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KVOA: Tucson's Redwood Mobile Park hit with cease-and-desist from AG Mayes

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TUCSON, Ariz. (KVOA) - Attorney General Kris Mayes is taking action against Redwood Mobile Park in Tucson due to ongoing issues with electricity and air conditioning outages.

These outages are occurring during life-threatening heat conditions, posing a severe risk to residents, including vulnerable groups like infants, children and seniors.

"Mobile homes heat up incredibly fast. These conditions aren’t just dangerous – they’re deadly," said Mayes.

She emphasized the necessity of electricity and air conditioning as life-saving measures, particularly in the current extreme temperatures.

The Attorney General's Office issued a...

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An official from the Boa Vida Communities made a statement saying, "We have been in touch with Attorney General Heather Hamel on this matter over the past week. On Friday August 8th we inspected each space within the community with a licensed electrician. At that time, it was determined that there were numerous unpermitted alterations made by residents, which cause the power draw to greatly exceed the capacity of the system. These alterations are causing the main fuses to trip, interrupting service for them and their neighbors. Each resident is provided with 50-amp service, by bypassing or altering this without our knowledge or approval they are drawing more energy than the system can provide. This can and has caused outages either localized to their space or street, or even effecting the entire community," said Josh Court of Boa Vida Communities."We will continue to work with licensed electricians to make any repairs or changes needed to ensure the system is being used as designed, and ensure that our residents do not experience interruptions caused by other residents tampering with system," Court said. 

So what you basically have here is a master-metered electrical system with tenants deliberately exceeding the allowable amps by putting in window air-conditioners in excess of what’s allowed, which results in lines melting and fuses blowing. The guilty parties here are clearly the tenants who are cheating and not the park owner.

WBUR: Montana tries to protect residents from rising mobile home park rents

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Manufactured homes are sometimes the last option for affordable housing. As private investors buy up parks, some states aim to protect residents from rapid rent increases.

Montana Public Radio’s Shaylee Ragar reports.

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Our thoughts on this story:

This must be a friend of the woke journalist from last week’s “we need rent control in Montana” story. Here are the facts. Montana is a trifecta Republican state. In all of America history, rent control has only been adopted in trifecta Democrat states. As a result, there is ZERO chance of rent control in Montana. 

The Bellingham Herald: As rent climbs at Bellingham manufactured home park, many there feeling trapped

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In March of 2024, when the Lakeway Estates manufactured home community in Bellingham was purchased by HavenPark Communities, a subsidiary of a private equity firm, a resident told The Bellingham Herald that nobody there planned to complain until there was “good reason.” Now, more than a year after the $41 million sale, the senior residents say many of them are being priced out of the park due to hefty increases in lot rent. “We live here. This is our home. They don’t care that we are people, that we live in this park. To them, we are an investment,” said one resident. The Herald spoke with five longtime residents of the park who requested...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Maybe the idiot bureaucrats of Washington state should have thought this whole “rent control” thing through a little bit more before they blundered into it. Most mobile home park owners try to keep their annual rent increases to single-digit levels, even though market rents would allow for 50% in some cases. But when a state decides to “stick it” to landlords with rent control, the landlords have no choice but to return the favor to protect their investment. If Washington bureaucrats had simply not adopted what has proven to be the dumbest woke initiative since “defund the police” then the rents would have remained lower. But they chose this idiotic course and now they are guaranteed to have zero housing investment and massive numbers of parks redeveloped into other uses that do not have restricted rents.

In summary, Washington state politicians made a tremendous blunder and they will soon face the consequences. Just watch.

Adirondack Daily Enterprise: Lake Placid approves loan for Cascade Acres

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LAKE PLACID — Residents of the Cascade Acres mobile home park have secured funding from the state and village in a last-minute attempt to stop the sale of the land that their 124 manufactured homes sit on by matching an offer from a private equity firm, allowing the residents to exercise their right of first refusal.

The residents’ purchase offer had not been accepted by deadline on Thursday evening and was still being debated by lawyers. But Cascade Acres resident and homeowners association co-founder Ryan Preston was hopeful it will work.

The village board held a special meeting on Tuesday to unanimously approve a loan of up to $420,000...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Yes, this is the same story as last week, in which the residents are trying to convince non-profits to buy them a park for over $1 million more than it is appraised for. This transaction has zero percent chance of ever closing and the tenants need to give up and move on and stop wasting everyone’s time.

