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Mobile Home Park News Briefing

ABC 15 News: Horry Co. mobile home park residents alarmed by rising lot rents

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HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WPDE) — Rent for mobile home lots is rising, leaving residents with no recourse. People living in mobile homes reached out to ABC 15 in frustration.

"I'm not just speaking for myself, but I think I could speak on any of the homeowners here who are retired, who are on fixed incomes, and it's becoming really, really difficult," said Kathy Marcus, mobile home renter in the Grand Strand.

Marcus moved to her home in the Grand Strand in 2020, paying $275 to rent the lot.

Now she's paying $685 for the lot alone, more than double. But she's not the only one facing a hike in lot rent.

Some data shows mobile home lot rents have...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

I know it’s a bitter pill to swallow for Palmetto State socialists, but South Carolina is NOT trifecta blue. It is, in fact, trifecta RED with Republican Governor, House and Senate. So there’s absolutely no point in running these socialist “rent control” articles there. It’s a total waste of time (which is the one thing that unemployed wokesters actually have an abundance of).

AOL: Idaho’s new ‘starter home’ bill promises cheaper houses. Not everyone agrees

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Idaho lawmakers narrowly agreed to send a bill aimed at lowering prices for first-time homebuyers to the governor’s desk on Thursday, continuing a late comeback for housing reform this legislative session.

The House of Representatives voted 36-34 to pass a twice-amended version of Senate Bill 1352, which overrides most local laws that prevent “starter-home subdivisions” — that is, dense, small-lot homes designed to sell for less than typical single-family options. Thursday’s vote teetered on a tie with every vote cast until Rep. Dori Healey, R-Boise, flipped her vote to yes before the final count. Healey could not immediately be reached...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“Zoning laws in the United States were created to divide us — they always have been, whether it’s by ethnicity, by race or by class,” Egbert told the House on Thursday.

If Idaho’s Governor signs this 100% socialist bill, then that’s really, really pathetic. How embarrassing.

MPR News: Oversight for ‘faceless corporations’ or ‘hammer’ approach? Mobile home parks bill poses test

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Sammi Silver never thought she would be advocating for rent control. Silver has worked as a realtor and property manager for years.

Silver, 40, moved in 2021 into Cimarron Park, a manufactured home park in Lake Elmo, and it seemed like the best way to get on her feet in the midst of a breakup and starting a new business during the pandemic. She was attracted to the “bougie” park amenities, like a golf course and a pool.

Being a mobile home owner, Silver said, “was supposed to be the step between for me, not the permanent destination that it's slowly becoming.”

Silver, who also serves as the vice president of the Cimarron resident...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

The DFL bill recently gained bipartisan support in the Minnesota Senate, but stalled along party lines in the House.

It’s a complete waste of time to propose any socialist anti-landlord bills in any state that is not trifecta blue (Democrat Governor, House and Senate). Minnesota has no such trifecta, so all this rent control discussion is a total waste of time. The only reason you see articles like this in Minnesota is that the socialists can’t get over the fact that they DID have a blue trifecta in 2024 and then lost it in the recent elections. Back when they actually had the blue trifecta, they never got any anti-landlord legislation passed. It’s kind of like the middle-aged character “Uncle Rico” in the film Napoleon Dynamite, who can’t get over his resentment for missing his final touch-down pass in high school football and, as a result, lives in a van in a corn field.

Adirondack Daily Enterprise: Wilmington board to revise, revisit manufactured housing code changes

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WILMINGTON — The town board is going back to the drawing board after a spirited public hearing that saw several community members voice concerns to a proposed local law that would ease current zoning code restrictions on manufactured homes.

