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Charlotte Observer: Affordable housing at risk as developer eyes Charlotte mobile home park for apartments

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Off Prosperity Church Road nestled near newly built townhomes, apartments and shopping centers sits a community fighting for its existence amid the weight of development pressures.

Last May, Leonel Chavez and many of his neighbors living in the Forest Park Mobile Home Park in northeast Charlotte were shocked when they received a letter from the property owner, Nesbit Oil Company, notifying them of their decision to sell after nearly 60 years.

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I would typically say “and another park bites the dust” but it’s important to remind everyone as to why so many mobile home parks are being torn down right now – and this article demonstrates many of those factors. They include the simple facts that:

  1. Mobile home parks are just the right size, in terms of acreage, for apartment complexes.
  2. Mobile home parks have existing water, sewer, gas and electric access.
  3. Mobile home parks have great locations on major roads.
  4. Cities will give out any zoning or permitting required to get mobile home parks torn down.

When you add these four facts together, you can see why apartment developers long ago figured out that an existing mobile home park is the perfect location for a new apartment complex.

WLNS: Kristana Mobile Home Park residents speak out against eviction

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LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) — Residents of the Kristana Mobile Home Park in Dewitt Township held a news conference earlier today, speaking out against what they are calling an “illegal eviction.”

Mid-Michigan Tenant Resource Center says that residents gathered to publicly oppose the eviction that has left them without running water and at risk of homelessness.

“All of us own our homes. We’ve poured our savings, time, and lives into them. What they’re doing to us is not wrong, it’s illegal,” said Kristana resident Jason Eldridge in a news release sent to 6 News.

“Families are facing an illegal eviction, carried out not through court, not...

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And another park bites the dust.

Portland Press Herald: Maine lawmakers give mobile homeowners a leg up in park purchases

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Friendly Village mobile home park in Gorham in April. Residents are attempting to buy the park but face competition from an out-of-state investment firm. Lawmakers sent a bill to the governor’s desk that would make it easier for more communities to purchase their parks. (Derek Davis/Staff Photographer)
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Lawmakers on Wednesday passed a bill to give mobile home residents the “right of first refusal” when their parks go up for sale, but it won’t go into effect quickly enough to benefit Friendly Village, a large park in Gorham awaiting a decision on its multi-million dollar offer.

The bill, LD 1145, was enacted in both the state...

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Maine now becomes the latest state to drink the Kool-Aid that somehow delaying legitimate sales to allow residents to take their hopeless shot at cobbling hand-outs and short-term loans to buy their park is a good use of everyone’s time. Non-profits have done a great job of convincing bureaucrats without divulging the simple fact that tenants succeed in buying their parks literally .0000001% of the time. The folks in Maine should probably also pass a first-option for the people in line at the airport to buy the plane they’re flying on in order to provide better snacks.

Aspen Daily News: $6.5 million pledged to help mobile home park residents

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Momentum is building for community contributions to residents of two Roaring Fork Valley mobile home parks to purchase the land on which their neighborhoods sit. 

Pitkin County, city of Aspen and town of Basalt elected officials all committed funds for the Aspen-Basalt and Mountain Valley mobile home parks at their respective meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday. 

The county and the city both approved $3 million in commitments and Basalt decided to double its commitment from $250,000 to $500,000. Residents attended each meeting, expressing gratitude for the support. 

With a $1 million pledge from Atlantic Aviation announced last week, the...

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These parks have a total of 140 lots and all these non-profits are wanting to spend a total of $42 million to save these two mobile home parks. Can someone with a degree in mathematics please explain to these folks that they are going to spend $300,000 to save a $30,000 mobile home from the wrecking ball? At some point – as has been well demonstrated in California and Florida – you just have to accept that there are higher uses for the land and to let the developers have it. While mobile home parks are only on one level, apartments can be stacked on three levels and therefore multi family can pay vastly more and still make the numbers work.

Oregon Live: Lawmakers agree to limit rent hikes at Oregon manufactured home parks, marinas

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A bill to further limit annual rent increases in many manufactured home parks and for floating homes in marinas has passed in both chambers and now heads to Gov. Tina Kotek.

House Bill 3054 passed Thursday out of the Senate 17-10 on largely party lines, with three excused votes.

If signed, the bill would restrict yearly rent increases in parks and marinas with more than 30 spaces to 6%. Smaller parks and marinas would still be subject to Oregon’s existing rent control law, which limits yearly increases to 7% plus inflation or 10%, whichever is less.

Manufactured home park residents typically own their homes but rent the land on which it...

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Oregon already had rent control. But now they have decided to lower the annual percent cap on rent increases by nearly 50%, which should pretty much signal to every park owner to put their park on the market as raw land to be redeveloped. What a bunch of colossal idiots.

Voice of OC: Stanton Rejects Mobile Home Rent Control Proposal

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Mobile home residents in Stanton won’t see any form of rent control anytime soon, as residents raise concerns over price hikes.   

Instead, Stanton City Council members say they’ll consider other support options.

Last week, council members voted 3-2 against holding a town hall to discuss rent control policies with residents from mobile home parks, with Councilman Donald Torres and Councilman Gary Taylor voting in favor of a town hall. Mayor David Shawver, who opposed the town hall, said it would give residents false hope.

Council members then voted unanimously to explore what other types of support and resources they can give...

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Last week, council members voted 3-2 against holding a town hall to discuss rent control policies with residents from mobile home parks, with Councilman Donald Torres and Councilman Gary Taylor voting in favor of a town hall. Mayor David Shawver, who opposed the town hall, said it would give residents false hope.

Common sense – and out of California, no less.

WFAE: Residents urge Charlotte City Council to vote against rezoning petition

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The owner of the Forest Park Mobile Homes has decided to sell the property where 60 trailer homes are located. Developers who submitted the rezoning request hope to build roughly 400 apartments and add 25,000 square feet of commercial space.

It’s not rocket science that 400 apartment units is a higher use of land than 60 mobile home spaces. That’s always been the limitation to the mobile home industry – you can’t stack them.

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The owner of the Forest Park Mobile Homes has decided to sell the property where 60 trailer homes are located. Developers who submitted the rezoning request hope to build roughly 400 apartments and add 25,000 square feet of commercial space.

It’s not rocket science that 400 apartment units is a higher use of land than 60 mobile home spaces. That’s always been the limitation to the mobile home industry – you can’t stack them.

Spectrum News: Bay area mobile home park residents push back against mass eviction

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BRADENTON BEACH, Fla. — Mobile home park closures aren’t just displacing people — they’re erasing entire communities.

According to The Eviction Lab, each park’s closure further decreases the already scarce supply of affordable housing. Now, 83 families at Pines Trailer Park are experiencing that reality. Still reeling from the aftermath of back-to-back hurricanes Helene and Milton, they’re now battling a new storm — a legal one — as eviction notices appear on their doors.

The park’s owner is proceeding with plans to close the park for good, forcing many tenants, including Jason Woodall, to find new accommodations. Woodall, who just moved...

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And another park bites the dust.

Multi-Housing News: Why Manufactured Housing Isn’t the ‘Last Resort’

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Real estate investors are increasingly gravitating toward niche asset classes that offer opportunities for outsize value creation, and manufactured housing communities are a prime example. As the largest source of nonsubsidized affordable housing in the country, MHCs play a vital role in the lives of tens of millions of Americans, yet they remain largely misunderstood and underappreciated.

According to the National Association of Home Builders’ recent report, 76.4 million households, or 57 percent of all U.S. households, are unable to afford a $300,000 home. This reflects a deepening affordability crisis, and one that continues to make it...

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Manufactured housing should not be seen as a last resort. It’s a viable, dignified, and scalable housing option that already works for millions of Americans. 

A rare, positive article that is built on common sense. Good job!

Mobile home park owners have always known that the media portrayal that “trailer parks” are the lowest housing option on the food chain has been false. Most parks equate to roughly Class B apartments in tenant quality – but at less than half the monthly cost!

Class C (and lower) apartments are actually the bottom of the housing pyramid and have always been so.

Tri-State Alert: The PA House wants to regulate mobile home park fees, but will the Senate agree?

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CHAMBERSBURG — The Pennsylvania House of Representatives passed a bill this week that would regulate fees at mobile home parks in the state. 

Many residents have been seeing surprising increases in rent and other fees in the recent months, seemingly out of nowhere. 

A lot of the owners of the parks are out of state and incredibly difficult to contact.

The bill passed the House 144 to 59 yesterday.

Attorney Clint Barkdoll said, “We were getting calls and emails from all over the country, people that were picking up on that story. The House has now implemented it. It goes to the Senate. This was a pretty wide margin that it passed by...

