|
By: Justin Martin, President - PioneerWest Property Management When the first heavy snow falls across Idaho, the difference between a prepared community and an unprepared one is as visible as the drifts themselves. In one neighborhood, plows carve neat paths before dawn, roofs are inspected against ice dams, and homeowners rest easy knowing their association anticipated the season. In another, residents watch in frustration as overbooked contractors fail to show, invoices climb by the hour, and board members scramble to explain why planning was postponed until it was too late. This is not a matter of luck or chance; it is the natural consequence of foresight, or its absence.
Every fall, HOA boards across Idaho face the same test. Budget season collides with the arrival of colder weather, and the strength of their stewardship is revealed in how they prepare for what lies ahead. It is tempting for boards to appease short-term homeowner concerns by holding the line on assessments, deferring increases, or assuming vendors will be available when needed. Yet this kind of optimism has a cost. Snow does not negotiate, nor do contractors who have already filled their winter schedules by the time November arrives. The decisions made in September and October determine whether a community glides through winter with calm efficiency or stumbles from one crisis to the next. The truth is that Idaho boards carry an even heavier burden than their counterparts in many other states. With winters stretching from November to April, snowfall totals in places like the Wood River Valley can exceed 200 inches annually, nearly twice the national average. Vendor pools are thinner, especially in rural towns where skilled tradespeople are in short supply. When demand spikes, the best crews are not just more expensive, they are often unavailable altogether. Associations that delay planning quickly learn that they are competing with entire municipalities and commercial operators for the same limited resources.
0 Comments
|
Thank You SponsorsArchives
October 2025
Categories |
RSS Feed