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Recalls are where community politics get real. When a board receives a Recall Petition, emotions run high and so do the legal stakes. In this week’s episode of Take It To The Board, host Donna DiMaggio Berger sits down with Becker shareholder Jonathan J. Ellis, Florida Bar board-certified in condominium and planned development law, to demystify what drives recalls, how they actually work and how to steer a community through the process with as little pain as possible.
Donna and Jonathan break down the two Florida recall paths—membership meeting vs. written ballot and why the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation’s (DBPR) forms and “facial validity” standard matter so much. You’ll hear the critical do’s and don’ts as they also cover the required five-day Board meeting to certify, what counts as a valid rejection of the recall effort, common traps like DocuSign signatures, and why the Division rarely polices the “story” behind a signature unless fraud is obvious.
Beyond the mechanics, they focus on strategy. Managers should stay neutral; boards must communicate early and accurately, with data that explains why tough choices—reserve funding, special assessments, construction projects and life-safety repairs—can’t wait. Donna and Jonathan weigh when to fight, when to pivot, and when to accept a valid recall with grace. You’ll learn about timing windows around elections, why recalls are harder to win than elections, and how to navigate developer-appointed seats and layered voting interests. They round it out with practical transition tips for new boards: bank resolutions, records turnover, and avoiding long-term contracts that handcuff future boards.
If you’re an owner building a recall effort, a director sensing one, or a manager trying to stay above the fray, this conversation gives you a clear, candid roadmap.
Conversation Highlights:
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By Donna DiMaggio Berger4.9
3131 ratings
Send a text
Recalls are where community politics get real. When a board receives a Recall Petition, emotions run high and so do the legal stakes. In this week’s episode of Take It To The Board, host Donna DiMaggio Berger sits down with Becker shareholder Jonathan J. Ellis, Florida Bar board-certified in condominium and planned development law, to demystify what drives recalls, how they actually work and how to steer a community through the process with as little pain as possible.
Donna and Jonathan break down the two Florida recall paths—membership meeting vs. written ballot and why the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation’s (DBPR) forms and “facial validity” standard matter so much. You’ll hear the critical do’s and don’ts as they also cover the required five-day Board meeting to certify, what counts as a valid rejection of the recall effort, common traps like DocuSign signatures, and why the Division rarely polices the “story” behind a signature unless fraud is obvious.
Beyond the mechanics, they focus on strategy. Managers should stay neutral; boards must communicate early and accurately, with data that explains why tough choices—reserve funding, special assessments, construction projects and life-safety repairs—can’t wait. Donna and Jonathan weigh when to fight, when to pivot, and when to accept a valid recall with grace. You’ll learn about timing windows around elections, why recalls are harder to win than elections, and how to navigate developer-appointed seats and layered voting interests. They round it out with practical transition tips for new boards: bank resolutions, records turnover, and avoiding long-term contracts that handcuff future boards.
If you’re an owner building a recall effort, a director sensing one, or a manager trying to stay above the fray, this conversation gives you a clear, candid roadmap.
Conversation Highlights:
Related Links:

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