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Profile
Join date: Dec 18, 2024
About
Eric M. Glazer, a native of Brooklyn, New York, is a distinguished attorney specializing in community association law. He earned his B.A. in Political Science from New York University and his Juris Doctorate from the University of Miami School of Law. In 1994, he founded Glazer and Associates, P.A., and later formed Glazer & Sachs P.A. Eric has dedicated his career representing condominium and homeowner associations. He also hosts Condo Craze and HOAs Show on YouTube, where he educates and engages with a live audience on association-related matters. Additionally, he is a Florida Bar Board Certified attorney in Condominium and Planned Development Law and a certified mediator by the Florida Supreme Court.
Posts (638)
Jan 26, 2026 ∙ 2 min
Condo and HOA Unit Owner Resolutions: A Necessary Reality Check
Last week we focused on board resolutions. Now it’s the owners’ turn. Most condo and HOA disputes start with skipped rules, personal reactions to enforcement, or not participating until there’s a problem. Living in an association means shared responsibility. Read the documents, stay engaged, pay on time, and address issues early. Follow the process and most conflicts never turn into legal ones.
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Jan 19, 2026 ∙ 2 min
New Year Resolutions for Condo & HOA Boards
Every year, condo and HOA boards promise this will be the year things finally run smoothly. And every year, the same problems show up again, late budgets, messy meetings, inconsistent enforcement, frustrated owners, and eventually legal threats. This article breaks down board resolutions that actually work, grounded in Florida law and real-world experience, not wishful thinking. These are the governance fixes that prevent problems before they turn into lawsuits.
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Jan 12, 2026 ∙ 3 min
CONDO ARBITRATION CASE FLIPSBOARD MEETINGS UPSIDE DOWN
For years, condo and HOA boards handled meetings the same way… vote first, let owners speak at the end. An arbitration ruling just declared that practice unreasonable and contrary to the law. Owners must be allowed to comment on agenda items before a vote happens, otherwise their right to speak is meaningless. This decision changes how board meetings will be run and sends a clear warning to HOAs with similar policies.
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