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The Post and Courier: SC's biggest bank sells its manufactured housing business to Warren Buffett's company

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The largest bank headquartered in South Carolina has sold its manufactured housing loan portfolio at a loss to a company backed by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, describing the specialty financing niche as a distraction.

The Greenville-based parent of United Community Bank said Sept. 3 that the deal was finalized late last week. The buyer of the loans, totaling more than $318 million, was 21st Mortgage Corp., a division of Berkshire-owned manufactured housing developer Clayton Homes.

United Community said it expects to book a onetime $21.6 million loss on the sale when its reports its third-quarter financial results later this year....

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It’s really hard to lose money financing mobile homes in mobile home parks that are “backstopped” by the park owners (the model that Buffett created) and incredibly easy to lose money on financing mobile homes without the park owner being involved in “backstopping” them (just ask any mobile home lender on their results from the year 2000 “Great Chattel Crisis”). Once again, park owners get zero credit for this invaluable service they provide their residents. Does that seem unfair? It does to me.

wvtf: Charlottesville's ground-breaking approach to protecting trailer park residents

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Nancy Lee Sprouse moved to Charlottesville 12 years ago after a visit from her long-distance boyfriend who had lived here all his life.

"One time when he had to leave we had gone to Walmart, and I started crying, because he had to leave," she recalls. "I said, ‘I just don’t want you to leave,’ and he asked me to marry him right by Walmart, so I said yes, and that's how I got here."

Today, she and her husband – Jimmy – are active in their church, a few blocks from home, and they’re living on a pension, so when word came that the Carlton Mobile Home Park was being sold and they’d be evicted, Nancy was distraught.

"We couldn’t afford to move...

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Then, one of her neighbors reached out to Dan Rosensweig at Habitat for Humanity." A woman from the mobile home park came to our office in a panic," he told Radio IQ. "She showed us a note that’s been distributed to all of the residents at Carlton that said the mobile home park is being sold. It was basically a 60-day notice." Working with the Piedmont Housing Alliance, the Legal Aid Justice Center, and park residents, he offered to buy the place with $7.25 million dollars from the city. Over the next three years, Habitat will help residents plan a new community with plenty of affordable housing. No one will be forced to leave, and the group says it won’t raise rent more than $15 a month.

Yes, this is the same story – regurgitated for weeks now -- in which Habitat for Humanity pretends to be the savior of these poor residents who have absolutely no idea what is about to happen. It’s like watching a war movie where the soldiers are walking into an ambush while admiring how nice the weather is. Just look at the wording “… will help residents plan a new community with affordable housing …”. That means the trailer park is going to be torn down and put back as an apartment complex or something other than a mobile home park, in all likelihood. That’s apparently what Habitat has done in the past, according to a park resident in an earlier article. Sure sounds that way to me.

Concord Monitor: New Hampshire celebrates 150th resident-owned community, leading the nation in affordable homeownership

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New Hampshire is known for many firsts: the first to declare independence from England, and its first-in-the-nation primary. 

New Hampshire is also the first state where residents of a manufactured housing community purchased their park, forming a cooperative to retain control over bylaws, like lot rent, to maintain affordability within their community.

Derry Oak Village, a 27-home park, celebrated a milestone this week as the 150th resident-owned community in the state.

Owning a manufactured home can be a path to affordable homeownership – and a way for many to downsize – but purchasing a home in a park means that the resident owns the...

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If you go to the website of ROC – who has been, to my knowledge, the most prolific promoter of “resident owned communities” – you will see that virtually all of their properties have been in New Hampshire. You will also see that there are very, very, very few properties that have ever been successfully made into tenant ownership. We’ve sold several properties to the residents – so we are no stranger to the concept – but I wonder if U.S. politicians are aware of how incredibly few of these transactions have ever happened. The bureaucrats spend so much time talking about this concept, and even passing laws regarding it, without probably realizing that they actually go to completion at an incredibly low statistical level. It’s like spending time legislating new laws to protect polar bears that are hit by lighting and then hit by a meteorite.

The Paducah Sun: More affordable housing coming to Southside Paducah

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More than 50 new affordable homes will be coming to Southside Paducah, according to management at a mobile home park.

Country Aire Mobile Homes in Paducah is developing its property as part of a plan to bring more economic development to the neighborhood. Management said the goal is to bring more affordable housing to the community.