Times Union: Malta mobile home park residents say they are being wrongly cited for code violations

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MALTA — A group of residents in Saratoga County’s largest mobile home park, Malta Gardens, has claimed that a part-time code enforcement officer for the town is harassing them by recently issuing numerous code violations at several homes. As they struggle to contest the validity of violations or remedy the issues, they fear they could lose their homes.

In March, park resident Patrick Allen received a letter from the town alleging he was violating state and town codes by having an unregistered camper in his driveway, having certain items on his porch, including plywood he was using to repair a floor, a grill and a garbage bag.

“There was no...

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Our thoughts on this story:

I guarantee you that if we drove around that town, we would find many worse violations in every single-family home neighborhood. This is not the first time a rogue inspector has decided to make it his life’s mission to harass good-natured mobile home park residents. The only way to cure it would be for each and every resident to demand a jury trial. That would clog up the courthouse docket so bad they would cry for mercy. 

Calgary Herald: Second generation: Former mobile home parks are growing up

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New life is being breathed into the former Blackfoot Mobile Home Park, a choice 17-acre site on Blackfoot Trail between Southland Drive and Heritage Drive S.E.

Purchased by real estate developer Bud Mintoft in 1967, the treed site on an escarpment west of the Bow River was once home to a closely knit neighbourhood of 400 people. Years after Mintoft’s death in 1988, his company, Wentworth Development Inc., acquired 33 acres next door. When the last home on wheels was rolled out of the park in 2022, the whole package was sold to multi-family builder Cedarglen Living. In homage to the original orchestrator of the community, this...

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And another park bites the dust.

Business Journal: Junction CRE to build industrial park on former mobile home site in northwest Harris County

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The sale of the former mobile home park property made news months ago as residents were evicted. The new owner has now revealed what's coming in its place.

 

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And another park bites the dust.

CBS NEWS: Woman charged with disorderly conduct at Li'l Abner Mobile Home Park management office goes to trial

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Woman charged with disorderly conduct at Li'l Abner Mobile Home Park management office goes to trial.

Ivan Taylor reports Vivian Hernandez faces three misdemeanor charges. Hernandez said she wants to go to trial, insisting she did nothing wrong.

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Our thoughts on this story:

Back in the 1990s, James Carville (who worked for Bill Clnton) famously said "drag a hundred-dollar bill through a trailer park, no telling what you're going to find” as his reaction to Paula Jones accusing Bill Clinton of sexual assault. This entire debacle at Lil’ Abner mobile home park just keeps getting weirder and weirder. Every week there seems to be a new lawsuit by tenants who were told to move out for redevelopment months ago. You could probably just mount cameras in this park and produce a #1 rated reality television show.

Petaluma Argus-Courier: Petaluma tweaks mobile home rules despite threats of legal action from park owners

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Last Monday’s Petaluma City Council meeting went late into the night, and at least 50 mobile home residents – some wearily holding signs reading “Support Petaluma Mobile Homes” – stayed in anticipation.

Mobile home residents from Youngstown, Little Woods Mobile Villa and Capri Mobile Villa remained in the council chambers to watch city leaders close what they consider to be loopholes in the law allowing mobile home park owners to bleed them dry with nonstop arbitration hearings.

Every time mobile home park owners propose a rent increase above a certain threshold, an arbitration hearing is triggered, costing park residents tens of...

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Both council members asked questions others didn’t, such as whether owners were consulted and what could happen if parks closed. They also underscored the threat of legal retaliation. That threat was all but assured. In an email to the Argus-Courier on Wednesday, Davies said that Harmony “should have multiple suits on file” in the coming weeks, with more expected after.

I hope Petaluma has a big line item in their city budget for legal fees, or otherwise they have really screwed themselves. Common sense tells you they are going to lose this case and, if they do, the parks will also be able to get judgements against the city for their legal fees and damages.

Is this really the best way for Petaluma to spend their tax dollars – to squander millions to appease maybe fifty vocal mobile home park residents? Looks pretty stupid to me.

I also like the obvious fact that this whole bit of idiocy is being orchestrated by some “Soros-inspired” political action group – just look at how professional those protest signs are! I couldn’t get stuff that nice printed at Fastsigns. Are the folks holding these up even actual residents or just being paid to be there? Doesn’t look very authentic to me.

