When Privacy Becomes Collateral: VP Anh Jung’s Latest Violation Exposes Homeowner Information

Whether this decision was rooted in negligence or willful disregard, the question stands: Does Ms. Jung lack the capacity to understand the policies she’s bound to—or is she simply choosing not to follow them?

On April 11, 2025, Power Ranch HOA Vice President Anh Jung posted a list of internal landscaping work orders—complete with homeowner street addresses—on a partisan Facebook group she controls. The group, branded “Power Ranch HomeOwners Alliance,” is not affiliated with the official HOA and has no formal authority to share operational HOA data.

The list included 19 entries, exposing detailed work requests from homeowners across the community. These included irrigation issues, plant replacements, and tree removals, all tied directly to identifiable addresses —none of which were redacted or approved for public release.

While there is little to debate regarding the landscaping or irrigation challenges that may exists right now in our community, the glaring issue here is privacy, adherence to policies and law, and the accountability of leadership.

Violation of Ethics, Policy, and Trust

Jung’s post is more than a political maneuver—it’s a blatant violation of the PRCA Board Code of Ethics, which prohibits using one’s board position to advance personal agendas or disclose internal information. It also violates the PRCA Communications Policy, which strictly limits who may share HOA information and prohibits the release of operational data through unauthorized channels. Additionally, her actions contradict Article 12.2 of the PRCA CC&Rs, which forbids board members from using their position for personal or political gain, and may constitute a breach of fiduciary duty under A.R.S. § 10-3830, which governs the conduct of nonprofit directors in Arizona.

As Vice President, Jung is expected to uphold the integrity of the Association—not undermine it. Her decision to bypass official communication channels and release privileged data to push her ongoing campaign to remove the current landscaping vendor reflects a disturbing disregard for her responsibilities.

What This Means for Homeowners

If you submitted a maintenance or landscaping request in recent weeks, your address may now be circulating on social media—without your knowledge or consent.

This breach not only undermines homeowner privacy, but sets a dangerous precedent: If board officers can unilaterally publish internal data whenever it serves their political strategy, no homeowner’s information is truly protected.

Why It Matters

We rely on our Board to operate with professionalism, neutrality, and respect for procedure. Ms. Jung’s post did none of that. It exposed resident data, bypassed PRCA safeguards, and served only to reinforce her personal agenda—at the cost of the community’s trust. Jung’s actions very well may create significant liabilities for the board and our community.

This isn’t just a misstep. It’s an ethical failure—and it demands accountability.

RECALL KEN. RECALL ANH. RECALL KATHARINE.

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