The Homeowners Association vs. The Flamingos: A Study in Escalation
A homeowner in a planned community received his first violation notice in 2019. The infraction: twelve plastic flamingos positioned across his front yard in a loose formation that resembled either a migration pattern or a very determined sales team. The HOA demanded their removal within thirty days.
He replaced them with twenty-four flamingos. Then thirty-six. By 2022, the count had reached seventy-three. The HOA issued fines. He paid them and added more flamingos. One was wearing sunglasses. Another held a tiny martini glass. A third had been dressed as a small pirate.
The dispute escalated through three levels of community arbitration, two cease-and-desist letters, and one heated town hall meeting where the homeowner arrived carrying a framed photograph of his late mother, who he claimed had loved flamingos. The HOA, unmoved, voted to pursue legal action. The legal action cost the community association forty thousand dollars in attorney fees and took eighteen months to conclude. The judge ruled that while the flamingos violated aesthetic standards, the homeowner's display constituted "expressive conduct" and was therefore protected. The HOA was ordered to pay his legal fees. He immediately ordered ninety-four additional flamingos in various seasonal attire.
Today, that home serves as an unofficial roadside attraction. Visitors stop to photograph the yard. Some leave gifts. Last month, someone left a plastic penguin. He kept it.
The HOA president declined to comment, which is probably wise.
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