Anne Miller wrote:
Kyle said "I was about to transport it or dismantle it, but my father in law who is the president of our local farm bereau encouraged me to fight it. I realize that he's right.
Before you take it down, here is what I would do if this was my problem.
I would submit plans for a smaller greenhouse to management. (And advise them that you will remove the current one)
If they reject those plans I would submit plans for garden beds with row cover to see what happens.
If these are rejected I would ask what can I do to grow some plants?
Best wishes for growing food.
Stacie Kim wrote:
Could you ask the management what policy they're using to decide that your greenhouse is not allowed? Do they have written by-laws somewhere?
Could you ask what their concern is? Ask them to be specific. Is it the aesthetics of the greenhouse? Is it safe in high winds? Are they concerned that you're growing illegal crops? Have they had complaints from other neighbors?
If you could get down to the gist of what they're complaint truly is, perhaps you could hash out a compromise.
Thank you Stacie, I sent them an email to breakdown some of these statements, stay tuned!
I know it's a stretch and not that I'm for bigger gov't, but are their any Fed or state laws in place that supercedes these silly community rules?
Douglas Alpenstock wrote:It sounds as if obviously temporary structures are allowed. Perhaps management sees the greenhouse as a permanent structure? Do other residents have garden sheds and such? I would think your rental agreement must include some wording about this.