Clothesline: Solar Device or Eyesore?

By Amy Quinton on Thursday, November 1, 2007.

A battle is brewing in neighborhoods across the nation to bring back what was once part of America’s backyard landscape – the clothesline.

This green movement touts the clothesline as an environmentally friendly way to dry laundry. But about 60 million Americans live in community associations that prohibit or restrict clotheslines.

As New Hampshire Public Radio’s Amy Quinton reports, right-to-dry advocates are hoping legislation will change that.

It’s a sunny fall day in Nashua and Vicki Meeghar wishes she could be hanging her laundry outside to dry.
(1165 I had the clothesline right out here…(sound of door opening)
She walks out on her condominium’s back porch at Ledgewood Hills,
a planned community with 376 units.
Meeghar points to where her clothesline had hung for about a year.
(it was attached to a plant bracket there and strung up and attached to the light there and it was only about 10 or 12 yards long and for the most part you couldn’t see from the road you couldn’t see the clothes)
Two large walls separate her unit from the others and a stand of evergreens grow between her porch and the road.
But despite her efforts to find an innocuous location, Meeghar received a letter reminding her that clotheslines are forbidden at Ledgewood Hills.
Her clothesline would have to come down.
Meeghar says she saw her clothesline as a small step in conserving energy and fighting climate change.
(I wish there would be some acknowledgement that this is an idea whose time has come, this is the 21st century, and we can’t just continue to use energy willy-nilly)
Community associations site aesthetics as the main reason for the restrictions.
David Fredette is President of the Ledgewood Hills Association.
“I would think if you drove around and saw 50 clotheslines hanging out on everyone’s deck that to me that would not be very appealing to look at, the rules are their to protect people to protect their asset, to protect their investment, and that’s the largest investment people have in their lives so they feel very strongly about it.”
But right to dry advocates argue that protecting that investment by denying clotheslines is costly to the environment.
Concord resident Alexander Lee is founder of Project Laundry List, a group that is advocating for legislation that would allow people to use clotheslines, even in community associations that ban them.
“people realize that the government isn’t going to solve the global warming problem and they want to be able to do something in their own homes and they’re not even allowed to do a very simple thing that they could do to save a tremendous amount of energy, six to ten percent of residential energy use goes towards the electric dryer.”
(nats)1088
Recently Lee held what he called a “Right to Dry Summit” at a Concord apartment.
Surrounded by pictures of clothesline art and old washboards, about a half dozen advocates from as far away as California and Florida came to share their frustrations over the issue.
Nats, everyone talking at same time (if everybody used clotheslines then the issue of property value would not come up ..years ago everybody had one, yes, until they told us it was low class)
Twelve states already have laws that protect clotheslines – some couch it in language that recognizes it as a low-tech solar dryer – a renewable energy device.
Democratic Representative Suzanne Harvey of Nashua is sponsoring right to dry legislation in New Hampshire.
“I live in a detached condo so we all have our own separate homes, but we’re not allowed to hang out anything, and I think in a state like NH where people tend to think in terms of living the way you want to as long as you’re not hurting someone else, this is the right kind of legislation”
Harvey says her legislation would allow associations to consider aesthetics or placement of clotheslines, but they could not ban them.
Community Association Institute spokesman Frank Rathbun says passing state legislation is the wrong way to solve the issue.
The group lobbies on behalf of the 60 million Americans living in neighborhoods governed by covenant.
4:30 “Anything that can contribute to improving our environment should definitely be considered but the question is, where should it be considered, by what body, should the government get involved in 300-thousand community and condominium associations, or are those decisions best left to the homeowners in each association, we think it’s the latter.”
Rathbun says part of the problem is that governing regulations in many associations need to be reviewed.
He says in some cases, the bylaws were written several decades ago and may not make any sense today.
But Abigail Beutler (Boitler), who lives in a Nashua condo that bans clotheslines, says it’s not easy to change those rules.
1157 1:58 that would take two-thirds of the people here agreeing to even bringing it up to a vote so I don’t think anyone would feel that strongly enough about it that they would go around with petitions to gain back a freedom they should have had in the first place.
But the Right to Dry legislation may have a hard time passing in New Hampshire as well.
Its sponsor hopes that if it doesn’t pass, it will at least invoke what she thinks is a needed conversation about energy conservation and global warming.
For NHPR news, I’m Amy Quinton.