Business Observer: $30M redevelopment heads to former Wimauma mobile home park

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Construction of a self-storage facility at Winchester Center is planned to begin this month. The three-story, 934-unit center is being built by Barron Collier Cos. and Metro Commercial at the retail development on Immokalee Road and Orange Tree Boulevard in Naples. The facility, on 2.8 acres, will be operated by StorQuest. It is scheduled to open late next year. The 21-acre Winchester Center, when complete, will have 41,836 square feet of commercial space and a tenant line up that includes anchor Sunshine Ace Hardware, with a 22,650-square-foot store, as well as a two-story NCH Immediate Care and Physician Offices. The other tenants to...

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And another park bites the dust.

MITCHELL NOW: Mitchell Nets $2 in Trailer Auction at City-Owned Mobile Home Park

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The City of Mitchell netted just $2 in a recent auction of trailers located in its city-owned mobile home park near Hitchcock Park. Held on Wednesday, the auction offered three trailers and one building, but drew only two bidders. Two trailers sold for $1 each, while the remaining trailer and house received no bids and are slated for demolition.

The city of Mitchell made just $2 at an auction for trailers in its city-owned mobile home park near Hitchcock Park. The Wednesday auction offered three trailers and one building, with only two bidders participating. Two trailers sold for $1 each, while one trailer and a house received no bids and...

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Our thoughts on this story:

I could have told these idiots that selling old mobile homes in an auction format like that would be a total failure. I’ve been to these type of tax sales and nobody ever shows up to bid. Bureaucrats should stick with things that they’re good at … which is basically nothing.

EHN: Millions in mobile home parks face drinking water pollution violations far higher than city utilities

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An Associated Press investigation found widespread failures to meet safe drinking water standards in U.S. mobile home parks, where residents often rely on poorly regulated or untested water systems.

In short:

  • Nearly 70% of mobile home parks with their own water systems violated safe drinking water rules over the past five years, far more than municipal utilities.
  • Aging infrastructure, unregulated water sources, and weak oversight leave many residents exposed to contaminants like arsenic and bacteria.
  • Some states, including Utah and Colorado, have begun...
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Our thoughts on this story:

This is a regurgitation of the same article as last week, only with even more factual blunders. Let’s start with the obvious. The article is only talking about parks with water wells. That’s maybe 10% of all parks (probably more like 5%). Roughly 8% of Americans live in “trailers”, but less than half of that number live in mobile home parks, with the other half residing on their own private land. So here’s the actual math: 300 million Americans times 3% = 9 million Americans. Then multiply that number by 10% and you get 900,000. Then take away all the water wells that are properly permitted and maintained (about 50% according to the article, which I will bet $100 is completely wrong and more like 90%) and you have 450,000 people. So the title should be “hundreds of thousands” and not “millions”, even based on the writer’s faulty figures and logic.

But then there are other difficulties with the stats here. This entire article series is not based on any actual data but extrapolating some bureaucrat’s opinion regarding only the mobile home parks of Utah. Utah, and that region of the U.S., has some of the worst contaminants of water – including arsenic – that require methods of active extraction. In most of the other states, all you have to contend with is adding chlorine for water purification. So that’s hardly a fair data set to base assumptions on.

There are definitely “trailer parks” out there that have unlicensed water wells with zero supervision. We’ve all driven through their muddy roads where the homes lack skirting and the tenants lack shoes. Nobody buys those, and they remain in the hands of the original mom and pop builders for an eternity. But to claim that those properties are a fair representation of all the properties with licensed water wells that are regularly inspected based on state, county and city laws is ludicrous.  

News Gazette: Local developers plan to redevelop Rantoul trailer park into apartments

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RANTOUL — In 2018, Todd Modglin and his father, Kevin, bought a small parcel hosting about a dozen trailer homes in west Rantoul through their property management company, KTRM LLC.

Now, seven years later, the pair — who are also the CFO and president at Mid Illinois Concrete and Excavation Inc., respectively — are looking to redevelop the 0.68-acre site.

Todd Modglin told The News-Gazette he and his father feel the trailers have begun to “age out a little bit and were going to need some updating.”

“We own other rental properties in Rantoul,” he said. “And the last couple of years, we’ve gotten a lot of requests for higher-end rentals,...

