| During
the escrow process, you also will be informed of specialized
conditions that affect the California home you wish
to purchase. They may include the following conditions:
Lead Paint
Sellers of properties built prior to 1978 have the following
obligations to you:
• Give you a HUD pamphlet entitled "Protect
Your Family From Lead in Your Home"
• Disclose all known lead-based paint and related
hazards and provide you with any available reports
• Include a standardized warning as an attachment
to the contract
• Complete and sign statements verifying that
requirements have been met
• Retain the signed acknowledgement for 3 years
• In addition, sellers must give you a 10-day
opportunity to test for lead
Natural Hazards
California law requires sellers to disclose to you,
via a "Natural Hazard Disclosure Statement"
or NHD, if properties are located in one of six predetermined
"natural hazard" zones. (If the property is
not within one of these zones, sellers, of course, have
no such obligation.)
The six zones are:
• A flood hazard zone as designed by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
• An area of potential flooding after a damn failure
(also known as an inundation area)
• A very high fire hazard zone
• A wildland fire area, also known as a state
fire responsibility area
• An earthquake fault zone
• A seismic hazard zone
If an NHD is delivered to you after you signed the Purchase
Agreement, you will have three days to rescind the agreement.
However, if you receive the NHD before you signed the
Purchase Agreement then you cannot use the NHD to rescind.
Mellow Roos Districts:
Especially (but not exclusively) if you are buying a
home in a newer area of Saratoga, you may be locating
into a Mello-Roos tax district, and the seller must
provide to you a "Notice of Special Tax" to
let you know. If this notice is delivered to you in
person, you have three days to rescind your offer. If
it’s delivered via U.S. mail, you have five days
to decide.
Basically, a "Mello Roos Community Facilities District"
is formed by a local government, district, or agency
to finance public services and facilities including
police and fire departments, ambulance and paramedic
services, parks, schools, libraries, museums and cultural
facilities.
Condominiums etc.
If you’re buying a condominium, townhouse or other
planned development (for purposes of this discussion,
we will call them all "condominiums"), there
are things you need to know about common areas (such
as greenbelts and recreational rooms) and the homeowner’s
association.
You will be required to make monthly payments, known
as regular assessments, to maintain common areas, as
well as special assessments to replace a roof or repair
the plumbing, as determined by the homeowner’s
association (“HOA”.)
Condominiums also may have regulations regarding architectural
requirements, limitations on pets, and age restrictions
(i.e., senior housing). These must be formally disclosed
to you during escrow. You may receive this information
via the following documents, to the extent that they
exist and are available:
• Declaration of Restrictions: Commonly known
as "CC&Rs", or Conditions, Covenants and
Restrictions
• Articles of Incorporation or Articles of Association
Bylaws
• All current financial information and related
statements, including operating budget, estimated revenue
and expenses, HOA reserves, estimated remaining life
of major components (including roofs, plumbing etc.),
and regular and special assessments
• A statement describing the HOA’s policies
and practices in enforcing lien rights or other legal
remedies for default in payment of its assessments
• A summary of the HOA’s property, general
liability, and earthquake and flood insurance policies
• On existing HOA’s, a statement describing
any restrictions on the basis of age, such as authorized
senior citizen housing
Many smaller HOAs will not have all of these documents,
but must provide what they do have. We recommend that
you review these documents thoroughly, because they
will affect you firsthand.
Megan’s Law.
If a registered sex offender lives in the neighborhood
in which you want to locate, you have the right to investigate
– this is made possible due to a 1996 statue known
as "Megan’s Law." (Note that the seller
does not have an obligation to provide this information
to you.)
To investigate, you may:
• Log on to: http://caag.state.ca.us/megan/index.htm
• Call (900) 448-3000 to access the California
Sex Offender Information Database. (There may be a charge
to check names by telephone.)
• Call your local Saratoga police department to
locate a CD-ROM records viewing station.
Contact
us for more info on Saratoga CA disclosures. |
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