All reservations are expected to be completed by next January. Solsidan Management Co. Inc. is investing about $2 million in the property, and property manager Amy Fritts said more affordable housing in Paducah is crucial — especially amid the national housing shortage.

Additionally, mobile home park is...

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Jon Stratton has called the Southside community home for 21 years. “Southside’s been dying for a long time now. It’s been happening probably over the last 12, 15 years that I’ve noticed,” Stratton said. “And I feel like the whole economy on this side needs to be rejuvenated.”

Finally, a truthful quote from a “normal” resident – and not some nut case who would choose a bucket over a toilet if it saves $3. This is what 99.9% of park residents really think about park improvements and higher rents – they are 100% on-board with it. It’s about time that the media starts interviewing the nice people with nice homes, yards and cars and not the .01% of park residents who could care less about their quality of life as long as it saves 50 cents.

KSBW: Watsonville recommends regulating mobile home park sales

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he Watsonville Planning Commission recommends new regulations to prevent the sale of mobile home parks to developers, aiming to protect affordable housing options in the city.

In Watsonville, mobile home parks make up 6% of the total housing units. Some consider these affordable housing options.

With rising property values in California, there is a growing concern that developers will buy out entire mobile home parks and displace residents.

"I've got no plan; just hope that the city of Watsonville is going to step up to the plate and basically keep that from happening," said Martin Hathaway, a mobile home park resident.

"I can't go out...

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With rising property values in California, there is a growing concern that developers will buy out entire mobile home parks and displace residents.

No joke. Mobile home parks represent perhaps the most attractive re-development parcels in every market in the U.S. Not only do they have the right size (2 to 10 acres) for virtually every pad user, but they also typically have great street frontage, access to municipal water and sewer, and the city will grant any zoning or variance required to get the “trailer park” torn down. I have long said that eventually somebody would figure this out and build a business model around simply buying parks for the development potential. They’ve already figured this out in California. That’s why the national conversation on mobile home park lot rents needs to be “how high do they need to go to keep mobile home parks from being torn down?”.

my central jersey: 'It's not your grandma's trailer': Mobile homes are affordable solution to homebuyer woes

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Cesar Gaona Jr.’s story is a familiar one.

A native of the Avenel section of Woodbridge in his late 20s, he was excited to buy his first home when he started his search last spring.

But even with his job as a business development manager in the IT sector, he soon found that high interest rates, low inventory and the most competitive real estate market possibly ever stood in his way of fulfilling the American dream of becoming a homeowner.

That was until about five months later when he toured a new unit at the Carteret Mobile Park.

“I purchased the home and I’ve never looked back,” Gaona Jr. said. “It was so unexpected, and it was probably...

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"It's really disappointing that banks are not willing to see how stable the market is for manufactured homes in a land use community," said Dolan.

No, what’s really disappointing is that nobody appreciates the fact that probably 90% of every mobile home loan in a mobile home park is “backstopped” by the park owner in order to get the customer financed. Under that arrangement, if the customer defaults, the park owner has to abate rent, effectively take over payments, renovate the home, run the ads, and get it sold. The media gives 0% attention to this fact. Once again, without mobile home park owners the U.S. supply of affordable housing would be greatly reduced – yet we get zero thanks for that fact!

KLFY: Property developer says Kaplan officials wrongfully prevented mobile home park project

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VERMILION PARISH, La. (KLFY) — A property developer says Kaplan city officials must pay up after violating its property rights.

In a lawsuit recently moved to federal court, the developer claims the city wrongfully rezoned property the developer had purchased and prevented it from creating a mobile home community.

LECO Properties LLC said in the lawsuit that it purchased the property — Legion Park Subdivision — in September 2022. At that time, the property was zoned as an R-2 Residential District, meaning it could be used for mobile homes as long as those homes complied with certain requirements, the developer said.

The developer claims...

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Not to dispense advice – and with the understanding that I am not an attorney and never hope to be one – but here’s what a well-known municipal attorney once told me the attack plan was on cases like this: sue any council member or official who acts out of accordance with the law, in a personal capacity. When they realize that they have personal accountability for their actions – including potentially having to personally pay their own legal defense – they will typically change their vote. I don’t know the details of this case, but that’s an angle that should probably at least be discussed by the owner with his attorney if he feels that this group refused to give him the permit that the ordinance demands he should receive. Most bureaucrats and volunteers in these committees have no idea of the litigation liability dangers they face when they go “rogue” from what the letter of the law states. And, once informed, they may have an immediate attitude adjustment.

realtor.com: Sarah Paulson Offers Major Discount on $2 Million ‘Jewel Box’ Mobile Home in ‘America’s Priciest Trailer Park’

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Sarah Paulson is offering up a very rare opportunity to snag a property in one of the world’s most exclusive (and pricey) trailer parks after putting her mobile home on the market for $1.8 million.