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And another park bites the dust.

WUSF: When even manufactured housing becomes unaffordable

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Homeowners in Florida are being quietly priced out of their communities. People often own their manufactured homes but rent the lot underneath them.

Census data shows lot rent in the state has nearly doubled over the last decade. That means manufactured housing parks, which are considered the largest source of unsubsidized affordable housing, are now growing unaffordable.

Under Florida law, management can pass along fees, like utility charges and property tax increases, as long as they are considered “reasonable” and are mentioned in a park’s original governing document, which is called a .

WUSF spoke with various homeowners who...

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Our thoughts on this story:

I’m not sure what they mean by “unaffordable” but it’s an absolute fact that lot rent, insurance, property tax, utilities – pretty much everything related to owning a single-family home, condo, or mobile home – is going up at a rapid pace. Who’s to blame? Not park owners. We’re the folks that have delivered the least expensive form of detached housing America has ever seen. The actual culprit is inflation, which has been the direct result of government over-spending (we’ve got $36 trillion in debt) and other failed policies. If you want to hate someone, hate the government. But blaming mobile home park owners for all the ills of America is ridiculous.

The Islander: Pines Trailer Park homeowners v. PPI hearing pushed back

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A hearing to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the Pines Trailer Park homeowners association against the park owner was pushed to late August.

Originally set for July 28, the hearing was rescheduled for Aug. 29 before 12th Judicial Circuit Judge Edward Nichols via Zoom.

According to court documents, the park owners’ attorney, Pines Park Investors LLC, Shawn Arbeiter, requested the delay. A reason was not stated for the scheduling change.

The homeowners association at the trailer park, 103 Church Ave., filed a lawsuit March 28 against PPI, a corporation managed by developer Shawn Kaleta. The HOA alleges a series of violations related to an...

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And another park bites the dust.

Post Independent: Two mobile home parks accept offer for resident ownership following initial rejection

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The current owners of Mountain Valley Mobile Home Park and Aspen-Basalt Mobile Home Park on Monday, July 28, accepted an offer from the residents of those parks to purchase the communities for $42 million. 

The two communities have been working towards converting their respective mobile home parks into “Resident-Owned Communities,” or ROCs. An ROC functions similarly to a mortgage on a standard house; however, instead of one person paying their mortgage monthly, the entire community pays it down as rent. 

The communities have been working with Thistle, a Boulder-based non-profit that manages various affordable housing schemes in Boulder,...

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Our thoughts on this story:

We’ve sold a few mobile home parks to the residents over the years. There’s nothing wrong with that. When the non-profits offer you $42 million for two “trailer parks” any smart person would say “yes., yes, yes”. It’s not rocket science. But will they actually close on the deal? That’s the big question.

Adirondack Daily Enterprise: Residents resist purchase of Cascade Acres

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LAKE PLACID — Residents of the Cascade Acres mobile home park are attempting a last-ditch effort to keep a private equity firm from buying the park land that their 124 manufactured homes sit on, over concerns that a new owner could lead to lot rent increases.

A rumor has sprung up that the buyer plans to replace the mobile homes with condos. This is not substantiated, though, and owners of the company say they have no such plans.

Cascade Acres is currently owned by M.H. Communities Ltd., a mobile home park owner based in Nashua, New Hampshire. In March, residents learned of plans to sell the park to the private equity firm Crown...

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But, one week ago, they learned the state cannot buy the property. The appraisal for the 52-acre property came back $1.1 million below the $6.5 million offer from Crown, Preston said. By law, the state cannot pay more than the appraised value.

Yeah, that’s kind of a deal killer. Clearly, the only way to buy the park is to factor in raising the lot rent to market levels and filling vacant lots.  And that pretty much sums up why these “tenant-owned” deals never happen, because they’re not professional deal makers and have zero common sense on the requirements of how to put big mortgages on properties and actually pay the bills.

JOLT: Olympia City Council seeks creative solution to protect manufactured home communities

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The Olympia City Council is exploring ways to preserve manufactured home communities by addressing land use concerns not covered by the state of Washington's rent stabilization law.  

At a study session held on Tuesday, July 29, Olympia Housing Program Senior Specialist Christa Lenssen discussed the state's newly enacted House Bill 1217, which introduces measures for rent stability and tenant rights, as well as protections for manufactured home communities.  