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Wow, you people must really

Wow, you people must really be bored. This passes for interesting in New Hampshire? I live in a community with HOA. And every time one of my neighbors complains that they got a letter about leaving their trash cans out or not cutting their grass, I say, "Boy that sucks." Then I walk away and thank GOD that I know longer have to look at their dirty trash cans. Long live the HOA!

Are you really Bored?

Are you really Bored? Perhaps you should apply for serving on your board and doing architectural review?

Or perhaps you're already joyfully watching other homeowners as they are trapped in their home, scared to even attempt to improve their house/yard/landscape because the ARC refuses to give them permission to put in that greenhouse, solar panel that doubles as a new carport, or even water conserving landscape and rock gardens. These violate the "harmonious blend" prescription laid down by the master architect in 1984, so you want to pay someone to enforce these out-dated building concepts into the next century? Think about that when you're bored...perhaps you'll discover a morsel of creativity that the rest of us can marvel?

What did Thomas Edison do when he was bored? Or Marconi, Davinci or Aristotle? They didn't snoop on their neighbor's property.

These association "rules"

These association "rules" are made to be broken, because these are not "laws". These authorities have never passed the democratic process specified by the law. In Texas, all mandatory associations are supposed to be founded on the authority of a petition (PC 201...211). But the housing industry circumvents this law and has violated the spirit of the law for over 20 years, and violates the rule of perpetuities (TX Constitution, Bill of Rights). The law alludes to a 10 year contract term. "Automatic Renewal" clauses effectively create perpetuities.

The "contract" allegedly signed by new owners is a fraud, and a mafia environment surrounds these contract enforcement regimes. They can come clean when they follow the law and renew this contract with a petition. 51% of the present day owners must agree to renew this contract, and have the free choice Americans deserve. There is no new housing available that is not in a mafia environment, thus we see a monopoly.

We've been fooled and brainwashed - there is no valid contract. Wake up and mandate that the HOA corporate charter be renewed via the process that was supposed to be used to create the "contract" (according to the law). But the CAI and the management lobby will cry and gnash their teeth if this should come to pass...they could never survive a true democratic test. This is the behavior of a Fascist dictatorship - they are afraid to put it to a vote and submit to the will of the people.

Wake up, America. You've been had.

Air dry 21 pieces of clothing in the space of 39" TIBBE-LINES

I am the inventor of the Tibbe-Line, an easier more efficient way to air dry laundry. The Tibbe-Line is multi-functional in that it not only can be used to air dry clothes on an already existing clothesline but can also be made into a PORTABLE CLOTHESLINE that can be used at home or taken with you, use it just about any where (camping,traveling,vacationing,etc.(HANGERS ARE USED INSTEAD OF CLOTHESPINS AND YOU CAN HANG 21 PIECES OF CLOTHING IN THE SPACE OF 39".

The Tibbe-Line can also be used to transport clothing in a vehicle and also as a space saver in a closet. They can be especially useful for people in wheelchairs, giving them easier access to their clothes in the closet.

I have cut my laundry time by more than half as well as cutting down on my electricity consumption and my electric bill has gone down as well. So every time I use the Tibbe-Lines I save time,space,money,energy,our environment as well as adding longevity to my clothes.

poem

To think that I shall never see
Upon a clothesline, hanging free,
Fresh clean drawers and woolen socks,
Dungarees and artists' smocks,
'Tis a sad and somber thought
That "proper" townfolk think we ought
To waste the sun and air and breeze
In stormy times like these.

I think that if that

I think that if that clothesline is an environmentally friendly way to dry laundry then I don't see any problem.