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Kym Kemp: Fortuna Council to Meet Today in Closed Session as Mobile Home Park Dispute Continues

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The Fortuna City Council will meet in a special session today, Monday, March 2 at 5 p.m. at City Hall, 621 11th Street. The posted agenda includes a closed session to discuss potential litigation connected to Royal Crest Mobile Home Park and its owner, Storz Management. This is the latest development in a months-long dispute over space rent increases.

As Lost Coast Outpost has detailed in prior coverage, the conflict is about rising rents at the park. The City is being asked to consider a permanent rent stabilization ordinance but is concerned about legal exposure if stronger laws are enacted inacted. LoCO’s reporting lays out the...

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As Lost Coast Outpost has detailed in prior coverage, the conflict is about rising rents at the park. The City is being asked to consider a permanent rent stabilization ordinance but is concerned about legal exposure if stronger laws are enacted.

America saw inflation of over 20% during the Biden era. Against that background, how on earth would you expect park lot rents not to go up? Do you want the park owner to simply lose money by running the park? The answer in California is, of course, “yes”.

As Margaret Thatcher once said “socialism doesn’t work long term as you eventually run out of other people’s money”. That’s literally all this story is about.

Coloradoan: Fort Collins to increase mobile home park oversight with licensing

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UPDATE, March 3: Fort Collins City Council gave final approval to creating a mobile home park licensing system and creating new requirements for park owners during their March 3 meeting.

The measure passed unanimously.

ORIGINAL STORY: Fort Collins is planning to increase city oversight of mobile home parks by creating a new licensing system and requiring park owners to be accountable for needed maintenance.

There are nine privately owned mobile home parks in city limits and an estimated 1,400 homes within them, according to city data.

Five other mobile home parks are located just outside city limits in Fort Collins' growth management area...

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This means residents are at the mercy of park owners when a dying tree poses a hazard to their home, for example, or when a water or sewer line needs to be repaired.

Seriously? Has the writer ever even been in a mobile home park in Fort Collins? They’re immaculate. This article is so off base it’s pathetic.

MINNESOTA REFORMER: Minnesota needs a Manufactured Home Park Resident Bill of Rights

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Gwen Elliott from Blaine returned to work after 30 years at UPS because she could no longer afford her rent. George Zuccolotto in Northfield was promised no rent increase, then received new fees for water and trash — resulting in $180 in additional costs over three years. Sammi Silver watched her Lake Elmo rent spike 40% over five years. 

These cases reflect a systematic pattern: out-of-state operators buying Minnesota manufactured home parks and implementing aggressive rent increases on residents who own their homes but rent the underlying land. Because relocating a manufactured home costs thousands of dollars, residents face limited...

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Because relocating a manufactured home costs thousands of dollars, residents face limited options when corporate owners raise costs.

That is a complete lie. Any mobile home park owner will typically pay the full cost of moving any mobile home to their park if a customer wants to relocate. They are called “organic” moves, and they are done all the time. This is the same false narrative that has fueled much of the woke movement. If I have a park and a potential resident calls me and says “hey, I hate where I’m at, can I move to your park” I’m going to say “absolutely, and I’ll pay for the whole move”. So let’s cut the “limited options” B.S.

The real reason that residents don’t move is simply that they can’t find anything cheaper to move to. This story normally starts with an old mom and pop selling the property after a 50-year run with dirt-cheap rents that haven’t been raised in 20 years. The new owners are piling millions of dollars of debt on it – and fixing a bunch of deferred infrastructure items like roads – and raising rents to make economic sense of the purchase and rehab. The tenants hate that their rent is going up – despite all the great improvements being made – and create this false “private equity groups are evil” and “we have no options” schtick to try to get somebody – anybody – to come up with some regulation to stop their rent from going up. But the problem is that there’s nothing even remotely as inexpensive as the mobile home park at the NEW rent, so there’s no place to move their mobile home (which could be done for free). In addition, if they want to buy their own land and put their mobile home on it the price tag nationwide averages $80,000 for the lot and then they will have to build a septic and well for another $30,000.  And to get that loan they’ll need at least $20,000 cash and great credit. Which they don’t have, which is why they are in the mobile home park in the first place.