If paying such a hefty sum for a one-bedroom, one-bathroom, transportable trailer seems outrageous, keep in mind that the $1.8 million price tag attached to the home is actually discounted; Paulson, 49, originally put the property on the market back in May with a $2 million ask.

It’s also important to note that the trailer park in question is far from average. In fact, it has actually become known as America’s “most expensive” and “most...

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Located in Malibu, CA, the park, known as Paradise Cove Mobile Home Park, has an illustrious history. In addition to Paulson, the trailer park also counts the likes of Stevie Nicks, Matthew McConaughey, Pamela Anderson, and Minnie Driver among its current and former residents.

Before I ever got into the mobile home park business, I owned billboards including a company I bought during the Los Angeles economy crash at the time of the Rodney King riots and the Northridge earthquake. Back then it was well-known that those mobile home parks were the home to stars on the way up or the way down in their careers. There’s certainly nothing wrong with that role, but to pretend that a 1960s trailer is a “jewel box” is as absurd as pretending that a 1980 Yugo is a “classic high-performance automobile”. Nobody is going to buy that outside of Los Angeles.

The Post and Courier: Rent increases coming to Spartanburg County mobile home parks as new owners plan repairs

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SPARTANBURG — The group of investors who bought four neglected Spartanburg mobile home parks in July plans to fix up the units while also raising rent.

“We're not looking to come in and be the highest rent in the area,” said Tim Woodbridge, one of the investors who made the purchase. “We're looking to increase enough so we can put enough money back into the parks. If you're not making money, you're not putting the money back into the parks, into the homes, and all of a sudden it just cascades into a bad situation.”

The sale was brokered by Marcus and Millichap and includes 98 mobile home lots and two single-family homes.

The parks... Read More

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The group of investors who bought four neglected Spartanburg mobile home parks in July plans to fix up the units while also raising rent. “We're not looking to come in and be the highest rent in the area,” said Tim Woodbridge, one of the investors who made the purchase. “We're looking to increase enough so we can put enough money back into the parks. If you're not making money, you're not putting the money back into the parks, into the homes, and all of a sudden it just cascades into a bad situation.”

I commend the new owners on their narrative to the media, which is that you have to charge higher rent to offer a good, safe product.

And then, of course, the writer can’t help themselves to add this worn-out quote from a resident:

"If they’re doing an increase, they’re gonna put a lot of people out of a place to live".

You can use that same quote on literally every good and service in the U.S. right now, which are up a collective 20%+ under the Biden administration. It’s a meaningless statement. I wrote an article recently in which I highlighted that – under the government’s own budget-setting on-line help site for Americans – it shows that housing is not the #1 cost, but instead ranks behind healthcare, childcare, taxes and even transportation costs. When you get those four solved then you might start complaining about mobile home park rents going up! Give me a break.

CBS News: Despite state violations against a Colorado mobile home park, advocates say park policies exploiting low-income residents have remained for months

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In a follow-up to a CBS News Colorado community investigation first published in July 2023, advocates claim practices at a mobile home park in the Centennial State have continued to exploit the families with lower incomes who have lived there for more than a year, despite a state agency citing the park's owner with several violations. 

The park in question is the Foxridge Farm Mobile Home Park on Colfax, just east of the E-470 and I-70 interchange in Arapahoe County. 

In 2023, CBS News Colorado's Kati Weis spoke with several concerned residents at the park about a host of complaints they had – some people so upset, that they staged a...

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Baez says the real problems remain: parking policies she claims are aggressive and discriminate against the park's lower-income families – policies that she said eliminated free street parking, charged monthly fees for extra parking spaces, and charged additional fees for visitor parking.

Virtually every mobile home park in the U.S. was built for a maximum of two car parking per mobile home. It is not the park owner’s fault that residents have more than two cars. Despite this, most park owners try to accommodate this issue with overflow parking and dicussing if those with one car would allow others to park on their spaces. But the contention that mobile home park owners are required to provide unlimited parking is pure insanity. I dare you to find an apartment or condominium in the U.S. that allows you to park as many cars as you want there.

