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6

J U L Y , 2 0 1 6

LOOKING

FORWARD

LARRY THOMAS, PCAM

| CAI-NJ CHAPTER EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

A

fter reading Steve Kroll’s excellent article “The

Benefits of CAI-NJ Membership — A Community

Association Volunteer Leader’s Perspective” in the

June 2016 issue of

Community Trends

®

,

I came to the

realization that all of our community leaders and profes-

sionals need to be relevant in order to properly serve our

communities.

The governance and management of our community associ-

ations is an ever changing industry. Whether we are dealing

with legislative issues, mortgage reform, delinquency matters,

aging buildings and amenities or fair housing/ discrimination

issues, the landscape changes daily. In order for all of us to

remain relevant in our roles as community leaders, it is import-

ant to keep abreast of what is happening that can, and will

affect our communities. CAI-NJ is constantly researching these

matters and coordinates several educational opportunities

for all of our members. Our monthly magazine,

Community

Trends

®

,

presents timely articles pertaining to community

issues. These articles are written by members who are experts

in their respective fields. Here are my suggestions on how to

stay up-to-date and maintain your relevancy in the community

leadership arena. Steve mentioned most of these in his article

last month.

1. If you are a board member

• Make sure you and your board read all of CAI’s printed

materials. These include

Community Trends

®

(produced

monthly by CAI-NJ), and

Common Ground

(produced

semi-monthly by CAI National’s office).

• Attend any and all in-person educational events present-

ed by CAI-NJ. These include any legislative updates

(CAI-NJ sponsored four updates in 2016), the CAVL

Roundtables, the Annual Senior Summit (held this year

on July 14th at Renaissance at Manchester), any of

Staying Relevant

our lecture series held at the CAI-NJ Headquarters in

Freehold (see the calendar on the facing page for future

lectures).

• All board members should attend the Annual Conference

and Expo (this year it is being held on Wednesday,

October 26th, in Somerset NJ). This is the one event

that brings together all of our professional vendors and

service providers. With over 160 exhibitors and several

educational classes, this is the one “must attend” event.

• Make sure your professionals are relevant. CAI and

CAI-NJ have a vast contingency of community industry

focused professionals you should contemplate when

considering a service provider or vendor. Look for law

firms that have a staff solely dedicated to community

associations. CAI awards the CCAL designation to

attorneys who meet educational and experience require-

ments in the community association field. Consider

an engineering company that specializes in community

associations. These firms can be located in our annual

directory or on our website. Reserve schedules are a

vital function in the success of your community’s well-be-

ing and should not be left up to a firm that isn’t adequate-

ly experienced in this field. CAI awards the RS (Reserve

“In order for all of us to

remain relevant in our roles

as community leaders it is

important to keep abreast of

what is happening that can, and

will affect our communities.”

CONT I NU E S ON PAGE 44