Los Angeles

  HOA Management    

J & N REALTY, INC.

Time-Honored Quality & Commitment Since 1993

- Primus Inter Pares -  

 

           ~ first among equals 

 

 

Some of your dues go toward paying for your community’s insurance needs. Have you ever wondered what kinds of insurance our community association needs? Below is a list of the different types of insurance typically available to associations. 
            Many  associations do not have all of these types of coverage; but they’re available if they need them. The board and manager work closely with the association’s insurance professional who is familiar with your unique needs. 

 

             Property insurance. Most other types of coverage are built around property insurance. It covers all buildings, structures, and personal property owned by the association, including common property, parks, woods, open spaces, and recreational facilities, and sometimes includes portions of residential areas. 

 

             General liability. In addition to protecting physical property, our association has commercial liability insurance. Unlike property damage, which often can be measured in dollar amounts, liability claims have no limits other than those imposed by courts. 


           
Auto (owned, non-owned, and hired). Associations with employees who drive cars, trucks, or maintenance vehicles on association property or elsewhere while carrying out association business need auto insurance.


             Directors' and officers' liability. Boards are volunteers trying to serve their communities, but as the old adage says, “No good deed goes unpunished.” So, even when boards behave appropriately and use sound judgment someone may still file a lawsuit claiming wrongful termination, sexual harassment, discrimination, or mismanagement of funds, to name a few common suits. 

             Umbrella liability. This type of coverage closes some of the gaps in other types of insurance policies. No standard umbrella policy exists, so the association works closely with our insurance professional to design a policy tailored to our specific needs. 

             Workers’ compensation. This insurance—required in most states—provides benefits for employees who sustain injuries while working for the association.

             Terrorism. Insurance companies are now required by law to offer coverage for certified acts of terrorism. An “act of terrorism” is usually defined as any violent act that is dangerous to life or property with the intention of affecting the population's conduct, with damage totaling at least $5 million. 

             Mold. Damage from mold is excluded from most standard property insurance policies, which tend to provide coverage for damages that are sudden and accidental but don’t generally cover the cost of cleaning and maintaining a home.

J & N Realty, Inc. -- real estate, property, planned unit development (PUD), townhouse, townhome, hoa, condo, condominium, homeowner association, common interest development (CID)management in Los Angeles

● PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
● CONDOMINIUM ADMINISTRATION
● HOA MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
● HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION SERVICES
● HOA FINANCIAL OPERATIONS
● PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENTS
● COMMON INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS
● HOA MAINTENANCE OPERATIONS
● HOA QUALITY OF SERVICE
● - Clarifying the Manager’s Role
● - Checklist for Identifying Deficient Management
● - Small Claims Court Actions
● - Compare Your Rent
● - Model Code of Ethics for Homeowners Association Board Members

It is the fate of the Property Manager to toil at the lower employments of life; to be rather driven by the fear of evil than attracted by the prospect of good; to be exposed to censure without hope of praise; to be disgraced by miscarriage or punished by neglect, where success would have been without applause and diligence without reward. While others may aspire to praise, the Property Manager can only hope to escape reproach, and even this negative recompense has yet been granted to very few.





 

 

 

 

HOA Board Members may request log-in information to our Members Only area, which is packed with lots of very unseful information cannot be found anywhere else on the web
 

As Property Managers, we all have learned primarily

through our mistakes and pursuits of false assumptions

rather than by our exposure to fountains of wisdom and 

knowledge.