The Parks at Willow Ridge

HELP SHAPE THE FUTURE OF OUR Community

Join a committee

Change doesn't happen on its own—it happens when residents like you step up and get involved.

Our HOA committees are driven by residents (not board members), giving neighbors a real voice in how our community grows and improves. While the HOA Board retains final decision-making authority, committees play a powerful role in shaping recommendations and guiding initiatives that impact all of us.

You don’t have to be on the Board to make a difference. Committees are where focused ideas take shape, issues get solved, and new benefits for the community are born.

Joining a committee means:

  • You help address specific topics that matter most to you (beautification, events, safety, and more!)

  • You bring your unique talents and opinions to the table

  • You ensure the Board hears your perspective—and others like you

  • You become part of the solution, not just the conversation

If you want to see better communication, stronger amenities, and smart improvements, we invite you to join a committee and be the change you're asking for.

Let’s build a better community - together!

Interested in helping out in our community?

Fill out the Volunteer Application or complete the survey below to share interest in joining an HOA committee.

Let’s work together

Please fill out some information so that we can get you connected.

Committee Interest Form

Committees are about It is about connection, empowerment, and shared responsibility.

Committees are where ideas become action and residents become neighbors. The entire community deserves to have a place to be heard and to contribute.

This HOA doesn’t belong to just us—it belongs to all of us.

So, I am interested in forming a committee. What next?

  1. Residents decide to form a committee.

  2. Residents email the Board for approval to create their new committee.

  3. HOA Board reviews and approves the new committee.

  4. Residents will receive correspondence that their committee is approved and that they can start to draft a Committee Charter.

    • The HOA Board has a Charter template that can be filled out. The template includes: name, purpose, roles, responsibilities, reporting structure, number of members’ min/max, term length, member removal process, (optional) required skills or experience, meeting cadence, voting and quorum rules, and code of conduct and ethics.

  5. Residents email the Board for review and approval of their new committee charter.

    • The HOA Board prefers for the residents to present their Committee Charter during an open meeting.

    • If your committee will need budgets, it is important to know that budgets are determined every October for the next year.

    • If a committee has a budget request, these requests should be submitted to the Board by September 1st, so that we can prepare the budget for the following year.

  6. HOA Board reviews and approves the new committee charter.

  7. HOA Board President or Vice President will send the newly approved Committee Charter to Legal for their review and approval.

  8. Management Company and Lawyer will schedule a meeting at the courthouse for committee member (resident) signatures.

    • If the committee member (resident) does not sign, they are not considered part of that committee.

  9. Lawyer ensures legal document follows courthouse rules and procedures.

  10. Management Company and HOA Board Secretary will file your new committee charter.

Congratulations!