The intent of proposed Local Law No. 2 of 2026 is to make it easier for manufactured homes to be installed throughout the town by reducing the minimum lot size from the current 3 acres to what the code required for traditional, or stick-built, homes. In the hamlet area, colloquially considered the “center” of town, the minimum is one half-acre, increasing to one acre in the moderate intensity land,...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“The majority of public comments were in opposition to the law. Predominant concerns included … that it could lead to buildings that would unfairly diminish the values of existing properties and that it would detract from the main corridor’s aesthetic appeal to residents and visitors alike”

Ah yes, the simple reality that no city or town in America is ever going to allow new mobile home parks to be built. The stigma against “trailer parks” is – and will always be – the biggest protective “moat” in the history of investing. Park owners didn’t create this “moat” and don’t have to spend a single penny annually to maintain it – that job was performed by the American media over the past half-century.

CBS NEWS: Over 200 families face sudden eviction from Little Havana mobile home park: "We have nowhere to go"

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More than 200 families living in a Little Havana mobile home park are being forced to leave their homes, raising concerns about displacement and the impact on elderly residents with limited resources.

Residents at Silver Court Mobile Home Park, located near Southwest 8th Street and 32nd Avenue, say they were given six months to vacate after receiving a notice on March 11 from a firm representing the property owner.

The situation mirrors a recent case in Sweetwater, where hundreds of families were also displaced under similar terms, with financial incentives decreasing the longer residents wait to leave.

For 93-year-old Teresa Alvarez, the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

And another park bites the dust.

Northmarq: Manufactured housing rent and occupancy extend gains in 2025

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Operating conditions in the manufactured housing sector continue to perform well as both occupancy and asking rents improved in 2025. Continued deliveries were not enough to drive occupancy rates lower, as demand for manufactured housing remains elevated across the country. The Pacific region was the only area of the U.S. to record a decrease in occupancy in 2025, and even then, the rate dipped by just 10 basis points to 98.9%, which is the highest of any region. Tight occupancy led to continued rent growth. Rents advanced by 6.0% during 2025 to $772 per month. While gains were steeper in the previous three years, the recent increase...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“tight occupancy led to continued rent growth. Rents advanced by 6.0% during 2025 to $772 per month. While gains were steeper in the previous three years, the recent increase exceeds long-term averages. During the past year, rent growth was steepest in the West and Midwest, with rental rates in these regions rising 7.4% and 7.2%, respectively. The country’s largest region for manufactured housing, the South, followed these regions with an annual rent increase of 6.8%.”

I have no idea where they got this data from – as the average lot rent appears totally wrong and way too high – but any positive news on the industry is always appreciated.

AMI SUN: Pines Trailer Park HOA says 20 residents remain

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BRADENTON BEACH – During the March 19 city commission meeting, Building Official Rob Perry estimated there were only five to seven inhabited mobile homes left in the 86-unit Pines Trailer Park.

Pines Trailer Park Homeowners Association vice-president Rex Geissler disputed Perry’s assertion and emailed The Sun on March 25 saying that number is closer to 20.

A once-bustling community, the park now has a handful of residences that appear to be inhabited – with cars in the carports, bicycles outside and plants still blooming. Yet, the majority of the mobile homes are empty and some are in disrepair. There have been reports of squatters...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

And another park bites the dust.

The Ithaca Voice: A community’s effort to purchase their Varna mobile home park hits wall as deadline looms

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VARNA, N.Y. —  Residents of Hillside Acres mobile home park in Varna are holding out for a miracle most don’t expect will happen.

The mobile home community has waged an all-out effort to purchase the park before an out-of-state-developer does. But ahead of a Wednesday deadline, they still need at least $3 million to make their financing plan work. 

Resident Alan Bitar said the threat of an outside buyer has weighed on the community. He said he worries that the community could “suffer” in the hands of an outside owner.

“What we need is $3 million,” he said on March 26. “There’s somebody out there that wants to protect the community.  We...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“What we need is $3 million,” he said on March 26. “There’s somebody out there that wants to protect the community.  We need an angel investor or something, we need money.”

