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Timmins Today: Timmins mine gives notice to mobile home residents

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TIMMINS - A local mine is planning how to grow and has given notice to residents of a south-end mobile home park that they'll need to move. 

The area currently housing Fairway Village on Moneta Avenue, just west of Vipond Road, is converting to non-residential use by Jan. 31, 2028, Discovery Porcupine has announced. 

"This action is necessary as we plan additional growth initiatives that will contribute to job creation, new business opportunities for local suppliers and investments in the Timmins community. As a result, we have informed residents of Fairway Village that, by the end of January 2028, we will need to end their tenancy,"...

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And another park bites the dust.

WINK: Fixed income, rising rent, and the cost of safety: inside a mobile home community

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BONITA SPRINGS, Fla. –  Bob Kiefer loves his home in the Southern Pines community in Bonita Springs. He says neighbors look out for one another, but living in Southwest Florida has become increasingly expensive.

“Community is great here. Everybody takes care of each other,” Kiefer said.

Kiefer bought his manufactured home in 2019. Since then, he says his rent has nearly doubled.

“It went from $540 to $790, and we're paying $970 right now. So it's just about doubled in six years. That's a lot of money,” he said.

With rent rising, Kiefer says his budget is stretched thin –  even when it comes to food.

“We have to shop at four or five...

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“There's a lot of people in here that just are living on Social Security and that's it. And they just. It's not affordable.”

Perhaps it’s time to admit that living in Florida is probably not the best idea for someone living on Social Security. Florida has high living costs in every category, most notably insurance. If you are living on the $1,200 a month that the average Social Security recipient receives, then you should live in the Midwest where things cost 50% less. If you choose to live in Florida – despite the extremely high cost – then don’t complain about it because YOU made that decision. I’d love to fly first-class but I can’t rationalize it. If I did fly first-class I’d look pretty dumb if I complained the entire flight about how much it cost. It’s called “personal accountability”.

KESQ: Residents allege illegal rent notice practices at Palm Springs mobile home park

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PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (KESQ) - Homeowners at a Palm Springs mobile home park claim management violated local rent control laws by failing to properly notify residents of a 2026 rent increase.

Residents at Palm Springs View Estates say required written notices were not mailed in October 2025, which would have allowed the increase to take effect February 1, 2026. Instead, management allegedly attempted in January to deliver backdated notices by clipping them to or placing them in mailboxes—actions homeowners say are illegal and invalid.

Residents argue that under California Mobile Home Residency Law and the city’s Rent Control...

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During their retreat back to Berlin in 1944, the German army cut down a massive number of trees to block the roads and slow the U.S. and Russian troops down. It didn’t alter the end result, but maybe it held back the Allied victory by a few days. Delaying a rent increase by a couple months on a technicality is not quite a worthwhile effort, but if it gives the tenants some perverse sense of victory then who cares?

News 4 JAX: Florida lawmakers want mobile home park owners to justify rent increases. These are the bills under consideration

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida lawmakers are considering sweeping legislation that would require mobile home park owners to justify rent increases and boost relocation assistance for displaced residents, potentially affecting more than 800,000 mobile home residents across the state.

The identical House Bill 703 and Senate Bill 1550, known as the “Mobile Home Park Lot Tenancies” bills, were filed by Rep. Paula Stark (R-St. Cloud) and Sen. LaVon Bracy Davis (D-Ocoee), respectively. The legislation would implement new protections for mobile home residents beginning July 1, 2026, if passed.

“I need things done, like physically done to the...

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I’ve been getting a lot of calls from Florida park owners befuddled on how their red state has shifted so extremely blue over the past few years when it comes to tenant laws. I couldn’t agree more – Ron DeSantis has apparently lost his mind. If he had any backbone he would theaten to veto all these bills and shut them down immediately, yet he continues to sign them into law. Can there be a more socialist agenda than asking private park owners to beg to try to increase their rents? In a red state? WTF.

Taunton Daily Gazette: Taunton officials push for relief from soaring insurance bills

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A contingent of current and former elected officials from Taunton testified at a state committee hearing, coming together to express support and ask for movement on tackling lack of affordable homeowners insurance for manufactured homes. 

State Sen. Kelly Dooner, R. Taunton, filed a bill S.2738, "An Act Addressing Rising Insurance Costs for Manufactured Home Residents," to address the problem.