Let’s all just be honest and tell it like it is. The “Free Rent Movement” – of which this journalist is obviously a proud member – simply wants housing for free. Nothing more. There’s no great conspiracy, no underworld story in dark rooms, just the simple fact that people don’t like prices going up. And they’ve learned – through the Biden years – that politicians are mostly gullible and easy to manipulate.

moneywise: TN residents see bills increase by hundreds for utilities, rent, parking — and their landlord won't respond. How mobile home tenants can push back

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Residents at a mobile home community in Antioch, Nashville recently staged a public protest, calling out their property owner for ignoring repeated attempts at communication.

Since Jones Estates acquired Suburban Mobile Home Park in 2021, according to Fox Nashville, households report water charges soaring from manageable amounts to bills reaching several hundred — and in some cases several thousand — dollars (1).

A newly enforced two-vehicle limit per household resulted in cars being towed, with families paying about $500 to retrieve them. Management's response to mounting complaints? Effectively nothing.

This pattern of corporate...

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This article is so full of untruths that you’ve got to break it down into pieces:

Those who own manufactured homes occupy an unusual position: they hold titles to their dwellings, but pay monthly fees for the land beneath them (2). Relocating these structures typically costs $5,000 to $10,000, according to National Consumer Law Center data (2) — and, depending on the size and age of the home, that moving fee could exceed what these homes can sell for.

Mobile homes were never meant to be moved more than once: from the factory to the mobile home park. The whole point of a mobile home is that it’s built in a factory cheaper than you can build it on location. The sales pitch has never been “mobile homes are so easy to move that any idiot can do it”. I would guess that 99% of them never get moved twice, because it’s just not cost effective when you can simply sell them where they sit. The concept of mobile homes being easy to transport went away in the 1950s when you could no longer pull them behind your car. A mobile home is like any other dwelling: when you want to move you sell it right in its current location and buy another wherever you’re moving to. This “easy transportation” concept is nonsense unless you think we’re still in the 1940s. If you want something you can move every day, if you want to, go buy an RV.

That means relocating one of these homes is pricey and potentially unrealistic for many who live in them, and this economic reality grants property owners substantial control over pricing.

No, what gives park owners the control over pricing is that they virtually give their rents away for free and nobody can even come close to matching them. In a free market system, you go with what the lowest competitive price is, and nothing is nearly as cheap as a mobile home park. That’s why the customers don’t move. If the customer had a lower cost alternative, they most certainly would. And they wouldn’t need their trailer as it’s Section 8 housing.

Median lot rental rates across the country increased 45% over the past ten years, according to census data analyzed by NPR, and some metropolitan markets are seeing lot rental growth that’s outpacing increases in traditional rental housing.

So you’re telling me that mobile home park lot rents have gone up 45% over the past ten years and that’s bad? Heck, everything rent up more than 20% over just Biden’s one term. The average single-family home went up 105% during that same ten-year period. What a pile of crap.

When investment firms acquire these properties, immediate rent hikes typically follow to justify the acquisition costs.

The only thing in this entire godawful article that was not a complete lie.

WGME: Residents in Oakland mobile home parks push for rent stabilization ordinance

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OAKLAND, Maine (WGME) -- Residents of manufactured home parks in Oakland are urging town leaders to adopt a rent stabilization ordinance.

Residents from three different manufactured home parks say they've seen a series of lot rent hikes and deferred maintenance by their park management.

The Maine Labor Climate Council says families have been left with unresolved maintenance problems, safety concerns, and housing instability.

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Sure, that’s going to fix everything – let’s just pass rent control. Well, here’s the big reason that it’s not going to work: EVERY PARK OWNER WILL SIMPLY TEAR IT DOWN FOR A BETTER USE THAT HAS NO RENT CONTROL. Is nobody noticing that there are a handful of parks being torn down in every week’s news releases? Why? Because they can make more money with a different use. THE FREE MARKET WORKS AND SOCIALISM SIMPLY DOESN’T. It’s not my opinion, look it up on AI.

THE ASPEN TIMES: Pitkin County moves to subdivide Phillips Mobile Home Park

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Phillips Mobile Home Park, a mobile home park that Pitkin County purchased in 2018 for affordable housing preservation and possible future development, was re-zoned yesterday following a regular meeting of the Board of County Commissioners. 

The subdivision is intended to align actual land uses with land use code. The land was developed prior to current land-use code and is thus designated as “non-conforming.” The updates would change this. 

“The ordinance that approved the purchase of the subject property, the 2018 version, contemplated the division of this land for the purposes of maintaining the existing workforce housing or even open...

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Ultimately, commissioners and staff agreed to add language into the ordinance that acknowledges that, while this particular subdivision does not have any future development in it, the county reaffirms its intent to potentially use it for development in the future. 

And another park will be biting the dust as soon as everyone is not looking.

Page Six Hollywood: The 19-acre mobile home park with unbeatable sea views on the market for huge 8 figure sum

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A 19-acre mobile home park which offered some of the most stunning views of the Santa Monica Bay before it was incinerated last year in the Palisades Fire was quietly listed this week with the owners hoping the property fetches as much as $90 million, Page Six Hollywood has learned.

The Pacific Palisades Bowl Mobile Estate is located just north of Temescal Canyon on the hillside across from Will Rogers State Beach. In the 1950s the property was converted into a mobile home community, and as Westside property values started to soar starting in the early aughts, the Pacific Palisades Bowl and the neighboring Tahitian Terrace mobile home...

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And another park bites the dust (and I predicted it months ago).

News4JAX: Built-to-Rent trend expands to mobile homes in Palatka, offering ‘attainable’ rents amid housing crunch

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PALATKA, Fla. – A growing housing trend in Northeast Florida is expanding beyond single-family subdivisions and into manufactured housing, as developers look to meet demand from renters priced out of homeownership.

In Palatka, land clearing is expected to begin within 60 days for The Cove at Silver Lake Mobile Home Park, a 56-unit community of newly built manufactured homes — all available for rent.

“We’ve been working on this development for about two and a half years now,” said Apryle Melvin of KOP Realty, the developer behind the project. “Now that we finally have the green light and everything’s been approved, we’re ready to roll on...

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“If they were looking to buy a house, the same house they could have gotten for $150,000 in 2019 is now $340,000,” she said. “It just outpriced everyone for the most part. So we focus on attainable homes.”

Not to get on my political soap box, but the “Free Rent Movement” folks need to realize that Biden was the source of the current affordability crisis, as he was in charge through most of the period described in the article. Housing went up at twice the pace of household earnings under Biden, and that yielded most of the issues the socialists now are on a warpath about. Where were they back then?

Daily Press: Are campgrounds a solution to Michigan housing crunch? Some lawmakers think so

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(This story was originally published by Bridge Michigan, a nonprofit and nonpartisan news organization. Visit the newsroom online: bridgemi.com.)

LANSING — As Michigan faces housing and worker shortages, state lawmakers are weighing a proposal that would allow people in areas of need to live in campgrounds for more than half a year.

Legislation sponsored by state Rep. Rachel Smit, R-Shelbyville, would allow longer campground stays by amending the Michigan Health Code, which currently only allows temporary campground living for up to six months.

“In many situations, people have turned to their RVs and Michigan campgrounds as temporary...

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News Flash: there’s this thing in America called “free market” in which consumers have the freedom to do what they want and businesses strive to meet that demand. Why in the world does Michigan feel the need to regulate something like this? If somebody wants to retire in an RV Park, then what’s the problem? Conversely, if an RV Park owner doesn’t want longer term tenants, then why force it?

The lack of focus on “free market” is getting out of control in the U.S. right now and will end up with the same bad consequences as have afflicted every other nation that embraces socialism.

Shaw Local: Rock Falls council OKs ordinance, requires mobile homes moving in to be manufactured less than 20 years ago

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It’s an interesting legal argument that is completely lacking logic. Are they saying that mobile homes built in 2003 are not as safe as 2004, which is why they chose a 20-year cut-off? Do they realize that HUD is on record saying that every home built since 1976 is equally safe and they put their seal on all of them to affirm that? Or, if the problem is appearance, do they realize that a 1994 home looks just like a 2004 home?

You and I know that all they’re doing is to deliberately raise the bar on home cost to such an unsustainable level that no “trailer trash” can move into those vacant lots (which is a violation of Fair Housing) and...

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The Rock Falls City Council unanimously approved an ordinance Tuesday aimed at cleaning up its mobile home parks.

The ordinance bans mobile homes that were manufactured more than 20 years old from the parks within city limits. It applies to all those homes even if they’ve been renovated, but does not apply to homes already within a city park, accor ... [Log in or subscribe to continue reading]

Noozhawk: Goleta Protects Mobile Home Park’s Senior-Only Status with Urgency Ordinance

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During a packed meeting on Tuesday, the Goleta City Council approved an urgency ordinance in a 4-1 vote to keep University Mobile Home Park a senior-only park. 