Under the legislation, landlords are restricted from increasing rent by more than 5% annually and are prohibited from raising rents during the first 12 months of tenancy.  

While the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

While the bill focuses on rent-related protections, it does not address land use concerns or prevent the redevelopment of manufactured home parks.  But the underlying issue is that property owners can redevelop their land according to zoning allowances, potentially replacing manufactured home communities with apartments, townhouses or commercial developments.  

Well, they finally figured it out. When you enact rent control, mobile home park owners simply tear their parks down and build back better uses. Maybe they should have thought of that first?

AXIOS: Rising lot rents squeeze Florida mobile home park residents, report says

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Rising lot rents are pricing Floridians out of manufactured home parks, according to a new report from WUSF.

Why it matters: Manufactured home parks are "a crucial source of unsubsidized affordable housing for vulnerable individuals," the report says.

  • Residents are often older, retired adults on fixed incomes.

How it works: Manufactured homes, also known as mobile homes, are generally much cheaper than single-family homes built on site.

  • Residents typically buy their own homes and pay rent for the land underneath.

State of play: From 2015 to 2023, Florida's median lot rent has almost doubled, per WUSF, citing Census Bureau... Read More

Our thoughts on this story:

EVERYTHING squeezes Florida mobile home park residents. Gasoline, food, medicine, insurance, property tax, cable TV, cell phone, water, sewer, trash – you name it. How can you single out lot rent as the only culprit? Look, we live in a country which has the highest inflation and interest rates in 40 years. That’s not the fault of mobile home park owners. I seriously doubt that anyone – including the residents quoted in the story – really believe that. They’re just hoping they’ll get lucky and some bureaucrat will propose rent control. Here’s a news bulletin: there’s 0% probability of rent control in Florida. But if you want to propose it in Vermont, you might have a shot.

Time Standard: ‘You are heard’: Fortuna council agrees to talk mobile home rent stabilization at a later date

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The Fortuna City Council has agreed to discuss rent stabilization for manufactured home parks, after hearing pleas from seniors who say they are being priced out of Royal Crest Mobile Estates. The council, earlier this week, unanimously voted to discuss park rent stabilization in a future meeting.

City Manager Amy Nilsen said during the meeting there are steps and meetings needed before voting on a completed ordinance — the timing of the next session to workshop the idea depends on the hiring of an attorney experienced on the topic. She said a discussion could possibly be held in the second council meeting of August at the earliest, but...

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Our thoughts on this story:

I used to be on the Landmarks Commission in my small town. Occasionally we would have some nutty group come down to city hall and rant and rave about something and we’d say things like “you are heard” to get them to shut up and leave. That’s all the Fortuna council did here. There’s absolutely nothing of value in their declaration. It’s like when Teddy Roosevelt would tell the Indians “we shall endeavor to persevere”. Just verbal garbage, nothing more.

Santa Maria Sun: County supervisors amend zoning to protect senior mobile home parks

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Almost 7,000 seniors populate housing authority waitlists for affordable senior housing in Santa Barbara County.

“In the face of such high demand, the preservation of existing affordable housing, including mobile home parks, is clearly important,” county planner Lila Spring said at the July 15 Board of Supervisors meeting. “However, the county lacks regulations to prevent the conversion of senior mobile home parks.”

But by the end of the meeting, that was no longer the case. 

Supervisors passed zoning ordinance amendments to preserve existing mobile home parks in the unincorporated areas of the county and prevent the conversion of senior...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Bureaucrats may be able to force owners to deny residency to non-seniors, but they won’t be able to stop them from tearing their parks down and putting up more profitable uses.

Mass Live: Housing Court judge denies landlord’s request to stay a rent reduction at Ludlow mobile home park

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SPRINGFIELD — The rents at a mobile home community in Ludlow will return to previous, lower rates until the town’s Rent Control Board follows procedure, a judge has ruled.

Judge Jonathan J. Kane ordered on July 10 that monthly rents — which residents pay to live on their lots at the West Street Village Mobile Home Community — will return to $207, a rate that they were paying in 2023.