If passed, it would establish a commission “to investigate the availability, affordability, and regulatory treatment of homeowners insurance” for manufactured homes in Massachusetts, according to the language in the... Read More

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State Sen. Kelly Dooner, R. Taunton, filed a bill S.2738, "An Act Addressing Rising Insurance Costs for Manufactured Home Residents," to address the problem. If passed, it would establish a commission “to investigate the availability, affordability, and regulatory treatment of homeowners insurance” for manufactured homes in Massachusetts, according to the language in the bill. 

Does anyone reading this think it’s anything more than a total waste of time? Only an academic idiot would think that talking about rising prices will, in any way, lower them. It won’t.

Le Soleil de la Floride: REAL ESTATE: PROPOSED BILL TO STRENGTHEN THE RIGHTS OF MOBILE HOME OWNERS

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Paula Stark, Republican representative for St. Cloud in the Florida House of Representatives, has introduced a bill to strengthen protections and clarify the rights of mobile home owners. She states: « This bill updates how lot rent increases are determined, improves transparency in billing and payments, and strengthens enforcement mechanisms. Mobile home owners are a critical part of our communities, and this bill helps ensure fairness and accountability in lot tenancies. »

Democratic Senator LaVon Bracy Davis of Ocoee has also introduced similar legislation aimed at clarifying what can be considered an unreasonable rent...

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If a rent increase is demanded, it would have to be justified by documents such as invoices or material facts proving that there has been an increase in costs and expenses for the landlord. Similarly, the rent would have to be reduced if a service or facility no longer works or is no longer available to the tenant.

If Ron DeSantis does not veto this socialist crap then he’s not worthy of keeping his job. I don’t live in Florida, nor do I have any mobile home park interests there, but if you do then you need to get on the phone and call your representatives and tell them how unacceptable this is.

Housing Wire: Manufactured housing gains traction, but negative stigma persists

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As the housing market prices out more and more Americans, federal lawmakers are taking a closer look at manufactured housing as a more affordable supply-side alternative to a traditional stick-built home.

Nevertheless, misconceptions about new manufactured housing communities — that they are dilapidated, ugly, or unsafe — continue to beleaguer a segment of the single-family, detached housing market that is currently home to 7.2 million U.S. households. 

Legislators in both parties increasingly see manufactured homes as a crucial way to boost housing affordability. The Affordable HOMES Act, which the U.S. House of Representatives passed...

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Among local concerns are commonly held assumptions that manufactured communities reduce neighboring property values and negatively affect an area’s aesthetics, crime rates, and additional infrastructure costs. AscentDS’s Kim said these views are often misguided. 

Look up any mobile home park on Zillow. Look at the price of a single-family home right next to the mobile home park. Then look at the price of an identical home a block from the mobile home park. The home next to the park is about 20% less. It’s simply a fact that Americans don’t like living next to mobile home parks. Rather than insult everyone’s intelligence, why not just tell it like it is? Nobody wants to live next to affordable housing, whether it’s mobile home parks or apartments. Mayors, city councils, zoning departments and homeowners across the nation all know this. And that’s why there will never be any new permits ever issued for mobile home parks in any city in which people would want to live.

News Center Maine: Norway Commons residents ask Select Board to consider rent stabilization moratorium

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NORWAY, Maine — Residents of Norway Commons, a manufactured home community for those 55 or older, attended a Select Board meeting Thursday to protest what they said were rapidly rising lot rents and urged the board to consider rent stabilization measures.

Sharon LeBlond, who lives at Norway Commons, stood before and asked selectmen to consider drafting a moratorium to address lot fees and rent.

LeBlond said that while the lot increases are legal, they are “overboard” and make it harder for residents to afford living at the park, owned by Sun Communities.

“The situation is such that many of the people who live in the community can no...

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Residents of Norway Commons, a manufactured home community for those 55 or older, attended a Select Board meeting Thursday to protest what they said were rapidly rising lot rents and urged the board to consider rent stabilization measures.

Week after week the Maine media is doing a blitz to convince you that socialist rent control is mandatory in that tiny, irrelevant state. Maine is such a disappointment, ranking in the bottom ten states in economy, education and population growth. Clearly their leftist policies are a complete failure. If they pass rent control in Maine then the housing stock will go down the drain and/or be redeveloped. But in a state that can do nothing right, why not?

WATE: Resident sees 70% rent increase at Louisville mobile home lot

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LOUISVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) — Mobile home living was always considered affordable, but more and more mom-and-pop mobile home communities are being purchased by institutional investors who see the parks as lucrative, low-risk investments, leading to significant rent hikes.

Owners and renters at a mobile home park in Blount County were informed about the sale of their community on the first of January. One resident, Sherry Russell, found out that her lot rent would increase on February 1 by 70%, and within six days of taking over ownership of the trailer park, the new owner sent her a notice saying her lot payment for January was late, but she...

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One resident, Sherry Russell, found out that her lot rent would increase on February 1 by 70%, and within six days of taking over ownership of the trailer park

Woke writers always try to use hyperbole and focus on simply the percent of increase instead of the nominal amount. Yes, it looks like it went up 70%. But 70% was only around $250 per month as the rent was ridiculously low. Now $250 may sound like a lot, but that’s a fraction of what apartment rents have gone up, as well as health insurance and auto prices. Remember that the McChicken went up 300% in one year but it’s still the cheapest thing on the McDonald’s menu.

But here’s the most important point. Kentucky is trifecta Red and, as a result, the chances of rent control are absolutely zero. This writer needs to focus their socialist whining attention on trifecta Blue states, like Maryland and Massachusetts, where it might actually have some impact. I know that “you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take” but sometimes taking a really dumb shot makes you look just stupid.

Spectrum Local News: Auburn tenants seek mobile home park rent control

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AUBURN –– Residents of mobile home parks in Auburn are asking the city for a moratorium on rent increases, as the city and other communities await new state law on the subject.

Five mobile home park residents spoke to the Auburn City Council Monday. Among them was Sharon Dickinson, 79, a retired teacher. She said she has lived at Ja-Lynne Mobile Home Park on Lexis Lane for more than a year. When she moved in, she said, she was paying $475 a month and was told it would go up by $25 a year.

“And then all of a sudden, they raised it to $500, and then in April, we got a note on our door saying, ‘We’re going to be raising it $100 in...

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Rent control has been the death of healthy housing in every state that has ever enacted it (just use Google for support of that statement). It leads to massive redevelopment into other uses and shuts off all capital investment in existing or new housing stock. Maine ranks #43 of 50 states in economic vitality. It ranks #40 in education and #40 in infrastructure. Is their plan to rank at the bottom of housing, too? If so, they are on the right path.

KCBD11: Property owner considers closing mobile home park after fire destroys several units

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LUBBOCK, Texas (KCBD) - A property owner is considering shutting down his mobile home park permanently after a fire destroyed several units in what he believes was caused by trespassers seeking shelter.

Jesse Flores arrived at his East Lubbock County property to survey the damage from flames that broke out late Monday night. Flores believes the fire may have started when someone illegally staying in one of the vacant mobile homes attempted to heat the space.

The fire occurred just before 10 p.m. along East County Road 72-60, off the Slaton Highway. Four fire departments worked several hours to contain the blaze, according to the Lubbock...

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And another park bites the dust.

Click Orlando: New Florida mobile home bill makes major changes to rent, rules

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – A new bill filed in Florida this week aims to lay out a litany of rules for mobile home parks in the state.

The bill (SB 1550) was filed on Friday by state Sen. LaVon Bracy Davis (D-Ocoee), and it amends a Florida statute, which governs what factors courts may use to determine whether rent increases are “unreasonable.”

However, the legislation was originally authored by state Rep. Paula Stark (R-St. Cloud), who’s sponsoring the House version of the bill.

Under current law, courts may take factors like prior disclosures, inflation changes, operating costs and taxes into account.

However, this latest bill would expand...

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I get calls from park owners in Florida all the time trying to understand how the state got so screwed up when it comes to mobile home park regulations. Apparently the “Sunshine State” is like an M&M with a Red outside coating hiding a nasty Blue filling on the inside. If this bill passes you should expect even faster redevelopment of “trailer park” properties and much less enthusiasm by investors to bring old Florida mobile home parks back to life by injecting fresh capital into failing infrastructure and management. 

Homes and Community Renewal: New York State Homes and Community Renewal Announces Tenant-Led Acquisition of Essex County Manufactured Home Park

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Preserves Homeownership for Up To 165 Households

New York State Homes and Community Renewal (HCR) Commissioner RuthAnne Visnauskas today announced that tenants at Cascade Acres Manufactured Home Park in the town of North Elba, Essex County, formed a partnership with a local affordable housing developer to purchase the 165-unit Park from their landlord, ensuring the long-term affordability of the community. The residents successfully exercised a provision under New York State’s Right of First Refusal law to prevent the community from being sold to a private equity firm. The successful sale of Cascade Acres marks the first time the...

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The purchase is supported by a $4.7 million loan from HCR’s Manufactured Home Advantage Program, a $420,000 loan from the Village of Lake Placid, a $1.6 million loan from Champlain National Bank, and an equity investment from Mr. Montag. Homestead Development Corporation partnered with the Homeowners Association to assist with administrative work required for the purchase.

Now that sounds like a solid financial footing, right? Anyone want to bet that, five years from now, this “Frankenstein” lending construction has completely collapsed, and the park is back on the market? Non-profits don’t seem to realize that anything other than a legitimate long-term mortgage from a reputable lender is simply a quick fix that never holds together. I would refer people to the recent loan defaults on no less than four tenant-owned parks in Colorado as evidence of this fact. If the non-profits want to inject real non-refundable money and get a real 10-year conduit or agency loan based on actual net income, I can respect that. But instead they never want to actually commit for the long term – just enough to get their 5 minutes of virtue signaling fame and then move on.  I wish someone would track these “tenant-owned” deals and see how many actually make it over the long term. It can’t be many.

News Tribune: Trump cut money to relocate folks from this mobile home park. Then it flooded Read more at: https://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/article314252021.html#storylink=cpy

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Eight months after the Trump administration cut Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) money meant to relocate about 50 mobile-home park residents from a flood-prone valley near Tacoma, residents had the worst flood in 17 years.

As previously reported by The News Tribune, Pierce County was awarded a $10 million FEMA Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) grant in 2022. The grant was supposed to help the county acquire and demolish the Valleybrook Village Mobile Home Park off River Road East. The plan was to help residents of 45 mobile homes relocate elsewhere and turn the land into a natural floodplain to reduce...

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In April, when the FEMA funding was canceled, mobile-home park residents celebrated the decision, claiming that flood events were infrequent in recent years. All the residents are retirement age and low-income, and many told The News Tribune the money the county would have offered them to relocate was not enough to afford to live elsewhere.

So let me get this straight. Trump shuts off millions of dollars earmarked to move these people out of their longtime homes against their will – and the residents celebrate Trump’s decision. Then comes another flood and some homes are impacted but not significantly enough that anyone still wants to move out. And somehow Trump’s the enemy in this story? The tenants love the guy. Did this writer’s boss actually read this article or was it rubber-stamped because it had a negative Trump headline on it? Every time someone pulls a stunt like this it reduces their respect for the media a little more – and for good reason.

Local Cost Outpost: Fortuna Seniors Say Mobile Home Park Ordinance Needs Work

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Negotiations over Fortuna’s efforts to cap mobile home rent increases might be ending soon, but some advocates say the protections don’t go far enough.

Since mid-2025, mobile home owners in the Royal Crest mobile home park have been fighting for regulations that would limit how much and how often the park owner can raise their rents. (The owners of mobile homes don’t usually own the land in the park it sits on.) Fortuna’s city council declared a moratorium on rent increases in September, and floated a draft Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) at a recent city council meeting. It offers many asked-for guardrails, like annual rent increases...

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The issues in California are not about consumer protection but simply Socialism vs. Capitalism. You can’t argue that $850 per month in lot rent is abhorrent when the actual stats for Fortuna are a single-family home average of $375,000 and an average apartment rent of $1,720 per month. But to the socialist mind, all rent should be free. They simply don’t believe in the capitalist system of “free market” in which supply and demand set pricing and not the government. They want all prices to be mandated and cheap.

Canary Media: Cuts to manufactured-home efficiency rules would hit Southeast hard

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The U.S. House just voted to cancel efficiency standards for new manufactured homes — a move that could hit especially hard in the Southeast, where such housing is common and energy insecurity is high.

The measure would rescind 2022 criteria for insulation, air sealing, and other energy-saving features in prefabricated, or mobile, homes, restoring weaker standards more than 30 years old. The legislation comes as utility bills are rising fast nationwide — and if it is passed by the Senate and signed into law, it could cost households in double-wide houses hundreds more per year in increased electricity costs.

The very first energy...

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Mark Kresowik, senior policy director with the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy.

Who would listen to a guy with a title like that? Of course, he would spin it that dropping expensive and meaningless changes to “mobile home standards” will ruin the environment. But the reality is that these Biden-era initiatives – which included the electric car mandate and even the proposed ban on natural gas kitchen appliances – never really were to the benefit of the American consumer but, rather, simply a way to force-feed unpopular concepts that academic elites favored. In the end, the supposed “energy savings” of these new “mobile home standards” – over the entire life of the home – would have represented maybe a small fraction of the price increase in the home purchase itself. Thank heavens this Biden administration idiocy is being systematically trashed. I’m not sure the local landfill is big enough to handle it all.

Midcoast Villager: Searsport Mobile Home Park Residents Seek Relief From Out-of-State Owner

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SEARSPORT — Their homes may be "mobile," but residents feel stuck.

Residents of the Searsport Mobile Home Park returned to the Select Board this month with a renewed request that a rent stabilization ordinance be placed on the warrant for the town's annual meeting in March, signaling their intent to move the debate over rising lot fees from the meeting room to the ballot box.

Speaking during public comment at the Jan. 6 Select Board meeting, representatives of park residents again urged town officials to give voters the opportunity to weigh in on whether Searsport should adopt a local measure to address rent increases in manufactured...

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Residents have told town officials that since the park changed hands in 2021, lot rents have increased while maintenance and responsiveness have declined, leaving many — particularly seniors — feeling vulnerable and unheard.

Of all the arguments these “Free Rent Movement” groups try to make, the most pathetic is the claim that new owners – who inject massive capital in trying to bring these old, ugly parks back to life – are somehow harming the residents rather than saving them. If they want to complain about higher rents, that’s fine. It’s a fact that rents go up across all forms of U.S. housing, as do all related costs, and it’s called “inflation”. But to pretend that this property is going “backward” in quality, with all the work the new owners are doing, is absolutely absurd. I have NEVER seen a park that was not significantly improved in living conditions under new ownership. Have you?

Tampa Bay Times: ‘I have nothing’: How a mass eviction left retired, disabled Floridians homeless

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On a Sunday evening in December, Angel Rogelio Diaz Franco sprawled on a dingy twin mattress in the van he now calls home. Looking around, he squinted. The sole source of light inside came from a small flashlight, which cast a dull-white glow over a bedside tray loaded with pill bottles and a floor fan that circulated the van’s hot, stale air.

Tan carpeting ran up the walls and windows to keep out the sun and any inquisitive eyes. Up near the cab, a toilet seat rested atop a five-gallon orange bucket.

Franco, 58, has been living in the van since October, when he was evicted from his home of 19 years in Sweetwater’s Li’l Abner Mobile...

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And another park bites the dust.

VC Star: Santa Paula commission punts decision on raising mobile home park rent

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The Santa Paula rent review commission voted to delay a decision to mid-January on a nearly 50% rent increase for residents of a mobile home park after a three-hour hearing.

The commission, appointed by the city council, voted 2-0 to continue its meeting to approve a 47% per space increase, or $218.17 more a month, at 400 Mobile Estates, located at 400 Craig Drive. 

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Before the Santa Paula commission makes its final decision, they might want to be advised that LOW LOT RENT= REDEVELOPMENT. You can have low lot rents and demolished parks, or high lot rents and sustainable parks, but you can’t have low lot rents and sustainable parks. Never going to happen.

Sun Journal: Auburn mobile home park residents to seek moratorium on rent increases

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Residents of three Auburn mobile home parks hope the City Council will put a pause on rent increases following steep hikes over the past year.

Ja-Lynne Mobile Home Park, Washington Street Mobile Home Park and Stevens Mill Mobile Home Park have experienced high increases in lot rents recently, as much as $110 for some residents last fall, according to Dan Neumann of the Maine Labor Climate Council.

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What happened to Maine that made it into a nutcase powerhouse? Look, there are very few mobile home parks in Maine to begin with, so it’s not a big industry issue. But it IS a big deal if you own a park in Maine, and it’s completely unfair and literally raw socialism at its finest. Since it’s a Democrat “trifecta” state the concept of rent control is always in play. The State was trifecta red from 1854 to 1954 and then literally went off the rails. And it’s not really working out well for them as the Maine’s economy is ranked #43 out of 50 states. If you really get upset, you might want to boycott Maine’s products but … there really aren’t any.

WRAL: Cary mobile home residents face displacement as Chatham Estates sells for redevelopment

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A Cary couple is among more than 100 families being forced to leave their neighborhood after plans to sell the property were announced. 

On Monday, residents in the Chatham Estates mobile home park community were told they have six months to vacate, leaving many uncertain about what lies ahead.

The mobile home community has been tucked away off Maynard Road for decades. It has been a home to Steve and Ann Curlee since 1988.

"It's a lot of unanswered questions,” Ann Curlee said.