The ordinance, which went into effect immediately, prohibits changing the mobile home  park to an all-ages community and adds a citywide senior mobile home park overlay to ensure that mobile home parks remain predominantly available to seniors.  

The ordinance will expire after 45 days unless extended by the City Council. 

The mobile home park at 520 Pine Ave. near Old Town Goleta is the only park in the city that restricts residency to people age 55 or older, and is one of five...

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Harmony Communities Inc. has verbally threatened to file a lawsuit against the city following the ordinance’s adoption, according to Goleta City Attorney Isaac Rosen. Nick Ubaldi, who represents the management company, claims that the city’s ordinance violates federal fair housing law as it reportedly discriminates against families with children, is not considered “urgent” under state law, and impacts affordable housing and fairness. 

I know nothing about the details of this case, but I do know that the City of Goleta looks to be getting into a lot of trouble here and better assign a big part of their city budget to legal costs and damages if they don’t change direction.

This would not be the first case of a city thinking they have unlimited power … and being wrong.

AV Press: City weighs mobile home compliance

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PALMDALE — The Mobile Home Park Rental Review Board on Wednesday will review its annual compliance report, which focuses on local parks’ compliance with the City of Palmdale’s rental control ordinance. 

Palmdale’s Municipal Code Chapter 5.44 determines that rents for mobile home spaces are regulated to protect mobile home park residents from “excessive” rents while also allowing park owners to receive a fair return for their investment.

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Palmdale’s Municipal Code Chapter 5.44 determines that rents for mobile home spaces are regulated to protect mobile home park residents from “excessive” rents while also allowing park owners to receive a fair return for their investment.

When the government regulates rents and profits, it’s no longer a free-market system but simply the very definition of socialism. Karl Marx would love California today, but he’d look odd in shorts.

Sun Journal: Norway pushing ahead with moratorium on lot rent increases for mobile homes

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Residents of Norway’s largest mobile home park are closer to getting a reprieve on lot rent hikes. 

The Select Board voted 4-1 Thursday in favor of a draft 180-day moratorium, an attempt to delay a plan by the corporate owners of Norway Commons to raise lot rents starting April 1.

The motion that passed called for Norway to base its moratorium on the one-year pause recently approved in Jay. Norway’s would be set for 180 days.

Once the draft is vetted by the town’s attorney the board will vote whether to schedule a special town meeting for residents to vote on the moratorium. The next meeting is scheduled for March 5.

Board Chair Russ...

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Sure, Maine has lost their marbles. Ranking nearly last of 50 states in every category from population to economy, it’s not surprising that they now want to lose their affordable housing, too, through annoying park owners into redevelopment. The good news is that there are very few mobile home parks in Maine so it’s not a big story unless you already own a park there. And, in that case, start coming up with some other uses for your land that are free from the control of these nutjobs.

Sahan Journal: Twin Cities mobile home parks feel the pain of immigration enforcement, often in isolation

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Residents of several mobile home parks in the Twin Cities suburbs say federal immigration agents are still lurking around their neighborhoods, and that they often don’t see high numbers of supporters when people are arrested. 

Residents and activists say there are special challenges at mobile home parks — they’re usually secluded from surrounding neighborhoods, they don’t receive as much attention as other residential neighborhoods, and they often have one or few roadways leading into the park, making it easy for immigration agents to choke off residents’ access to exits.

“It’s not as crowded here, there’s not as many people that can...

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“…they often don’t see high numbers of supporters when people are arrested.” 

First of all, I have never seen or heard a single discussion of ICE arrests from any park manager or owner, so I had to assume this is mostly made up. But then the big reveal came with the quote shown above in which the writer simply wants people to try to show up and disrupt ICE from making arrests, in the rare event they ever did. So then I thought “what the heck is the Sahan Journal, which wrote this crazy story”? Here’s the answer from their own website: “Founded in August of 2019, Sahan Journal is a nonprofit digital newsroom dedicated to reporting for immigrants and communities of color in Minnesota.”

Mystery solved. The entire story is 100% fiction.

Concord Monitor: ‘It’s not fair’: Hopkinton residents struggle to sell manufactured homes under new park ownership

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Jean Lightfoot had her final years all mapped out: She would sell her house in Hopkinton when she turned 80 and use the proceeds to settle comfortably into a retirement home. 

But watching her neighbor, Tom Ryerson, struggle to unload his home at the Meadows of Hopkinton, the same manufactured housing community Lightfoot calls home, has given her serious doubts.

Ryerson listed his two-bedroom, two-bathroom manufactured home for $229,000 in January. Since then, he’s been forced to slash his asking price to $179,000, a 20% drop and $35,000 less than what he paid. He’s had little interest in the property, not because of anything wrong with...

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“Ryerson listed his two-bedroom, two-bathroom manufactured home for $229,000 … with a lease for the land of $1,285 a month.”

Who in the world would think you could EVER sell a 2/2 mobile home for $229,000 with a $1,285 monthly lot rent attached to it? Particularly in a low-energy market like Concord, New Hampshire? This bad decision-making, on the part of the homeowner, is not the result of any action by the park owner but simply poor financial education. You’d be lucky to sell a regular 2/2 single-family home in Concord, New Hampshire for $229,000 – a quick review on-line shows I can buy a nice 2/2 frame house on a pretty lot for $295,000 without any lot rent whatsoever. I’m lost on what the homeowner was thinking on this.

WGAL: Lititz mobile home residents forced to leave homes as property is repurposed

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LITITZ, Pa. —

Residents of Plateau Village Mobile Home Park in Lititz are in shock after receiving a notice from United Zion Retirement Community that the property will be repurposed into new independent cottages, leaving them less than a year to find new homes.

Feelings of despair and distress

Kelly Horst, a resident of the community, expressed her distress, saying, "My house is not a palace, but whether you live in a condo, car, cabin, it's your home, and I'm losing my home."

Horst, who cares for her husband Troy, who has dementia, finds the prospect of relocating unsettling.

"To relocate someone who has a disease such as dementia. It's...

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And another park bites the dust.

Montana Free Press: Residents of Missoula area mobile home parks unionize, join effort to limit rent increases

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When Maria Cassidy received a notice that her monthly rent was increasing by $200 after a Texas-based company bought Harvey’s mobile home park in Bonner, her heart sank.  

“I felt trapped,” she told Montana Free Press. 

Cassidy, who has lived at Harvey’s since 1990, said under the park’s previous owner, annual rent increases for the lot to park her mobile home ranged from $5 to $25. Before Oak Wood Properties purchased the park in 2023 and raised lot rents in 2024, the $420 per month was already difficult for many residents on fixed incomes to afford, she said. The nearly 50% increase was devastating, Cassidy said. 

“It especially...

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There’s a lot of liberal lunacy to unpack in this story, so let’s break down the false assertions one-by-one.

Shawn Belobraidic, a Harvey’s resident and bargaining team member, said mobile home parks are promoted to out-of-state investors as profitable because they can pass costs onto vulnerable residents who typically don’t push back.

No, that’s not correct. Investors can increase rents because their existing rents are ridiculously low and everyone knows it. Interesting how the writer forgot to mention that the single-family home cost in Missoula is $512,000 and the average apartment is $1,560 per month. And the lot rent is audacious at around $700? Give me a break.

“We are going to demand a fair lease that treats us with the dignity and respect that we deserve,” he said. “We are not vulnerable, we are informed. We are not going to be taken advantage of. We are organized. We are not going to back down.” 

A Montana “tenant union” has no official power whatsoever, and here’s what the state law says about it: “the most concrete legal power is found in the Montana Residential Landlord and Tenant Act of 1977. Under Section 70-24-431, a landlord cannot legally evict you, decrease services, or increase rent specifically because you joined or organized a tenant union.” As you can see, it gives them no power to control rents, only the power to potentially not get evicted for joining the “union”.

Harvey’s resident Jacquie Thompson asked the crowd to support the union’s mission. Thompson said she moved to the Bonner park after retiring in 2019 because it was small, quiet and the $335 lot rent was affordable. Now, with rent and fees more than double that amount and her monthly fixed income at roughly $1,000, that’s no longer the case, she said.