The April 1st deadline passed, the money did not appear, and everybody wasted two months of their lives. In other words, the typical outcome for any “tenant-owned community” concept. When will people finally realize that the limitation of finding non-profit handouts render these deals as non-starters 99.9% of the time. Real-world buyers actually bring money to the table, while tenant buyers can only bring I.O.U.s.

AMISUN: City rejects Pines Trailer Park lot split application, expects new development plans

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BRADENTON BEACH – The owners of the Pines Trailer Park have applied to the city to subdivide the mobile home park into two separate parcels. 

“They did put in an application for a lot split which was rejected,” Building Official Rob Perry said during the March 19 city commission meeting. “They can’t do a lot split. There’s an old plat there. We have five mobiles on each lot in the old plat.” 

It’s unclear from the Jan. 30 lot split application exactly what the owners’ future plans are for the 86-unit mobile home park. The application shows the park’s present zoning classification as M-1 (mobile home use). The future land use category is...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

And another park bites the dust.

THE ASPEN TIMES: Aspen considers contribution toward another mobile home park purchase

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The city of Aspen is considering another contribution to a resident-ownership model purchase of a mobile home park, less than a year after the closing of the Aspen Basalt and Mountain Valley mobile home park purchase that the city assisted with. 

The Cavern Springs mobile home park in Glenwood Springs has received an offer to purchase the land underneath the park from an undisclosed buyer for a price of $23 million.

“Once this park is sold again to an outside entity … it will no longer be affordable,” Katherine Coe, project organizer at Mountain Voices Project — the presenting organization — said. “We know this from experience … and we...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

Do any of these non-profit groups own a calculator? At $23 million to buy a 98-lot park, that equates to around $230,000 per lot. Wouldn’t it be better to simply move these 100 households to a cheaper state and buy them each a stick-built house of their choosing for $230,000 and give it to them debt-free? Aspen is fun for wealthy people, but I doubt that it’s that great when you’re working in a tire shop. Why not give these households a quality-of-life upgrade for the same money? Or is the goal simply to “defeat landlords” at any cost? 

MHN: Havenpark to Invest $70M in Portfolio Revamp

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Havenpark Communities is planning to invest more than $70 million in the improvement and upgrade of some of its U.S. manufactured housing communities.

Havenpark plans to improve 46 communities this year, primarily across the Midwest, West and Sun Belt regions, a company spokesperson told Multi-Housing News. The manufactured housing owner and operator also plans to expand its portfolio primarily in these regions.

A total of 20 communities across the company’s portfolio will each receive more than $1 million dedicated for upgrades, while an additional 26 manufactured housing properties will get more than $500,000. 

The average Havenpark...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

Spending around $1 million in upgrades per park kind of refutes the absurd socialist narrative that private equity groups don’t maintain their mobile home parks, right? But I’m sure that no matter what Havenpark does, the media will be unhappy and say “why did they simply pave the roads and not make them out of classic cobblestones imported from London?” That’s how ridiculous the socialist camp has become.

Stillwater Gazette: Lake Elmo resident, senator back manufactured housing bill

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The bill, authored by Sen. Liz Bolden, DFL-Rochester, aims to achieve three things: define reasonable rent and prevent unreasonable rent increases from forcing residents out of their homes, give residents a better chance at owning their homes and enhance the enforcement of existing laws to protect residents.

Sen. Bolden’s bill comes as manufactured housing parks are purchased by out of state private equity firms that raise lot rents and make what was once considered one of the last affordable housing options that much less attainable.

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

Mafi went on to explain that when she asked Rep. Johnson why he did not ultimately support the bill, his response was one word: “politics.”

That’s right, Minnesota is NOT trifecta blue. The whole rent control schtick is, therefore, a waste of time. It was trifecta blue up until 2024. But then there was a new election and the citizens of Minnesota voted for the other team – and the window of opportunity for rent control came crashing down.

WMTW: York County mobile home park residents push to close 'loophole' ahead of rent vote

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ARUNDEL, Maine —

Residents of a mobile home park in Arundel are urging town leaders to address what they call a loophole in a proposed rent control ordinance before it goes to a town-wide vote in June.

