A possible third issue, is that the changes do not restrict the dues increase capability of the ACHOA BOD. See the initial discussion of the ACCC.]

The final presentation worthy of note was by the Fuels Management Committee, Mr. Moll. This was a disturbing presentation that requested a five year funding profile and efforts to support committee work that will police and impact all property owners. The claim, no proof was offered, that a wildfire prevention act will require individual property owners to comply with guidelines, such as a 100 foot perimeter around residences, established by this committee.[COMMENT: Mr. Moll, please provide your facts. We googled and found the HEALTHY FORESTS RESTORATION ACT of 2003. Is that it? We are not in a FOREST! Or maybe you are referring to the H.R. 1009 unapproved bill languishing in sub-committee, Wildfire Prevention Act of 2015, to provide hazard mitigation assistance through FEMA? It is NOT Nevada specific.) It is not clear where Mr. Moll’s ‘act’ was legislated but it certainly doesn’t sound like Nevada. If it indeed is the above Federal PENDING Act, then implementation in Nevada would require several changes to Nevadan’s property rights. This point was raised by the audience and dismissed by Mr. Moll and the ACHOA BOD.]

The meeting concluded on that note after no additional homeowner comments were offered.

Ron Duncan

Posted in 89511, ACHOA, ACHOA BOD, ArrowCreek, ArrowCreek HOA, ArrowCreek411, Articles of Incorporation, Assessment, Changes to HOA By-Laws, Changes to HOA CC&Rs, CIC Governance, Communication, Communication Committee, Community, Community Amenities, Concerned Neighbors of ArrowCreek, Control Destiny, Control Our Destiny, Demographics, FOA, Freedom of Speech, Golf, Golf at ArrowCreek, Golf Course Purchase, Golf Developments, HOA, HOA BOD, Home Landscaping for Fire, Home Safety, Home Sales, Home Values, Homeowner Questions, Landscaping, Property Value, Real Estate Value, Realtor View 0f 89511, Reno, The Club at ArrowCreek, Town Hall Meeting, Truckee Meadows Fire Marshall | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments