HOA President Demolished a Bridge, Then the County Arrived-Ginny

I Let the HOA Destroy “My” Bridge — Then Watched Karen Learn It Actually Belonged to the County.

My name is Miles Webb, and for 15 years the sound of my boots on that 60 ft concrete bridge meant my day had officially begun.

The bridge crossed Willowbrook Creek behind my grandfather’s old ranch house, connecting the main home to the electrical workshop where I built my contracting business from nothing.

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The house sat on 2.3 acres, split cleanly by water, cottonwoods, mud, and the kind of quiet I needed after my divorce took half of everything I thought I had secured.

On one side was the kitchen where I drank coffee before dawn.

On the other was my workshop, filled with $80,000 in specialized electrical equipment, wire pullers, underground cable locators, conduit benders, reels, test meters, and shelves of labeled parts.

The smell of soldering flux mixed with creek water every morning.

That smell became a kind of proof that I was still standing.

My business brought in about $150,000 a year, but it was not just money.

It was the one part of my life that had survived the divorce mostly intact.

My grandfather built the bridge in 1962, or at least that was what I had always believed.

His will mentioned all structures and improvements, and I assumed the bridge was included with the property like the barn, the workshop, and the gravel turnoff near the road.

Every year, Willowbrook County sent me a $200 check with a stiff little memo about maintenance.

I never studied the language.

I thought it was a utility easement payment, maybe a minor tax adjustment, one of those small county things that makes more sense to the clerk than to the person cashing it.

That misunderstanding sat quietly in a drawer for years.

Then Karen Blackwell found a reason to hate me.

Karen moved into Willowbrook 8 years ago during the housing boom, when every real estate agent in town was suddenly acting like they personally invented property values.

She had perfect nails, perfect hair, designer sunglasses, and a clipboard that seemed surgically attached to her hand.

For 6 years she served as HOA president, though served was the wrong word.

Karen ruled.

She cited elderly widows for garden gnomes, young families for fence stains, and delivery vans for being too visible from the street.

She called it community standards.

Most of us called it Karen looking for oxygen.

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