People living in Shady Oaks say the measure, as currently written, would allow the park’s owner to raise rents on vacant lots to so-called “market rates” — without a cap and without a clear definition of what that term means.

A group of tenants is planning to rally ahead of Monday night's select board meeting to push for changes. The rally is expected to take place shortly before the meeting begins.

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

People living in Shady Oaks say the measure, as currently written, would allow the park’s owner to raise rents on vacant lots to so-called “market rates” — without a cap and without a clear definition of what that term means.

People in Maine are so nuts that they now want to put rent control on vacant lots – something never attempted before even in wacky socialist states like California. How did they get so screwed up? Too much maple syrup in their diet? It’s pretty amazing that a state with low rankings in every category from education to health are now hitching their wagons to socialism to make their big comeback. Painful to watch.

SPECTRUM NEWS: Arundel officials work toward mobile home park rent ordinance

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ARUNDEL –– Town officials in Arundel are joining communities across the state in wrestling with soaring mobile home rent rates in local parks.

On Monday, as residents rallied at town hall to ask for help, the select board said it is working toward a final version of an ordinance for what it calls “rent stabilization.” 

Town Manager Keith Trefethen said the town has been working on the proposed ordinance since January and expects to put it before voters at the annual town meeting on June 10.

Jennifer Moreau said she has been living in Shady Oaks Mobile Home Park for the past 10 years. On Jan. 1, she said, her rent went up $40, then again...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“This is the last affordable housing for a large majority of Mainers, and it’s disappearing, so where are they supposed to go?” she said. 

Maine’s attraction to rent control is totally based on their fascination with socialism – there’s nothing more to it than that. Mobile home park owners are not non-profits and the rhetorical question of where poor people go is not their problem. But since nobody in Maine has a workable solution to affordable housing – or wants to pay a penny to house any of these displaced individuals out of their own pocket – they are more than happy to stick it to “evil landlords”.

Adirondack Daily: Wilmington board sets sights on affordable housing zoning changes

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WILMINGTON — On the heels of enacting changes intended to curtail large retail development and beef up screening requirements for commercial projects, the Wilmington Town Board is eyeing revisions to the zoning code once again.

There is a public hearing on the proposed Local Law No. 2 of 2026 at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, March 25 at the Wilmington Community Center. The law’s intent is to make it easier to install manufactured homes through friendlier zoning regulations.

The proposed law would lessen the amount of lot size needed for a manufactured home. It also seeks to decrease the minimum square footage of a “dwelling unit” from the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“Follos said today’s manufactured homes often look “indistinguishable” from traditional homes occupying similar footprints.”

Sure, they’re absolutely identical except for the fact that the mobile home sits 3’ off the ground with vinyl skirting, wooden stairs and the shape of a shoe box. There’s a fine line between trying to steer the reader and insulting their intelligence, and this writer clearly crosses that line.

MKE COMMUNITY JOURNAL: ‘They are squeezing everybody in this park to death’: Owners of manufactured homes get little protection as private equity moves in

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Priced out of traditional homes during an affordability crisis, many in Wisconsin have found another way to pursue an ownership dream.

Experts estimate that more than 100,000 Wisconsin residents live in manufactured homes, the more accurate name for what many call mobile homes or trailers — structures that make up the country’s largest portion of unsubsidized low-income housing. Many live in parks where they own their homes but rent the land beneath them.

But Wisconsin’s government is failing to enforce basic protections for residents at a time when private equity firms are buying up parks to maximize profits, a Wisconsin Watch/WPR...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

This article contains so many untruths that it’s not worth the time to refute them all. But it really doesn’t matter because Wisconsin is NOT a trifecta blue state – in fact, not even close. Both the House and Senate are red and the only thing blue in Wisconsin is the Governor. There has NEVER been rent control passed in a state that was not trifecta blue. So all this socialist schtick is just a total waste of time.