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PA State Senator Doug Mastriano said, “It’s a dangerous trend here. So we’re going to bring in more government control and regulation. It’s always better, and I’m convinced of this here, historically, looking at it, just let the market drive it. There’s going to be abuse and what have you and that’s the problem. We’re going to have the exception make the rule, and that can’t be the case in the housing market or in the military. I mean, in the military, we have some stupid rules because some soldier 80 years ago did something really dumb, and then the rest of us are living with the effects of that rare case. That’s just another example of Democrats having turned this into a way to control the market and to regulate, and we just don’t want that. So what we have currently coming over, is a no go for me.”

It's a simple fact that there has never been rent control passed by any state that did not have the “trifecta” of a Democrat-controlled House, Senate and Governor. Pennsylvania has a Democrat-controlled Senate and Governor, but a Republican-controlled Senate. Let’s hope this 107-year-old track record holds true once again, and that the Pennsylvania Senate Republicans have the strength to repel this stupidity.

WCCB: Northeast Charlotte mobile home community could be displaced by new development

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CHARLOTTE, N.C – Residents of Forest Park Mobile Homes are organizing against a development that would displace the entire Northeast Charlotte neighborhood of at least 60 families.

Leonel Chavez has lived in the community for decades. He says most residents own their mobile homes and invest tens of thousands of dollars into them while paying $500 a month to rent the land.

They feel anger, they feel saddened, they feel like they’re not being heard, they feel like they’re forgotten about,” Chavez said. “It’s my childhood home. It’s a lot of people’s childhood not only that, these are families that work hard to provide for their families and...

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And another park bites the dust.

NBC Miami: Owner of Li'l Abner Mobile Home Park files 200 eviction notices against remaining residents

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More than 200 families at the Li'l Abner Mobile Home Park in Sweetwater are now facing eviction, despite months of legal disputes and a mounting pushback from residents who say they won’t back down.

The owner of the property has officially filed eviction notices against 218 households that refused to leave by a previously set deadline of May 19. That date marked roughly seven months since residents were first told they would need to vacate the land so it could be redeveloped into affordable housing.

“We knew that this moment was happening,” said Enrique Zelaya, one of the remaining residents still fighting to stay.

Zelaya, who says he...

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And another park bites the dust.

Maine Morning Star: Bills to help mobile park residents protect homes advance but funding remains an obstacle for some

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Building off of a law passed last year, the Maine Legislature has advanced a number of bills that aim to support mobile home park residents in purchasing their parks.

The Senate voted in favor of two of these bills on Thursday. Others have already passed both chambers but still need to be funded.  

“As legislators, we consistently hear that one of the top issues on the minds of Maine people is access to safe, affordable housing,” Sen. Chip Curry (D-Belfast), co-chair of the Housing and Economic Development Committee, said during a press conference following Thursday’s votes. “That’s why our committee has been focused on two deeply...

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On Wednesday, the Senate also passed LD 1016, which would establish the assistance program fund but also a fee to help with ongoing funding. The fee would be paid by certain park buyers equal to $10,000 for each lot in the community. “I want to be very clear, I have no intention to de-incentivize the purchase of these parks by everyone,” said Sen. Cameron Reny (D-Lincoln), the bill sponsor. “There are exceptions to this fee to state and municipal housing authorities, for resident owner cooperatives and for smaller businesses and individuals with net worths of less than $50 million.” However, Sen. Rick Bennett (R-Oxford), who supported the minority committee report recommending against the bill’s passage, said he finds some of the carveouts troubling, specifically the one based on net worth. “It is treating people unfairly based on an arbitrary amount of money that that person or entity owns,” Bennett said. “I believe this is unconstitutional for that reason, although it’s very well intentioned.”

So now Maine is going to charge any park buyer who has more than $50 million of net worth a fee of $10,000 per lot – clearly to make it impossible for them to buy anything in the state. Even one of the idiots in the Maine senate admitted that it’s basically unconstitutional (which I assume means that it will end up in litigation for years and then probably defeated). I would say that all park owners should boycott Maine as a result of this attack on the industry, but the problem is that there is literally nothing anyone buys that comes from Maine except lobster and poorly made L.L. Bean pants.