The thought of leaving is something she said is too much to bear.

“Not knowing where we'll be going and whether we're going to fit into it or not,” she...

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And another park bites the dust.

CBS NEWS: Residents at Pacific Palisades mobile home park frustrated after property remains untouched with debris

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The Pacific Palisades fire was a year ago. Since then, only 10 homes have been rebuilt out of around 7,000 homes burned down. And amidst the backdrop of this most inept leadership, the paper dares to write an article condemning a mobile home park for not picking up all the debris that nobody else has yet either? What a bunch of hypocritical idiots!

nbc4i: Mobile home park again at center of proposed Dublin development

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DUBLIN, Ohio (WCMH) — A proposed development that would surround an existing mobile home park in Dublin drew renewed scrutiny from residents and mixed reactions from city planners this month, as developers presented revisions aimed at reducing density and expanding green space.

Columbus-based Casto is seeking approval for Avery Crossing, a development spanning more than 120 acres at the southwest corner of Avery and Rings roads. The project would incorporate the 24-acre Ponderosa Mobile Home Estates, a senior community with 107 homes that Casto purchased in 2022.

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One Ponderosa resident told commissioners she fears being forced out if rents rise as development proceeds around the community.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that the mobile home park is clearly not the highest and best use for this property. Clearly, anyone can see that, right? How can you think that a mobile home park on just one level can equate to the value of multi-story housing options that charge rents five times larger per month?

News Observer: Residents worry about what will happen if Cary mobile home park closes

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In the middle of Chatham Estates Mobile Home Park, a little girl in a pink Bluey shirt spins herself around atop a concrete slab. She twirls with her blue backpack in her outstretched hand — bunny ears on the top and a mermaid stitched on the side.

The two red brick stairs just a few feet from the girl used to lead to the floor of a pavilion with tin roofing, where Chatham Estates residents gathered for monthly meetings.

To the right of the pavilion, there used to be a playground with swings and slides. The school bus stopped right at the intersection, so the kids came to play while the mothers watched. Both the pavilion and playground...

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Since Westbrook put the property up for sale over two years ago, some residents have since moved, but most of the roughly 700 residents couldn’t afford to. Emidia Roblero, a WakeMed housekeeper, said they likely couldn’t afford to live in Wake County — much less Cary, where the average rent is $2,100 a month, according to Zillow. Residents pay $400 a month for a plot on Chatham Estates.

Since the very first issue of this weekly news review and discussion I have used the simple formula that sums up all of these types of articles: LOW LOT RENTS = REDEVELOPMENT. Why would anyone think that when apartments rent for $2,100 per month you would keep a mobile home park going for $400 a month and NOT SIMPLY REDEVELOP INTO APARTMENTS FOR $2,100 PER MONTH? Imagine a farmer that can either grow a crop that nets $1,000 per acre or one that nets $10,000 per acre – which would he choose to plant?

And, as always, another park bites the dust.

The Daily Journal: Mobile homes could make a comeback on the Peninsula

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Jaime Prieto and Migdal Ibarra have moved multiple times over the last several years, from the Peninsula to Manteca, Newark and back to San Mateo County.

After living with their daughter and four grandchildren for a little while, they decided it was time to move back to get their own space and be closer to their jobs.

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Prieto, who works at an auto body shop, and Ibarra, who works at Walmart and is also a cleaner, could no longer afford an apartment in the area, but the couple was lucky enough to secure a spot at a mobile home park in Redwood City. But that’s when other problems started to arise. The couple settled on something within their budget, but unlike manufactured homes, RVs and trailers are often financed like car loans, yielding much higher interest rates than traditional home loans. Even with decent credit, the couple ended up with a 27% interest rate.

I’m guessing the real reason this couple is paying 27% interest is that they fall into the credit grouping known as “subprime” with a credit score of 500 to 600. How do I know? Here’s what Google says about car loans (which has even lower interest rates than RVs):

Typical Rate Ranges by Credit Score (Approximate): 

  • Superprime (780+): New car: ~4.9-5.1%; Used car: ~7.4-7.5%
  • Prime (660-780): New car: ~6.5%; Used car: ~9.7%
  • Nonprime (600-660): New car: ~9.8-10%; Used car: ~14.1%
  • Subprime (500-600): New car: ~13-13.3%; Used car: ~19% 

Whoever wrote this article knows nothing about credit and interest rates and is trying to build a case that doesn’t exist, namely that – once again – capitalism is evil and takes advantage of everyone.