WFIE: Demo at Evansville mobile home park should be finished Wednesday

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. (WFIE) - We have an update on the plans to demo parts of a run-down mobile home park in Evansville.

It’s off of Oak Hill Road.

Earlier this month, city leaders signed an emergency raze order to tear down 10 vacant, damaged mobile homes on the property.

That work began last week, and crews say they hope to have it complete by Wednesday.

The city previously discussed issuing vacate orders for the people living in the park, but now say that will not happen.

Officials say the Department of Metropolitan Development will be helping them with other options.

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

And another park bites the dust.

AZ Luminaria: Company challenges AG lawsuit over electrical safety at Tucson mobile home park

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A company that manages mobile home parks in Tucson and across the U.S. is arguing it is not legally required to update its electrical systems from 1962 for manufactured home residents at a park in Tucson today. 

That’s according to the latest legal volley between BoaVida Communities, the property management company under an investment firm that invests in mobile home park properties across the country, and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes. 

BoaVida has taken the first step in a possible countersuit: filing a notice of claim, a legal effort to resolve a disagreement before a lawsuit is filed, to the Attorney General’s Office. 

Mayes...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“The Park’s electrical infrastructure is old and might be considered out of compliance using today’s standards, but considering the Park’s construction in 1962 using the 1959 National Electrical Code as its design reference, there’s nothing that can be considered as poor craftsmanship or out of code compliance for its time,” the notice says. “There is nothing inherently dangerous with the electrical system while being used as designed.” 

I hope the AG of Arizona read his own state’s grandfathering laws before he filed this, as all early indications are that he didn’t.

Santa Barbara Independent: Goleta Extends Senior Housing Protections, Is Sued in Federal Court

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Goleta city councilmembers voted to maintain the senior-status of University Mobile Home Park on Tuesday, extending the senior mobile home housing overlay that applies to the park until February 2027. The initial 45-day emergency overlay passed last month would have expired on April 3. The park’s owners and managers have sued the city in federal court over this emergency ordinance. 

What Is University Mobile Home Park? 

About 80 seniors, many of them low-income, call the park home. Located just off Hollister Avenue in Old Town Goleta, mobile homes are arranged in neat rows. For decades the park has served primarily senior citizens. Most...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

For decades the park has served primarily senior citizens …

I hope Goleta’s city attorney was consulted on this, because the simple fact that a bunch of seniors live in an all-age family park (which this property appears to be) does NOT make it a 55+ community. That’s not even close to how the law works.

WGAL: Warwick Township residents voice concerns over mobile home park closure during meeting

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WARWICK TOWNSHIP, Pa. —

Residents of Plateau Village Mobile Home Park in Warwick Township expressed their anger and frustration at a meeting regarding the planned expansion of United Zion Retirement Community, which will replace their homes and force them out by January.

The meeting focused on United Zion's conditional use application for the expansion, which includes 78 independent living duplexes and townhouse units and a community building.

Sue Verdegem, CEO of United Zion Retirement Community, clarified the situation, saying, "I do just want to make it very clear that tonight's proceedings have nothing to do with the closure of the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“The park will be closing as of Jan. 1, 2027. The outcome of this hearing does not change that in any way."

The owner has no interest in pretending that progress is subject to majority vote. Not everyone in America is hooked on pandering.

And, as always, another park bites the dust.

Patch: New Hampshire Community Loan Fund Receives $25,000 For Affordable Housing

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CONCORD, NH — Merrimack County Savings Bank, known as The Merrimack, provided a $25,000 contribution to the New Hampshire Community Loan Fund.

This funding is intended to support affordable housing initiatives across New Hampshire. The donation specifically targets assisting low- and moderate-income families in acquiring new, energy-efficient manufactured homes.

The contribution was made possible through the Community Development Finance Authority (CDFA) tax credit program. This program allows New Hampshire businesses to receive a state tax credit for 75 percent of their contributions to qualifying economic or community development...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

Are you serious -- $25,000 for the entire state of New Hampshire? Is that a joke?