Yes, the former owner’s lot rent was absurdly low, given the $500,000 local home price. Their mismanagement does not bind the new owner to continuing the absurd practice of practically giving away the lots for not much more than the actual cost of utilities, insurance, repair, property tax and management. As for the fact that this resident can’t live on $1,000 per month it should be noted that they reside in one of the most expensive housing markets in the U.S. (the average single-family home cost in the U.S. is half that), and perhaps the solution is for them to move to a much less expensive place. They could move to any city in Missouri, for example, and live happily on $1,000 per month with money left over.

 “Most of the residents at Harvey’s are seniors or people on fixed incomes. We simply cannot absorb these kinds of increases.”

Under the rules of Fair Housing, there can be no exception for seniors such as offering them a lower rent. As a result, the 80-year-old has to pay the same as the 30-year-old. And, yes, the younger folks with active jobs can afford to pay more than those on fixed incomes. If this rule was changed at HUD perhaps more owners would be willing to accommodate seniors with a lower rent, but until then it’s basically illegal. That’s not the fault of park owners who are merely following the law.

But on top of that – and what’s even more infuriating – is that food, healthcare and transportation costs have gone up far faster than mobile home park lot rents, yet that reality is never mentioned. A dollar is a dollar and if groceries go up $100 a week, then isn’t that just as bad for fixed incomes? Why are only mobile home parks singled out for the U.S. reality of inflation?

Central Maine: Waterville approves mobile home park lot rent stabilization ordinance

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WATERVILLE — The city now has the power to intervene when mobile home park owners want to raise lot rental costs to park residents.

When, for instance, park owners want to increase rents by more than the last Social Security cost of living adjustment, park owners must attend a hearing with a city rent stabilization board. Park owner must also submit a petition for lot increases to the city and park renters, including supporting documents, to justify the increase. Hearings must begin within 30 days of a park owner petition.

These are just some of the requirements mandated in a new city mobile home park lot stabilization ordinance the City...

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If mobile home park owners want to raise lot rents by a certain amount they must submit a petition to the city and park renters.

Here’s a better idea if you own a park in Maine. Find a different use for your land, tear down the park, and go into another line of business. There’s no way any park owner should have to grovel to keep their rents at market levels. It’s insulting. Clearly the state does not appreciate the great things that park owners do to provide the only form of non-subsidized affordable housing. Maine ranks near the bottom of the list among all states in everything from economic vitality to education to quality of life and population growth. Clearly Maine’s leaders are incompetent and this new rent control plan is just the latest in an endless list of blunders.

Press Herald: Saco again extends emergency pause on mobile home rent increases

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The city of Saco again extended its emergency moratorium on mobile home rent increases Monday night after residents of a local park renewed their pleas for help.

The Saco City Council unanimously voted Monday to extend the moratorium for another 60 days, with it now set to expire April 10.

The City Council first passed the moratorium on Oct. 27 and approved a 45-day extension in December.

The moratorium — which blocks lot rent increases at mobile home parks across the city as long as it is in effect — was prompted by outcry from residents at Blue Haven Mobile Home Park, many of whom say they’re on the verge of being priced out. Their...

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More idiocy out of Maine. Thankfully there are very few mobile home parks in Maine (and soon to be fewer).

Columbia Missourian: Columbia Tenants Union launches coalition representing mobile home parks

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The Columbia Tenants Union announced the launch of local unions 1, 2 and 3 representing three local mobile home parks at a protest on Sunday.

Over 100 households from Creekwood Estates and Richland Heights North and South have joined the coalition of unions to protest unfair treatment by the parks' New York City-based owner, Regal Communities, LLC.

Locals 1, 2 and 3 are the first unions formed under Columbia Tenants Union since its creation in June of 2025. They've been collaborating with residents since October, when they were made aware of poor conditions in the three mobile home parks. Jack Dobbs, the Columbia Tenant Union's...

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“One of the demands the union leaders made was a rent freeze until negotiations could happen between union leaders and Regal Communities”.

Just like Montana, Missouri has no such thing as an official “tenant union”. Here’s what AI says about it: “in Missouri, any group of tenants can choose to call themselves a tenant union; there is no formal state registration required to begin organizing. While federal law (for Section 8 housing) explicitly protects the right to organize, Missouri state law does not have a specific statute protecting all tenants from retaliation for joining a union.”

So basically the “tenant union” has no power to control rents whatsoever. In fact, since Missouri has absolutely no form of rent control, such a concept is kind of ridiculous.

