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Horseshoe Lake Estates reinvents itself
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
Jesse
White, president of the Horseshoe Lake Estates
Homeowners’ Association, says he will remain at that
post until the neighborhood’s suspected drug houses “are
all gone.” He is working hard to attract builders to the
125-lot subdivision, as derelict properties are removed.
This has resulted in 10 new stick-built homes, five
since January, with more to follow, and appreciation of
property values for the 105 property owners (20
residences occupy double lots).

After two years of
effort, this Horseshoe Lake drug house was
finally demolished and the site cleared.
Photo courtesy Jesse White |
Most
recently, a drug house in the 9200 block of 147th Street
Court has finally been demolished, after two years of
effort in documenting illegal activity.
The proof
required to begin a formal investigation of activities
at the house was time-consuming and meticulous, White
said. Over several months, residents recorded more than
60 license plate numbers of “visitors” to the house who
stayed but a few minutes, often without ever turning the
car off. The house had no electricity, was running on a
generator for lights; water had also been shut off.
Residents could smell meth “cooking” from the street,
and wondered why the occupants weren’t being busted,
according to White.
They
learned the sheriff had to actually see the activity
occurring — and after approximately 24 months of
neighborhood observation and documentation of dates,
times and activity, a raid paid off. The house was
eventually foreclosed while its owner was in jail, and
auctioned on the courthouse steps, where it had no
takers. (Any new owner would be required to pay for the
toxic cleanup of the site.) Eventually it was sold to a
company that cleaned and sold it, according to White, to
John Follese of Twin Towers Construction who has built
several homes in Horseshoe Lake Estates.
Concerned
about the number of nonowner-occupied residences in the
subdivision, in May 2005, the association voted to
exclude long-term rentals (an allowance was made for
currently rented properties and short-term nonowner
occupancy following the death of an owner). The new
covenant says, in part, “This land use restriction…
limit(s) and ultimately prevent(s) the renting of lots…
which the owners declare has led to frequent lot use in
numerous ways by renters which is detrimental to land
values and quiet enjoyment of all lots…” Eighty-five
percent of the subdivision’s land-owners signed the
petition, including several off-site landlords.
Seventeen residences are currently being used as
rentals, and are “grandfathered in” until those renters
vacate.

After two years of
effort, this Horseshoe Lake drug house was
finally demolished and the site cleared.
Photo courtesy Jesse White |
Rationale
behind the change is simple, and potentially useful to
other similar communities, White said. Recently, a
member of Taylor Bay Estates called for a copy of the
new covenant. According to White, some current landlords
have inherited their property. “They have nothing in
it,” he says. “If they don’t keep them up, the quality
of renter goes down.” He contends that if the owner
lives next door, residents can police themselves through
the use of a neighborhood-based “community watch”
security system.
Interestingly, one Horseshoe Lake Estate nonoccupant
owner who signed the covenant change decided to rent out
his property after the covenant was approved. That
owner, living in the Jackson Lake area, has allowed the
residence to deteriorate, according to White. Attempts
to enforce the new rules have failed. The community
association now believes it has no choice but to file a
noncompliance suit.
That may
prove to be difficult; both ABC Legal Messengers and the
Pierce County Sheriff’s Department have said they could
not serve the owner papers because of dogs patrolling
his fenced property. Registered letters of notice have
been sent twice, and twice returned to sender, unsigned.
Still,
White, his wife, Charlene, and their neighbors are
determined to make these new rules “the law” in the
subdivision, and to make it clear to everyone that drug
activity is no longer tolerated.
“We drive
around two or three times daily — making our rounds,”
Charlene White said. “We all want the neighborhood
cleaned up.”
With an 85
percent consensus on the covenant shift to eventual
exclusively owner-occupied residences, it seems almost
the entire development is in agreement.
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