It’s Friday, and if you are part of our Doom’s typical demographic, likely as not you are an affluent white male- and this issue might not be near and dear to your heart. For this mother of five though, I’m watching the battle of HOAs vs. clotheslines heating up- and I’m on the side of the clotheslines: [Hat tip Freedom's Phoenix!]
PERKASIE, Pennsylvania (Reuters) – Carin Froehlich pegs her laundry to three clotheslines strung between trees outside her 18th-century farmhouse, knowing that her actions annoy local officials who have asked her to stop.
Froehlich is among the growing number of people across America fighting for the right to dry their laundry outside against a rising tide of housing associations who oppose the practice despite its energy-saving green appeal.
Although there are no formal laws in this southeast Pennsylvania town against drying laundry outside, a town official called Froehlich to ask her to stop drying clothes in the sun. And she received two anonymous notes from neighbors saying they did not want to see her underwear flapping about.
"They said it made the place look like trailer trash," she said, in her yard across the street from a row of neat, suburban houses. "They said they didn’t want to look at my ‘unmentionables.’
It’s a tougher economy out there these days, and people are looking to save money where they can:
Although exact numbers are difficult to come by, a Pew Research study found the number of Americans who deem the clothes dryer a necessity has dropped significantly since 2006 — from 83 percent to 67 percent. While that statistic doesn’t indicate how many people have switched to line-drying, anecdotal evidence suggests that for both economic and environmental reasons, more people are doing so.
HOAs however, are the natural enemies of clotheslines:
Florida, Utah, Maine, Vermont, Colorado, and Hawaii have passed laws restricting the rights of local authorities to stop residents using clotheslines. Another five states are considering similar measures, said Lee, 35, a former lawyer who quit to run the non-profit group.
His principal opponents are the housing associations such as condominiums and townhouse communities that are home to an estimated 60 million Americans, or about 20 percent of the population. About half of those organizations have ‘no hanging’ rules, Lee said, and enforce them with fines.
9.6% of American homeowners are behind on their mortgages and budgets are tight. If it helps keep people in their homes, HOAs might consider that a clothesline in the backyard beats a foreclosure in the neighborhood.
Is there anything else out there that we ought to consider? This is an open thread, so let us know what’s on your mind.
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Disclosure: I have a clothesline in my backyard and use it all the time- much to the consternation of my neighbor.









I’m waiting for the moment when a bank becomes the majority owner of some neighborhood and votes to terminate the covenants that created the the HOA. That will be the day that we finally turn back the tide of ever-increasing housing fascism that HOAs represent.
twist -
Mrs M would perish without a line. We live in a perfectly good R2 neighbourhood and everyone hangs. Just two difficulties … 1) the dollar stores no longer carry sock dryers; and 2) Environment Canada occasionally over-promises sun
John-
How very sensible of you and your neighbors.
My clothesline is below grade and not visible from the street. My neighbor can only see the line from his backyard- not from any of his windows. That didn’t stop him for coming over right after we moved in to tell us that the line was against the CC&Rs.
According to the man that built the house, the line was on the plan when the house plans were submitted to the architectural committee. Apparently they didn’t notice the line and approved it- so we do have an exception.
I’ll agree that if clothes are hanging all over the front porch, it’s not a class look, but I don’t see what the big deal is when the line is in the backyard.
Mr. Twist and I between us spent five years on our homeowner’s board in AZ. We did it to try and keep the radicals off of the board. Sadly, too many people are concerned about the color of their neighbor’s basketball pole or if they left their hose in the front yard.
Igor “dislikes” it, and so do I.
Most of the HOAs in AZ continued to fight against solar panels due to their supposed unsightliness until they passed a law requiring HOAs to permit them. Clotheslines also have great environmental merit. Maybe we need a law protecting them as well. (Maybe an all-encompassing law stating that if a household item/tool has sufficient and proven environmental merit, an HOA cannot prevent a homeowner from using it.)
That said, a clothesline does belong in the backyard, not the front. However, I doubt that in reality that has been an issue.
Renting-
Believe it or not, I recently saw a home where the owners had stretched clotheslines all over the front porch.
I’m of the “no harm, no foul” school of front yard landscaping. Whatever I do shouldn’t make it difficult for my neighbor to sell his house. Consequently I think rules against things like hoses and windchimes are silly. I think I’d hesitate to buy the house next door to the folks with all the laundry out front though.
If HOAs stuck to health hazards and trashed out front yards, I’d think they were great. Unfortunately they are often manned by folks who fulfill their power trips by trying to dictate what shade of tan you can paint your trim.
i’m not a huge fan of HOA’s but my family does live in one (the wife REFUSES to chance moving next to the guy with a 78 el camino permanently up on cinder blocks in the front yard). to me it seems that the problem all too often is that the CCR’s don’t always differentiate the front from the back of the property. i don’t want to see your “unmentionables” blowing around the front porch or yard all up and down the block, but if the two back yards (that are the only yards in view from the typical home) next to me have a few bras hangin on a line, i have no problem with it. my wife hangs clothes to dry as well. however, we have those wire racks that you get at target for $10 and we can air dry 2-3 full loads in our bedroom. it’s not because i’m worried about the neighbors, rather we just think it’s easier than going in and outside (and prolly because wy wife doesn’t want her panties doubling as a flag in our yard?).
This was wildly OT, but I got a kick out of our local weather report today:
After all the baloney I usually wade through from the MSM, maybe I’m just too easily entertained any more.
Ontario, Canada has passed legislation that allows clotheslines.
http://www.mei.gov.on.ca/en/energy/electricity/?page=regulations
you have scroll down a bit to see the rules about clothes lines
45-
Too bad this video from the Premier’s website isn’t embedable:
http://www.premier.gov.on.ca/journal/index.php?page=2&journal=51&Lang=En
I love the slogan in the background, “Take a load off Toronto and let it all hang out.”
Keep the clothesline handy. It is always useful for hanging bureaucrats and politicians.
I have fond memories of my great grandmother hanging her laundry out behind her rural Virginia house. 4 or 5 acres, so no HOAs to worry about.
Southern AZ seems (to me) too dusty to put just-washed clothes outdoors, but I guess the spring and summer heat would dry them pretty quickly.
Russ-
Sometimes back when I lived in Chandler, I’d get sneaky and hang up clothesline below the fence. Mostly I hung towels on it. [Why, when the kids are in the pool three times in one day do they need three towels?]
The good thing was that things never had to hang out long enough to get dusty- it always seemed like things would dry in about 15 minutes.