Forbes: Probing Alternative Solutions To The Affordable Housing Crisis

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The crisis impacting housing affordability stands among the most pervasive and complicated challenges facing the nation. In virtually every part of the country, housing costs have outstripped incomes. That’s left huge swaths of the population either rent burdened or entirely removed from homeownership. The crisis is most acute in the nation’s largest cities, but smaller cities, towns and rural areas are not immune.

“This isn’t just a question of economics,” says Jonathan Curtis, founder and CEO of Southern California-based real estate development firm Cedar Street Partners. “When people can’t afford stable housing, everything else becomes...

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It underscored the need to modernize how cities think about growth, especially in high-opportunity areas where exclusionary practices still hold sway.

Did Kamala Harris write this? What a bunch of nonsense.

The Park Record: Community Planning Lab students have unique visions for affordable housing

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What does affordable housing realistically look like in Summit County?

It’s a big question plaguing officials from Park City to Henefer to the County Courthouse. It pops up in almost every municipal city council meeting, county council meeting and issue of The Park Record. Is it possible to cater to tourists who desire second homes and a plethora of short-term rentals while still allowing locals to live and work in the area without bending over backward for a multi-million dollar home?

Officials and organizations across the county are still working on finding an answer, but two members of this year’s Community Planning Lab cohort have...

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Communal housing is an interesting concept. I saw it first-hand at the late Tony Hsieh’s Airstream Village in Las Vegas, and it was working there. Residents donated their skills and time – in addition to their rent – to do such items as cooking, cleaning, etc. But the big problem with this concept is Fair Housing under HUD, as tenants are “curated” for their skills and I don’t know how that works under the law (and Tony Hsieh’s assistant couldn’t explain it to me, either). This concept may work on a hippie commune in the mountains of Colorado, but it won’t probably pass muster in a highly regulated mobile home park.

WSAW: Schofield mobile home park owner falls behind in taxes allowing county to seize ownership

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SCHOFIELD, Wis. (WSAW)— More than three years after residents vacated their trailers at Northern Mobile Home Park in Schofield the owner has failed to pay property taxes, allowing the county to take ownership of the land.

The owner owed more than $145,000 in back taxes and needed to pay at least $98,000 to retain ownership. The property is just more than 7 acres.

In March, the county began the process of clearing the remaining mobile homes at 281 Grand Avenue.

At its peak occupancy, about 60 trailers were on the property. In 2020, concerns about the property and the condition of the structures led to legal action. In November 2021, the...

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And another park bites the dust.

Aspen Daily News: Atlantic Aviation commits $1 million to mobile home parks

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tlantic Aviation is committing $1 million toward the fundraising effort for residents of two mobile home parks in the Roaring Fork Valley, a move it hopes will spark more private-sector participation. 

Residents of the Aspen-Basalt Mobile Home Park in the Basalt area and Mountain Valley Mobile Home Park near Carbondale are raising funds to purchase their parks from the owner, Park City, Utah-based Investment Property Group. Wednesday’s announcement marks the first private-sector contribution to the fundraising campaign. 

Atlantic Aviation operates a large network of fixed-base operators across North America, including both the...

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So last week it was the group pledging $250,000 and now we have a new player pledging $1,000,000 towards a hopeless minimum goal of $20,000,000. The residents have very little time left on the clock and clearly the goal is not going to be reached. What a great virtue signaling maneuver – simply pledge money towards an impossible goal and you get in the paper without ever having to pay a penny. Utter genius. At NBA basketball games they sometimes let an audience member try to make a shot from half-court and, if they do, they win $100,000. Only in this case, they have to take the shot from outside the stadium – there is literally 0% risk of having to donate a penny.

Click Orlando: Mobile home residents in Central Florida face eviction risks as lot rents surge

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BREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – Mobile home residents across Central Florida tell News 6 they are being priced out of their communities as corporate buyers acquire parks and dramatically increase lot rental fees, forcing many to choose between basic necessities and keeping their homes.

“It’s out of hand and there’s nobody to control it,” said Mark Hose, who recently left his home of 10 years at Tradewinds Mobile Home Park in Cocoa. Hose told News 6 his lot rent nearly tripled from $245 to $725 monthly.

At The Colony mobile home park in Merritt Island, resident Heather Powers has seen her lot rent increase three times in less than a year, reaching...

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Mobile home residents point to a growing trend of large corporations purchasing mobile home parks and implementing aggressive rent increases. The business model particularly affects residents who own their homes but lease the land underneath, leaving them vulnerable to rising costs with limited options for relocation.

