I just remember at our apartment complex, having to call about an emergency leak that I was worried was going to flood our crawl space. I had to call California.
I just remember at our apartment complex, having to call about an emergency leak that I was worried was going to flood our crawl space. I had to call California.
"There are no finger prints under water."
"The rifle itself has no moral stature, since it has no will of its own. Naturally, it may be used by evil men for evil purposes, but there are more good men than evil, and while the latter cannot be persuaded to the path of righteousness by propaganda, they can certainly be corrected by good men with rifles. --Jeff Cooper"
My feedback
Edit: Couple pages late! OOPS....
Common sense WINS!!
COMMON SENSE WINS! ** LIKE & SHARE **
CASTLE ROCK - A controversial gun policy at an apartment complex for seniors has been thrown out after a 9Wants to Know report.
The Douglas County Housing Partnership, a multi-jurisdictional housing authority, held an emergency board of directors meeting late Wednesday afternoon. Board members decided that the policy, which would have prohibited residents from having firearms in their homes, will not go into effect.
"These community policy changes were distributed without the knowledge or authorization of the Board of Directors of the Douglas County Housing Partnership or its staff," a Douglas County Housing Partnership release said. "This board does not support any action that infringes on an individual's rights and will not allow Ross Management to implement these changes. "
FULL STORY & VIDEO HERE:http://www.9news.com/rss/story.aspx?storyid=34912
Last edited by 10mm-man; 08-07-2013 at 22:49.
I saw this on another forum:
Update From: Robert B. Wareham The Law Center P.C.
From Robert B. Wareham
"BULLETIN: The Oakwood Apartments are not owned by a private property owner, but by the Douglas County Housing Partnership (DCHP) which on its own website admits that it is a "political subdivision and public corporation of the State of Colorado." That's right, the landlord is a state actor. Article II Section 13 of the Colorado Constitution expressly prohibits this conduct. I spoke with the Executive Director of DCHP this afternoon and she assured me the new policies were distributed by the property manager, Ross Management Group, without being vetted through the DCHP Board. She asked us to refrain from filing a lawsuit until the Board could meet. She assured me that she has called a Board meeting for this afternoon to address the firestorm created by this new policy. Because we want to save the taxpayers money, we agreed to give the the opportunity to rescind this unconstitutional policy.
I also spoke with Douglas Count Commission Jack Hilbert whos is a strong 2nd Amendment supporter and friend of mine. He was equally outraged and working behind the scenes to put pressure on the DCHP Board. (The County Commissioners appoint several of the Board members including the current Chair.)
For the armchair lawyers who were arguing that nothing could be done if this had been a private property owner, I direct you to Stanley v. Creighton Company, 911 P.2d 705 (Colo.App. 1996) which stands for the proposition that a provision in a residential lease that violates public policy is void. A strong argument could be made that a unilaterally imposed ban on a constitutional right not contracted for at the inception of the contract is void on its face. Section 3 of Article II gives you the inalienable right to defend yourself. Section 13 give you the right to keep and bear arms in defense of your home--sounds like public policy to me! At any rate, you should never jump to the conclusion that nothing can be done when it comes to defending your 2nd Amendment and CO Article II rights."
Robert B. Wareham
The Law Center P.C.
Hmmmmm....wonder if that had any part in the resolution of this?
If you want peace, prepare for war.
Ross Management Group is paid by Colorado taxpayer, they need to be dragged into the public light and made to explain and immediately fired.
Sent from my electronic ball and chain.
Yes, I know ...sorry in advance
I believe he can do this under the new law a few different ways:
1) "loan" the items to the friend for up to 72 hours and stop by the friend's apt. at least every 72 hours and "regain possession", only to immediately "loan" them out again for another 72 hours (assuming he has no key to the friend's apt.).
2) Store the items in a lockable container (safe/closet/locker) at the friend's apt.to which only he, and not the friend, has the key. The law does not say "where" you are allowed to keep them...just that they remain in your possession and are not transferred. It does not say the items have to be stored at your home.
EX: One can store them in a rented bay at "Public Storage" and other such facilities
EX: One can store them in a safety deposit box
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The fattest knight at King Arthur’s round table was Sir Cumference. He acquired his size from too much π.
This pisses me off. In arguablely the most conservative county in the state, our republican commissioners don't do their due diligence, too concerned with being part of the ruling class, to notice such a thing and refuse to do business with leftists.
I guarantee you that Denver, Adams, Boulder or any other left leaning county would award you a contract if you exclusively donated to republicans, and you would be disqualified if you donated a dime to a tea party or conservative cause.
I, for one, am trying to figure out how a welfare manageme.. I mean "state housing management" agency can donate to the Dems and not be seen as a conflict of interest