KRCR: Tehama supervisors debate rent control for mobile home parks in unincorporated areas

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TEHAMA COUNTY, Calif. — The Tehama County Board of Supervisors discussed the potential imposition of rent control requirements upon mobile home parks within the unincorporated areas of the county at their meeting Tuesday night.

The supervisors first approached the topic of rent control in mobile home parks at a meeting back in June and they requested staff bring back more information on it, District 3 Supervisor Pati Nolen has been the main driver of it and explained why at Tuesday's meeting.

"Currently there are 10 counties that have a rent stabilization ordinance that specifically addresses mobile home parks in the unincorporated areas...

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"Currently there are 10 counties that have a rent stabilization ordinance that specifically addresses mobile home parks in the unincorporated areas of their counties,” Nolen said, "We're not talking about section 8, we're not talking about homeless situations but if we don't have this conversation that is exactly what we're talking about."

Oh, I get it, the park owner is responsible for the tenants’ lives in perpetuity and must be held accountable if the tenants fall into Section 8 or homeless status because of their own failure to manage their finances and live in a modern world.

Only in California.

GV Wire: Mobile Home Park Owner Seeks $1M from City of Fresno in Rent Control Dispute

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The owner of a controversial mobile home park is suing the city of Fresno for $1 million, alleging that rent control has cost the company money and diminished the park’s value.

The lawsuit from La Hacienda Mobile Estates says Fresno’s Mobile Home Park Rent Review and Stabilization Commission’s November 2023 decision to only allow a minimum rent increase has prevented the park from being profitable.

“The Commission approved only the minimum annual Consumer Price Index adjustment allowed under the ordinance of 6.6% — amounting to just $24.92 per month and far short of what would be required for La Hacienda to break even,” the lawsuit...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Now this is an interesting article. A rent control board member is accused of deliberately keeping the mobile home park rent increase low in order to try to buy the park themselves at a reduced price. I hope the park owner wins and that puts the fear of God into every other rent control board member out there that they may actually have personal liability from their decisions. It reminds me of the zoning case in Dallas in the 1980s in which a real estate speculator went to the Dallas City Council to renovate an abandoned K-Mart into a movie theater. The neighbors hated the idea and got to the board members and convinced them to vote against it. The property owner reminded the board members that the property already had the zoning for a movie theater and they had no option other than to approve the plans. Nevertheless, the board voted it down. So the developer filed a personal lawsuit on each and every member of the board that voted “no” and within two days they had an emergency meeting and approved the theater.

Amazing how a little personal accountability takes the fun out of things, right?

Bowling Green Daily News: Fate of residents in mobile home park uncertain

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It’s a muggy Monday night, and lawn chairs sit around a glass-top table outside Cindy Floyd’s trailer at the Kentucky Gardens Mobile Home Park, where a meeting of the BG Mobile Homeowners United advocacy group is taking place.

During the meeting, as she watches a group of children play basketball on the nearby street, Floyd expresses worries about her children as they will soon have to move out of the park.

“We have responsibilities to these children to give them a lifestyle they deserve,” Floyd tells the group.

The land on which the mobile home park sits, with some ancillary properties, was purchased by Joy and Eddie Hanks in...

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Our thoughts on this story:

The land on which the mobile home park sits, with some ancillary properties, was purchased by Joy and Eddie Hanks in 2020 for $600,000, with plans to redevelop the park into “Digs on the River,” a 23-acre mixed use area with plans for apartments, a restaurant and commercial space.

What part of the residents’ “fate” is uncertain here? They have been formally given notice to leave and the owners of the property seem to be following all the correct steps.

What’s really interesting is the price paid for the property, which equates to only around $15,000 per space. Once again, this park could maybe have been saved with higher lot rents, as most well-run parks today are worth around $50,000 a space and that would have made the redevelopment plan less appealing.

Once again, as always, LOW LOT RENTS = REDEVELOPMENT.

KJZZ: 'A Decent Home' documents the fight of mobile homeowners for everything they have

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Mobile home parks here and around the country are being bought up by private equity firms and wealthy investors.

It might seem like an odd investment. However, people who live in these parks often own their manufactured homes — but not the land they sit on. And they’re not actually very mobile.

The 2022 documentary “A Decent Home" tells the story of many of these mobile homeowners and their fight to stay in their homes when their rents were raised — or their land was sold out from under them.