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Our thoughts on this story:

I have three main takeaways from this article:

  1. If anyone thinks that a $207 per month lot rent is sustainable in a town with $293,000 single-family home prices and $1,510 per month apartment rents, then you’re too dumb to argue with. Clearly, this owner needs to tear the park down immediately and redevelop into apartments or any other use. I’m sure they’re calling the land brokers right now.
  2. The protestors’ signs in the photo are all professionally made and NOT by the residents. This is clearly the work of a well-funded “Free Rent Movement” group. The residents are simply pawns in this game.
  3. Massachusetts is a state filled with political and judicial nut cases.

So let me now tell the judge and tenants what will happen next:

  1. The park owner will find a better use for the property and give the tenants termination notices.
  2. The residents will have to leave and will find all other housing options cost literally ten times more than the park did.
  3. The political action group that is funding and promoting this nonsense won’t even take the tenants’ phone calls when they realize they’ve been played for fools.
  4. The residents end up 100% screwed and the park owner ends up with a more successful use that makes ten times more money than the park ever did.

How do I know? That’s how these situations always turn out.

KAALTV: New study shows drinking water in 68% of mobile home parks is unsafe

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(ABC 6 News) — If you live in a mobile home, a new study says your drinking water may be unsafe.

The Associated Press reports 68% of mobile home parks that run their own water systems violated safe drinking water rules in the last five years.

For comparison, city water systems come in 20 points lower at 48%. More alarmingly, many parks go completely unregulated.

The study comes after EPA research into a cancer cluster in California traced back to high arsenic levels.

Nationwide, nearly 17 million Americans live in mobile homes.

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Our thoughts on this story:

Great headline for sensationalism, but then you read in the article that it’s NOT 68% of mobile home parks that supposedly have water issues but only 68% of those with their own well water. But then the argument gets even weaker when it’s revealed that the “68%” number is not rooted in science but merely an estimate based on a micro-sampling of a few small trailer parks in western states, which sometimes have a very high degree of carcinogens in their water supply that can’t be cured with simply chlorine. The reality is that maybe 10% of U.S. mobile home parks are on well water and, of those, all of the institutional-quality ones are tested monthly and in 100% compliance. So when you take the supposed 68% and apply it to roughly 10% of mobile home parks on well water, that’s just 7%. But then you take off all those professionally-managed parks and leave just those nasty 1-star slum trailer parks down by the river and you are probably at 2% or less of all parks. So shouldn’t the headline actually read “New Study Shows Drinking Water in 98% of Mobile Home Parks is Safe”? Absolutely!

Next City: As Private Equity Squeezes Mobile Home Parks for Profit, Residents Fight Back

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This story is part of a series on manufactured housing and solutions to help mitigate threats facing mobile home residents. Read our previous pieces on the health impacts of private equity ownership and historic preservationists’ role in protecting these communities.

Marjory Gilsrud and Yvonne Maldonado have never met. They live in separate manufactured home communities, more than a thousand miles apart from each other. But both women, as leaders in the tenant associations at their respective parks, are fighting the same threat as they work to preserve one of the last bastions of affordable homeownership.

Home to some 22 million...

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Our thoughts on this story:

The media regurgitates this story every week. Look, if you think that private equity groups are evil then you better go on Google and look up all the holdings by Carlysle, Apollo – and hundreds of others – and you’ll realize that pretty much everything you do or use on a daily basis is owned by private equity groups. As a result, you’ll have to move to an island in South America and live in a tent to escape the reach of what you believe to be Satan. Smart people realize that private equity groups inject millions of dollars into their mobile home park holdings to bring them back to life and nobody else has the money to do so in a big way. Thank God they exist.

Second Wave Media: Preserving Homes, Changing Lives

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Across the country, community development financial institutions (CDFIs) such as IFF are changing lives. These specialized financial organizations support nonprofits, small businesses, and individuals in low-income areas who may have difficulty accessing traditional banking services. Their aim is to promote economic development, affordable housing, and community growth – and that is exactly how IFF is helping Detroit Phoenix Center (DPC), and Family Promise of West Michigan. 

"By investing into our organization, they're also investing into the community, and hundreds of young people, potentially thousands, are going to be served," says...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Read this:

Recently, IFF closed a $430,000 loan that provided DPC with financing for the purchase of a 40-foot recreational vehicle (RV).

OK, now read that again.

If you are thinking WTF then you have common sense. If you are thinking “I don’t get it” then you must have worked in the Biden administration.