The National Board of Certification for Community Association Managers (NBC-CAM) has granted credentials to eight professionals who have completed the requirements to become Certified Managers of Community Associations. The CMCA certification demonstrates that these managers have passed NBC-CAM's national exam and met requirements for managing condominium, cooperative and homeowners' associations, joining more than 3,200 CMCA certificants nationwide.
To obtain the CMCA certification, a manager must successfully complete a 16-hour classroom course, the Essentials of Community Association Management, and pass the National Certification Examination. The test was developed by over 1000 managers, homeowners, and association professionals and is administered by an independent outside testing agency. Certified managers must adhere to the CMCA Standards of Professional Conduct and take continuing education courses to recertify. If CMCA certificants do not comply with the Standards of Professional Conduct, they are subject to disciplinary action, up to and including suspension or revocation of the credential.
The CMCA certification is the first tier of the pyramid of professionalism for community association managers, which is followed by the Association Management Specialist (AMS) and the Professional Community Association Manager (PCAM) designations offered by the Community Associations Institute (CAI).
NBC-CAM is the first and only nationwide organization created solely to certify community association managers and to help consumers identify managers who have demonstrated fundamental competency and knowledge in this profession. With the dramatic increase in association-governed housing over the last 25 years (10,000 community associations in 1970 versus 205,000 today), there is an expanded need for education in community association management.
A community association manager's duties include:
- providing administrative, operational and managerial counsel to association boards and residents;
- developing association budgets and financial reports,
- directing the enforcement of community association covenants and restrictions,
- assisting board members in the selection of contractors and insurance providers,
- overseeing payment for community association services,
- directing association personnel, and
- performing site inspections.
The National Board of Certification for Community Association Managers (NBC-CAM) was established in 1995 by the Community Associations Institute to ensure that managers have the appropriate skills to effectively manage community associations. The Community Associations Institute is a nonprofit association created in 1973 to educate and represent the nation's 205,000 community associations—condominium associations, homeowner associations and cooperatives. CAI members include homeowners, associations and the professionals who provide products and services to them.
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[Editor's Note: A complete listing of newly certified managers follows.]
Certified Managers of Community Associations
- Christian Anderson, Shorewood Forest POA, Inc., Valparaiso, IN
- Winston Blazer, Tellico Village POA, Loudon, TN
- Gary Feller, The Spirit of Property Management, St. Charles, MO
- Ellen Fix, EMB, Bellevue, WA
- Marvin Hunt, Tellico Village POA, Loudon, TN
- James Miles, Consolidated Community Management, Inc., Tamarac, FL
- Patricia Richardson, SWRA, Dadeville, AL
- Alisa Vyenielo, Robert C. Maddox & Associates, Las Vegas, NV