Neighborhood sharing
Give HOAs and neighbors a calm post-storm handout
A printable and social-ready handout that helps neighborhood leaders share official sources, safe checks, and contractor cautions.
Reviewed 2026-05-16
Short answer
A good HOA handout lowers confusion after the first big hail report
This guide is built for someone who needs to post once in a neighborhood group, send one HOA email, or print one flyer for a common area.
What to do
Follow the homeowner workflow
- 1
Lead with emergency and official weather sources, not roofing offers.
- 2
Include a short ground-level checklist and a contractor verification reminder.
- 3
Provide image, PDF, email, and carousel variants for common neighborhood channels.
- 4
Keep the tone neutral enough for HOAs, realtors, insurance agents, and residents to share.
Details
What this guide is built to clarify
One post
A single-image version should work in Facebook, Nextdoor, and text threads.
Carousel
A multi-frame version can explain safety, source links, roof check, and roofer questions.
The PDF should be readable on a lobby board or in a mailroom.
Boundary
This is not a diagnosis, recommendation, or insurance outcome.
Use this page to organize questions, source links, and safe next steps. Official sources, licensed professionals, and written policy documents should control final decisions.
Sources
Check the latest source first
-
Ready.gov
Make a Plan -
National Weather Service
Severe Thunderstorm Safety -
Federal Trade Commission
Avoid Scams After Weather Emergencies