This whole new ‘tenant union” nonsense reminds me of a little kid wearing a badge out of a cereal box and saying they’re a sheriff. It has no clout no matter how loud you shout it.

Florida Politics: Sweetwater OKs Flagler Center District, clearing way for redevelopment of former trailer park

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Plans for the project include more than 5,000 residential units alongside several hundred thousand square feet of retail and office space.

Sweetwater officials have approved a new zoning framework, clearing the way for the long-planned redevelopment of a former trailer park property.

City Commissioners voted unanimously to create the Flagler Center District, a major step toward redeveloping roughly 105 acres at Flagler Street and Northwest 112th Avenue into a dense, mixed-use community anchored by housing, jobs and transit access.

The decision establishes a new land-use and zoning category that developers say unlocks one of the most...

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And another park bites the dust.

Mitchell Now: Mitchell City Council Approves $1 Transfer of Former Mobile Home Park Site for Owner-Occupied Housing Project

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MITCHELL, SD (Mitchell Now) — Mitchell city leaders approved transferring the city’s former mobile home park property on First Avenue to the Mitchell Area Development Corporation for $1 to move forward with a new housing development.

The Mitchell City Council voted 7-1 on Feb. 2 to approve the redevelopment agreement for the First Avenue site, according to the Mitchell Republic. The plan calls for 24 owner-occupied homes — 10 single-family villa-style homes and 14 ranch-style townhomes — with a deed covenant requiring the homes remain owner-occupied for at least 10 years after the initial sale.

The project is expected to be built by Sioux...

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And another park bites the dust.

The Mercury News: https://www.mercurynews.com/2026/01/30/fierce-backlash-prompts-san-jose-to-punt-mobile-home-park-ordinance-that-would-allow-raised-rents-and-passed-on-costs/

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San Jose has pumped the brakes on changes to its mobile home park ordinance after fierce backlash from residents, who derided a proposed one-time,10% rent increase and accused city leaders of ignoring their concerns when crafting the new rules.

Under the proposed changes, the rent increase would be triggered when a home is sold, a rental registration would be required and specific procedures would be adopted to solve rental disputes. Landlords also would be allowed to pass on capital improvement costs to residents.

​With its 58 mobile home parks — which collectively have over 10,000 spaces and represent a significantly cheaper housing...

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Sure, stop all rent increases forever. Why not make landlords reduce their rents 10% annually instead? Why not end private property completely and just take it from the owners and give it to the tenants?

I know these city council people know better than to embrace this socialist nonsense, but they simply don’t have the guts to stand up to the screaming mob. What a bunch of cowards.

MTFP: Rent hikes hammer residents of Helena trailer court

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Small details around Lynne Weinacker’s home illustrate a daily story — one about getting by on very little. Plastic containers labeled “flour” and “pancake” are stacked neatly on her kitchen counter, filled with bulk goods. The crate for her rambunctious dog, Ginger, fits like a puzzle piece under her kitchen table.

Over nearly 20 years, Weinacker has made the two-bed, one-bath trailer in the Golden Estates Mobile Home Park a cozy home. She bought the trailer on Helena’s eastern edge, across the highway from Walmart, for about $5,000 around 2007. 

For years, the rent Weinacker paid for the land beneath the trailer was manageable, the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Here’s an important announcement for all woke journalists: Montana is trifecta red. It has a Republican Governor, Senate and House. There is literally a 0% chance of ever enacting rent control. So you need to go somewhere else with your socialism pandering. Maine would be a good place. Pack up all your worldly goods in a U-Haul, jump on I-90, and you can be there in 35 hours.

Spokesman: Lawsuit filed in Spokane County seeks to block recently passed rent control bill

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OLYMPIA – Lori and Guy Miller envisioned a 14-lot property in Spokane Valley as part of their retirement plan when they purchased it in 2012.

However, they say a new law that caps by how much landlords can increase rents on a yearly basis prompted them to sell the property last year after they determined it was no longer feasible to keep it.

“They’re making it impossible to operate, and that’s bad for affordable housing. That’s terrible for the people that can afford it the least,” Guy Miller said in an interview. “I mean, it sounds like it’s a good thing, it has terrible consequences.”

The law, which took effect last year, caps yearly...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Finally, someone has the guts to stand up to the Washington socialists. But what a shame that it has to go to that extreme simply to protect their property rights. What a nasty state.