City News: ‘It’s like a punch in the gut’: Mississau‘It’s like a punch in the gut’: Mississauga mobile home park residents set to lose their homesga mobile home park residents set to lose their homes

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Several residents of a 25-acre mobile home park in Mississauga are now speaking out in an effort to save their homes, but it may be futile as Peel Region moves full steam ahead to clear the land they live on to make way for new development.

Tucked away, off Dundas Street East, you’ll find the Twin Pines Mobile Home Park where Ruth and Gord McIntyre have lived for the past 50 years.

“We raised our family here because it has such a great sense of community,” Ruth said. “It’s just this little town where everybody felt warm.”

But time is running out for the McIntyres and others who’ve called this park home.

“These are our homes. And we happen...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

But Peel now wants to clear this land to build much needed affordable housing — a decision that leaves these homeowners confused.

You can build apartments three stories high, but mobile homes are only on one level. As a result, it’s always easy to justify tearing parks down for multi-family use.

And, as always, another park bites the dust.

My Stateline: Rockford to consider transforming mobile home park into RV community

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ROCKFORD, Ill. (WTVO) — Rockford city officials will consider a proposal this week that could transform a long-standing South Main Street mobile home park into a modern, long-term RV and fifth-wheel community.

The city’s Zoning Board of Appeals will hear the plan at the March 17 meeting, before it heads to the Code and Regulations Committee ahead of the full City Council.

The property, located between the Rock River and Klehm Arboretum on S. Main, currently operates as the Riverview Mobile Home & 5th Wheel park, a decades-old, grandfathered mobile home community that was annexed into the city in 2001.

Over the years, deteriorated and...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

And another park bites the dust – soon.

Click On Detroit: Michigan manufactured home residents meet with elected officials about lot rent and water concerns

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STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. – Residents from manufactured home communities across the region came together on Sunday for a meeting about climbing costs and deteriorating living conditions.

The meeting follows Local 4 reporter Kyla Russell’s series of reports spotlighting some issues impacting the neighborhoods.

Most recently, Local 4 covered an issue facing the Rudgate Manor neighborhood in Sterling Heights. The park has seen a near 85% increase in lot rent since the current owners took over, according to resident records.

When an estimated 20 million people live in mobile home parks across the nation, residents say the rising prices are...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

“The park has seen a near 85% increase in lot rent since the current owners took over, according to resident records”

Don’t you love how these articles always follow the same path of only talking about rent increases by percent and never by dollar amount? Let’s look at some similar examples:

  • Dollar Tree raised their prices from $1 to $1.25. That’s a whopping 25% increase, which equates to only 25 cents.
  • McDonald’s raised the McChicken sandwich from $1 to $3 –an insane 300% -- which actually only translates to a $2 difference.

So when a mobile home park has a ridiculously low lot rent, like $200 per month, and you raise it by 85%, that’s an increase of only $170 over the span of a decade or so. During that same period, single family homes have gone up $200,000 on average and apartments have gone up $1,000 per month.

Never trust any article that refuses to talk dollars but only percentages. They do that because cheap rents can only look expensive when you change the rules of the game to percentages over actual dollar values. It’s the standard conversion rate of woke journalists.

Judge presses state to speed license renewal for Whispering Pines mobile home park: Whispering Pines mobile home park in Lee Township gets Michigan license renewal

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About three years after applying for it, Whispering Pines mobile home community in Lee Township was granted a renewal of its operating license by the State of Michigan on Friday.

Whispering Pines general counsel Steve Cherin provided the Daily News a copy of the license, which will expire on Oct. 1, 2027. The license, issued specifically by the state's Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) department, indicates that Whispering Pines, at 227 West Olson Road, has 106 property sites and is operated by Akshita Banerjee.

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Our thoughts on this story:

Frank Rolfe

Gee, do your think a three-year turnaround on the permit is a tad bit too long?