The HOA Ordered Me To Destroy My Koi Pond, Then State Law Took Over-Quieen - Chainityai

The HOA Ordered Me To Destroy My Koi Pond, Then State Law Took Over-Quieen

The fine notice was waiting on my front door like a dare.

It was a Tuesday morning in October, the kind of morning when the backyard looked too peaceful to be accused of anything.

The pond was catching the low gold light, and the koi were moving slowly through the water, orange and white and black bodies sliding beneath the surface with that ancient, patient rhythm fish have when nobody has told them humans are ridiculous.

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Then I read the paper.

Eight hundred dollars.

Violation of section 6, subsection D.

Water features exceeding fifty square feet require prior ARC approval.

Unauthorized installation.

Immediate remediation required.

I looked from the notice to the pond, then back to the notice, and for a moment all I could think was that Tanaka, the big orange-and-white koi I had raised from a fingerling, was being fined for existing.

He surfaced near the shallow edge as if breakfast was the only issue on earth.

I had built that pond over four months, but I had thought about it for years before the first shovel went into the ground.

I am a landscape architect, and my own yard was not something I treated casually.

The pond was thirty-eight feet long, twenty-two feet wide at the broadest point, and six feet deep in the center.

It held about fourteen thousand gallons of water.

It had multi-stage filtration, aeration, and a circulation plan designed to keep the water clear without chemical dependency.

Around the margins I had planted cattails, blue flag iris, native sedges, pickerelweed, arrowhead, and swamp milkweed.

I chose those plants because they belonged there.

They were not decoration.

They were function.

They held soil, filtered water, fed insects, sheltered frogs, and turned what could have been a pretty backyard feature into a living system.

The HOA did not see a living system.

Gloria Chen, chair of the Community Standards Committee, saw an unauthorized water feature from the path behind my fence.

She took a photograph.

She issued the fine.

And in the final paragraph, she ordered immediate remediation.

That meant fill it in.

The funny thing about people who love rules is that they sometimes forget rules live in layers.

An HOA rule sits in one layer.

State environmental law sits in another.

And when the two collide, the little rule does not get to boss the big one around.

I knew that only because of Frank Delacroix.

Frank lived next door at 13 Fernwood Drive, and he was the sort of neighbor every HOA should fear quietly and respectfully.

He was sixty-eight, retired, polite, calm, and had spent thirty years as an environmental attorney specializing in wetlands law.

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