Sara Terry spent seven years making the film, and it’s screening Friday, Aug. 30, at Glendale Community College.

Conversation highlights

When did...

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So what private equity found it could do was coming and raise lot rent — sometimes by as much as 60% and 70%. Which, you know, may not sound like much if you're going, "Oh, it went from $320 to $405." But think about if your mortgage was increased by 40%, 60% ... that is a huge impact on people…

No, that’s not correct at all. Raising rents from $320 to $405 is an increase of 27% NOT 60%. If you raise the lot rent from $320 to $405 that’s a $85 increase. The average mortgage payment in the U.S. is $2,715 per month (per Google). If you raised that by 27% that’s a monthly increase of $733 per month. THERE’S NO WAY YOU CAN COMPARE AN INCREASE OF $85 PER MONTH TO AN INCREASE OF $733 PER MONTH – that’s nearly a 10-for1 difference! Using this logic, McDonald’s raising the Dollar Menu price of the McChicken from $1 to $1.60 – a 60% increase – represents a much greater offense and financial burden than either of the above.

When you talk about price increases, the percentage means nothing and the actual amount means everything. If milk goes up 50% and a car goes up 5%, guess which one is a bigger problem for the average U.S. household?

How math challenged is America, anyway?

Yambill County's News-Register: Maybe it's time our planners revived mobile home option

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According to MHVillage, a national mobile home brokerage, a dozen mobile home parks were developed in McMinnville in the quarter century extending from 1972 to 1997. Together, they served to accommodate more than 1,000 units of affordable, factory-built housing for local families.

And in the quarter century since, extending from 1998 to 2023? Nada. Zilch. Zero. Nary a one.

That suggests we are overlooking one of the best options available to meet the demand for habitable quarters at a manageable prince point — a daunting challenge everywhere, but all the more so in a West Coast wine country community marked by soaring lot and home... Read More

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NIMBYism certainly plays a role, but what is it about modern, well-kept developments like Kathleen Manor and Olde Stone Village that puts off prospective neighbors? We find nothing objectionable about them at all.

Whoever wrote this obviously lives in an apartment as no homeowner on earth would welcome a mobile home park being built in their neighborhood. If this writer did own a stick-built home, and there was suddenly a zoning request to build a “trailer park” next door, you know they’d be the first one marching on city hall with a flaming torch. Give me a break.

New England Public Media: Ludlow mobile home residents decry 150% rent hike

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Residents of the West Street Village mobile home park in Ludlow held a rally in front of the Housing Court in Springfield this week.

Residents of the community said the park's owner got permission from the rent control board in Ludlow to raise their lot fees by 150%. They're hoping to have that decision reversed in court.

Debee Boulanger is the vice president of the West Village Homeowner's Association. She said the increase does not reflect the level of care the owner has been put into the park.

"Instead of improving the quality of our life at the park, he did cosmetic things. So it's like if a band aid on a boil or something like that,"...

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Residents of the community said the park's owner got permission from the rent control board in Ludlow to raise their lot fees by 150%. They're hoping to have that decision reversed in court.

So let me get this straight. The park is subject to rent control. The rent control board approved the increase. So how is this even a story? Do the “free rent movement” folks now want a rent control supreme court to watch over the rent control board – just because they don’t like the outcome?

These residents are sending a definite message to the park owner: “time to redevelop into something else”. If they keep this up they won’t have a mobile home park to complain about.

Lynwood Times: The economic eviction crisis in manufactured home communities

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The Baby Boomer generation (those born between 1946 and 1964) has been the driving force for consumption in America’s economy. Gerber’s baby food, Saturday cartoons filled with ads for sugary cereals, hula hoops, teaching the world to sing with Coca Cola are all part of the economic engine fed by the Baby Boomers. But this generation of consumers faces an unsettling reality in retirement.

Every day 10,000 Boomers retire, many surviving on an annual social security income of $15,500, only four hundred dollars above the Federal poverty level. With affordable housing in short supply, seniors have turned to manufactured homes, believing they...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Based on this writer’s arguments, every single product and service in America – which have risen a collective 20% under the Biden administration – is a part of the “economic eviction crisis”. If gas costs $4 a gallon and eggs cost $5 a dozen, that takes away money that could go against higher rents, right?