To the woke writer who authored this article, there is zero chance of rent control ever being passed in Florida, so you’re wasting your time.

Hartford Courant: CT mobile home protections bill stalls over rent caps sticking point

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The Connecticut House of Representatives on Wednesday spent hours debating a bill that would strengthen protections for mobile and manufactured home owners, many of whom are seniors, but decided to stop the discussion in the face of Republican opposition.

The sticking point — even in a limited capacity — was a proposal to create a rent cap.

Mobile home owners typically own their homes, but not the land they sit on. Residents pay rent to the park owner on the land. House Bill 5428 would limit annual rent increases to 2% of rent plus any increases in the annual consumer price index and provide a process for park owners to appeal that limit...

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Republicans opposed it as well, saying it interfered with landlords’ rights and the free market.

Even though the Republicans are right on all counts, Connecticut has a Democrat trifecta of Governor, House and Senate so the Republican voting block in the state has no power at all. But quietly, in the background, many of the Democrats also agree with the Republicans on this. Rent control is housing suicide and has been well proven in all those states that have enacted it. That’s really why they don’t enact rent control.

MSN: Over 50 Houston families evicted from mobile home park — some were charged rent after leaving, advocates say

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Taking up residence in a mobile home park can be an economical means of putting a roof over one's head.

But more than 50 families at County Road Mobile Home Park in Houston, Texas, were displaced after the land they were living on was sold, according to KHOU 11 News. Residents had until April 8 to move out, and some were forced to spend thousands of dollars to relocate.

Marta De La Garza, who lived in the park with her family for five years, says she had to shell out $9,000 — $3,000 for transportation and $6,000 to set up utilities — to move to a new location.

"We had to pay for the people who moved the mobile home. We had to pay a...

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And another park bites the dust.

Mitchell Republic: Renters of city-owned trailer park seek new homes as rental contract terminations loom

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MITCHELL – Good intentions have to be backed up with good actions. At least, that's how some tenants at a local trailer park feel about a plan that removes their homes to make way for a city-led housing development.

In early April, the city announced the intent to purchase the 35-unit mobile home park near Hitchcock Park, with the goal of developing the lots for housing and to remove the eyesore along East First Avenue. This meant existing renters would have to relocate and Mitchell Mayor Jordan Hanson made statements about not making tenants move out too quickly. Plans have also been finalized to donate two lots to Habitat for...

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And another park bites the dust.

The Aspen Times: Basalt residents seek support to purchase mobile home parks

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Basalt Town Council discussed a potential financial contribution to help purchase two, downvalley mobile home parks to help residents retain their housing. 

The Aspen Basalt Mobile Home Park in Basalt and Carbondale’s Mountain Valley Mobile Home Park gave notice to their tenants in late March they were starting the process of either selling the parks to a private buyer or giving residents the opportunity to buy it themselves. 

Residents on Tuesday filled council chambers to discuss purchasing the parks, with the goal of garnering support from local municipalities, as well as Colorado and national nonprofits.

Elizabeth Rivas, an Aspen...

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If it agrees, Basalt could join other local governments to raise $20 million to assist with the purchase of both mobile home parks. Basalt Town Manager Ryan Mahoney and Basalt Town Council members discussed a contribution of $250,000 toward the purchase. The $20 million goal, however, might be difficult for local municipalities to reach on their own.  “It’s looking at this time that the $20 million ask is probably a little tall for the governments, if I had to read the tea leaves,” said Mahoney. 

What’s so frustrating about these articles – which dominate the landscape right now – is that their logic is missing one fundamental reality: the lot rent will be the same or more under resident ownership as it will be under corporate ownership. Here’s why:

  • The cost of every single line item on the P&L is the same whether owned by a non-profit or a for-profit company (water, sewer, electric, insurance, property tax, etc.).
  • The cost of the debt service (mortgage interest and principal payment) is the same whether the buyer is a non-profit or a for-profit corporation.
  • Therefore, the lot rent will be the same regardless of who buys the park – the non-profit has zero financial advantage for the tenants.

But there’s even more to the story. As anyone who has researched the end result of tenant-owned communities knows, the quality of life and the collection of rent go down when the amateur tenants run the property. They can’t evict their friends and they refuse to make cap-x repairs. The managers show favoritism to their friends and zero capability to find new debt when the loans come due. Essentially, a total disaster with a time-delay fuse.

