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I imagine the argument that you will get is that the rules were put into your HOA to draw home owners that did not want to be know as from a farming community. Those will obviously also be the hardest to change their minds besides perhaps the neighbor, which I picture as older, that thinks chickens are dirty, smelly, loud, obnoxious creatures.
Start with your neighbor. How long have they owned their house, and how long have you owned yours? There may be a pecking order there.... Sorry, couldn't resist. Go over with an apple pie or something baked with your eggs better yet. Have the coop clean clean clean and invite her and her furry creatures over to meet the feathered ones and see what happens. Without her in your corner, you don't have much of a shot if she complains.
The only time a pecking order comes into play is in influence wielded by one person over another or when different pieces of property have different numbers of votes attached to them. For example, in some HOAs, property size determines the number of votes an owner has. A townhome may only be entitled to .25 vote, someone with a "normal size" lot may have .5 vote and someone with several acres may have a full vote. If one owns several lots, one is entitled to all votes for each lot owned--and one also has to pay the assessment for each lot. The only time seniority has any power is for the developer, and then only until he/she turns control over control of hte association--usually triggered by timeline and buildout percentage.
Pecking order was used tongue in cheek. Some people don't get my ascerbic wit..... Where I was talking pecking order, is sometimes in neighbor play, the ones that have been there the longest sometimes have a little more pull (only with each other), than the newbies. I wasn't talking about HOA's. Those things I hate. Snobby people who think their rear ends don't stink and wish to flock together and create a "perfect" neighborhood.