But the bigger issue – and one that nobody wants to talk about – is the simple fact that seniors may need to move to more inexpensive areas of America in retirement since they no longer need to have access to employment. These type of articles always give the narrative of the expensive urban market with lot rents approaching $1,000 per month as opposed to the rural mobile home parks in states like Arkansas, that rent for $150 per month. And that’s not fair or constructive.

The bottom line is that most seniors, as part of their downsizing in housing and costs, need to move to cheaper states and more rural areas. If they don’t want to do that, then that’s their choice. But the option is always there and if they refuse to embrace it then they shouldn’t complain.

Houston Public Media: Pasadena residents in mobile home community, some evicted, voice concerns about new management

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Patricia Viera is one of a few residents who have been evicted from the land at Parkview Mobile Home Park. Her home is now getting demolished because she couldn’t afford to move.

“I’ve been living here for 15 years,” she said in Spanish. “I work for the hospital at Bayshore. I’ve been sleeping there, showering, and I’ve stayed at the parking lot.”

Residents say new management for the land their homes are on arrived in March and have since been making changes to property rules. People with cars have been told they have to pay to have them parked in the community now, and some of them have lost their dogs because they’re not allowed on the...

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Residents say new management for the land their homes are on arrived in March and have since been making changes to property rules. People with cars have been told they have to pay to have them parked in the community now, and some of them have lost their dogs because they’re not allowed on the property anymore.

One look at the homes in the photo and any idiot can tell why certain residents are being asked to leave. The new owner is obviously trying to bring this downtrodden park back to life and, with progress, some people get displaced.

Park owners can’t win with writers like this. If the new owner left the dilapidated homes alone, they would be tagged as slumlords in these type of articles, and if they get them torn down, they’re identified as being cruel.

You can’t please everyone, so you have to please yourself, your good residents, your bank, your city inspectors and the surrounding community. It’s that simple.

CBS News: Eviction notices given to 100 residents at Miami-Dade mobile home park not legit, county program says

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MIAMI — A Miami-Dade County program providing free legal services has exposed eviction notices that were given to roughly 100 residents living at the Palm Lakes Mobile Home Park weren't legit.

The original eviction notices to vacate were set for July 22 but they were only filed on August 5.

Residents Arnoldo Morales and Delmi Ramirez said living at Palm Lakes is their only option because homes elsewhere in Miami-Dade County are unaffordable.

"What I get monthly from my social security is not enough to pay that kind of rent," Morales said.

He told CBS News Miami he is disabled and his wife is bedridden. Ramirez is a stay-at-home mom who...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Wow, the free legal aid attorney got the residents a few weeks more time. Big deal. The fact is simply that the park is being redeveloped apparently into apartments. It’s the same old adage week after week: LOW LOT RENTS = REDEVELOPMENT. How high would the lot rents have needed to be to make a mobile home park in this location more valuable than an apartment complex? Not sure. But that’s the key issue people need to explore.

FOX 7 Austin: Dripping Springs mobile home residents in danger of becoming homeless

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DRIPPING SPRINGS, Texas - Residents in a mobile home community in Dripping Springs are in danger of becoming homeless. They are pleading for more time after receiving 60-day notices to vacate their homes.

A letter was sent out to 36 families in the Gateway Estates Mobile Home Park in Dripping Springs.

"There are some people who've been here upwards of 20 years," Project Connect Dripping Springs President Martin Garza said.

The letter said the residents need to leave within 60 days.

"There are families, there are kids at the other end of that communication," Garza said.

The notice came on July 29, 2024, just a couple of weeks before the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Another article about a mobile home park being redeveloped into a different use. This only happens when the park does not yield as much income as alternative uses. Want to stop this from accelerating? Stop criticizing higher lot rents. That’s the only thing that can stop the redevelopment mania.

National Mortgage News: New ways the White House, FHA aim to support affordable housing

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The  has undergone significant fluctuations in recent months, as  and mortgage rates rising from COVID-era lows have created a volatile ecosystem.

 to provide homeowners with new avenues of support. These include $100 million of funding through the Department of Housing and Urban Development's Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing program and streamlining the Department of Transportation's DOT loan program.

The first round of grant funding, roughly $85 million, was allocated this year to the first round of PRO Housing...