So let’s cut the crap about how tenants buying the properties yields lower rents ad better quality of life. That’s a total lie. Instead, this is really just about virtue signaling. And, in this case, the city manager that offers $250,000 towards a $20 million target knows it’s just a way to get a headline and nothing more. The end.

Realtor.com: What’s It Really Like To Live in a Mobile Home, According To Owners and Agents

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Mobile homes are the new starter homes. Between sky-high interest rates, high home prices, and limited availability of real estate overall, becoming a homeowner is something many Americans feel they can't afford.

While renting is a good option for some, others are finding creative ways to live in their desired locations, despite the prohibitive price tag - like mobile homes.

Mobile homes are no longer just the go-to preference of thrifty retirees. Many people from across the age and life-experience spectrum are looking to manufactured homes and accessory dwelling units (ADU) as a new mode of affordable homeownership.

But if you’ve been...

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Mobile homes are the new starter homes. Between sky-high interest rates, high home prices, and limited availability of real estate overall, becoming a homeowner is something many Americans feel they can't afford. While renting is a good option for some, others are finding creative ways to live in their desired locations, despite the prohibitive price tag - like mobile homes. Mobile homes are no longer just the go-to preference of thrifty retirees. Many people from across the age and life-experience spectrum are looking to manufactured homes and accessory dwelling units (ADU) as a new mode of affordable homeownership.

A rare, favorable review of our product. But that’s two weeks in a row so I like the trend.

Maine Republic: Amid growing interest from out-of-state investors, Maine mobile homeowners ask for more protections

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Dawn Beaulieu lives in a double wide on a corner lot in Friendly Village Mobile Home Park in Gorham.

It's the perfect size for her and terrier mix, Bella.

She has lived in this home for more than two decades and in Friendly Village for close to 30 years. The mortgage, on top of the monthly lot rent of just more than $600, is a lot with her single income, but she makes it work.

"I've paid 22.5 years of a 25-year mortgage. I have two and a half years left," Beaulieu said. "And then I own my home. I am scared to lose it before I get to that point."

She also worries about many of her neighbors in this community of 302 lots, with 263 occupied...

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Fallacy #1: A $600 lot rent is too high in Brunswick, Maine. In fact, it’s far too low. The evidence: the average single family home in Brunswick costs $443,000 and the average apartment is $1,893 per month.

Marieke Giasson, who lives at Bay Bridge Estates in Brunswick, said monthly lot rent typically went up about $15 or $20 a year. She paid $410 a month in 2021. Then, Legacy Communities, an Arizona company that owns about 70 manufactured home parks around the country, bought her park. In the last three years, Giasson said rent has increased by 46%. She now pays about $600 a month.

The fact is that $600 per month lot rent in Brunswick is ridiculously, indefensibly, impossibly low.

Fallacy #2:  The tenants buying a mobile home park for $22 million will yield lower rents. The truth is that the lot rent will be the same in order to cover all operating costs and a $22 million mortgage and down-payment loan.

On Tuesday, the Friendly Village residents submitted their own bid to purchase the park for more than the community's initial asking price of $22 million.

How can the U.S. media be this math and logic challenged?

Cascade PBS: WA mobile homeowners, advocates react to new rent stabilization law

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Brenda Valdez feels like she can finally exhale.

The mother of two and mobile home owner from Elma in Grays Harbor County said she no longer has to hold her breath waiting for the next lot rent hike to come knocking at her door after Washington state adopted an unprecedented 5% annual limit on rent increases for manufactured home owners last month. 

Valdez said her lot rent — what she pays for the ground under her mobile home — had nearly doubled in the past decade, and she expected to face another $100-a-month increase in July.

“$100 – it’s like worth a week of groceries for my kids, it’s half of my energy bill, it’s a pair...

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After years of fighting for mobile home tenants’ rights, Deb Wilson is celebrating new rent stabilization requirements, signed into law this month, that will cap rent increases for mobile homeowners at 5% per year.

Sure, Deb and her neighbors will celebrate their big win for a while. And then they will get a notice that the park is being closed for redevelopment. None of these idiots apparently understand that by approving the 5% cap on mobile home park lot rent – and 10% on apartments – they signed a death warrant for Washington state parks. Who wouldn’t tear their park down and build apartments – or literally any other use – instead? The answer, nobody. Goodbye mobile home parks, hello new apartment units.