WWII Medal of Honor Winner Told Not to Fly the Flag

It's stories like these that makes people really hate homeowners' associations. (H/T Don Surber)

Col. Van T. Barfoot, a local Medal of Honor winner, is under the gun from his Henrico County community's homeowner association.

In a five-paragraph letter to Barfoot that he received yesterday, Barfoot is being ordered to remove a flagpole from his yard. The decorated veteran of three wars, now 90 years old, raises the American flag every morning on the pole, then lowers and folds the flag at dusk each day in a three-corner military fashion.

In a priority mail letter, the Coates & Davenport law firm in Richmond is ordering Barfoot to remove the pole by 5 p.m. Friday or face "legal action being brought to enforce the Covenants and Restrictions against you." The letter states that Barfoot will be subject to paying all legal fees and costs in any successful legal proceeding pursued by the homeowner association's board.

Barfoot's daughter said this evening that news reports about the association order have prompted an outpouring of sympathy and offers of help from people following her father's ordeal.

Tonight, the Sussex Square Homeowners Association issued a statement reiterating its position that Barfoot directly violated the association board's denial of his request to erect a flagpole.

"This is not about the American flag. This about a flagpole," the statement reads.

Barfoot lives in the Sussex Square community in far western Henrico; its board of directors rejected a plea from Barfoot in July to approve the pole, disallowing the fixture on aesthetic grounds.

Col. Barfoot is 90 years old, he fought in not just World War II, but Korea and Vietnam as well.  He doesn't need crap like this in his final days.

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  • maulreius
    This kinda stuff boils my bottom -- covenants and associations. I gotta similar situation. I signed a covenant to buy the lot we have and I've had a couple of visits by the former owner. Now, the irony is the former owner has some land in the neighboring town and the town has a slot minimum build size. Postage stamps or huge tracts. Former owner doesn't like it, needless to say I am not very sympathetic.
  • jwhite224
    Kevin, I completely disagree with you on this one. The reason these become huge news stories is the majority of the country isn't part of an association and doesn't relate to the fact that in any association, there are rules you have to follow. I'm in a townhome association and if people did whatever they wanted to - no matter how patriotic - chaos would rule. You can't just have people doing whatever they want when there are rules against it. This association denied this guy permission to put up a flagpole and he decided to do it anyway. It's like the state of Wisconsin telling you to put a front license plate on your car and you put one of the flag on instead. You can't just violate the rules because it's patriotic to do so.

    That's just my soapbox though...people look way too quickly at the American flag in these stories and become quickly blind to the real issue.
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