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For how many years now has the White House and FHA been talking about this topic, with basically zero success so far? The problem is that academics cannot legislate solutions to a free-market problem caused by the simple issue that Biden’s inflation has outpaced workers’ incomes. I don’t see any immediate solution other than for people to accept the need to commute farther out from urban centers. You have to remember that 60 million Americans live on 97% of the land mass and 240 million Americans are jammed into just 3%. The clear solution is for a large portion of those 240 million Americans to move out into the suburbs and exurbs where land and housing is cheaper. It’s not rocket science. Do you remember that chapter back in high school social studies in which 1800’s Americans headed out west in search of cheap land to settle on? Same concept.

MRSC: Six Housing and Planning Bills that Help Washington Communities Confront the Housing Crisis

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This blog includes summaries of six bills related to co-living, parking standards, building conversions, middle housing, residential building and energy codes, and manufactured housing  passed during the most recent short Washington State legislative session. The effective date for these bills was June 6, 2024, unless otherwise noted.

ESHB 1998: Co-Living                                    

From the outside, co-living buildings (also referred to as single-room occupancy, congregate living facilities, boarding houses, and more) often appear as standard multi-family residences, but the sleeping units are usually smaller, and common spaces,...

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What a laughable pile of nonsense. You cannot legislate affordable housing. It has to come from the free market. When bureaucrats pass more regulations, it just hurts more housing from being built, as opposed to helping the situation. You have to have zero common sense to think these six new laws are a step in the right direction.

FOX 17: 'Juntos' community center brings new hope to Franklin trailer park

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FRANKLIN, Tenn. (WZTV) — A Franklin church has built a community center for a working poor trailer park.

When you think of Franklin, Tennessee, how can you think of anything but wealth?

The state Department of Economic Development ranks Williamson County as one of the wealthiest counties in America. But then there’s the Franklin Estates Mobile Home Park—a mostly working class Hispanic community hidden by all the big houses. It hums to its own beat.

The building boom somehow missed the dilapidated convenience store that sits in front of the community, abandoned for a decade. Until the people at Berry’s Chapel Church of Christ decided to...

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Our thoughts on this story:

“We were looking for a place that was almost a presence within this community. And we have members that live within this community, and through them and being around, we noticed ‘hey, there’s a building that’s not being used,” said Pastor Preston Pratt.

We are also big believers in converting every inch of common area in every mobile home park into an amenity for residents. Abandoned clubhouses are low-hanging fruit and, with the addition of working heat and air-conditioning, sturdy carpet, fresh paint, and a vision for what the residents need, we have converted such structures into party areas, game rooms – even libraries.

Getting help from non-profits to augment the amenities is as simple as asking. We converted an old laundry building into a library and the local library donated all of the shelves and books – simply because we called and asked if they could help. We even had a Lions Club donate a giant playground.

Want to enhance your amenities for residents? Call and ask other non-profits.

KGW: Wildfire-destroyed Oregon mobile home park soon to get new housing — 4 years later

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PORTLAND, Ore. — A mobile home park destroyed during the devastating Labor Day wildfires of 2020 is soon to be rebuilt, nearly four years later. 

The Holiday Farm Fire leveled Lazy Days Mobile Home & RV Park near the McKenzie River community of Blue River, displacing dozens of families. 

As part of a wildfire recovery project, around 20 new modular homes are expected to be delivered to the community this fall. 

On Monday, Governor Tina Kotek toured the modular homes factory at Blazer Industries in Aumsville. The factory is one of four businesses to receive a grant from the Modular Housing Development Fund aimed at combating Oregon's...

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Our thoughts on this story:

In Texas you could fill a mobile home park back to 100% capacity in six months, but in Oregon – with endless regulatory red tape – it takes four years? I love the way that blue states like Oregon are always talking about the need for affordable housing, yet they throw up every regulatory roadblock possible to housing of all categories. What a bunch of idiots.

STUPIDITY LEVEL: HIGH

yourerie: Residents struggle to relocate after mobile home park repurposed for overflow parking

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A little over a year ago, Meer Village LLC bought the Village Mobile Home Park off of West Lake Road.

In January of 2024, the new owners, who also own Waldameer Park and Water World, gave park residents evacuation notices requiring them to either leave or move their mobile homes by the end of October.

Waldameer’s president Steve Gorman said the land from the neighborhood would solve an important issue for the amusement park.

“We’ve learned over the summer that we need more parking on busy days for Waldameer, so at this point, we just start preparing the land for next summer to have excess parking,” said Gorman.

He said Waldameer has...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Give me a break. I’m betting the amusement park did not need “overflow parking”. They needed the park town down because it scared their customers and hurt their property value. 

STUPIDITY LEVEL: MEDIUM