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Kelowna Now: Shasta Mobile Home Park in Kelowna one step closer to being sold after lengthy court battle

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Another mobile home park is up for potential redevelopment after a judge recently approved a sales process for lands, which are valued at millions of dollars.

In a court decision from April 10, 2024, the judge approved a sales process for the property located at 3745 Lakeshore Road.

A variety of issues were addressed in this latest court proceeding, including the nature of the sale process and whether or not to engage with the city and seek any rezoning for the land in question.

Owned by the four sons of Lloyd and Marjorie Callahan, Douglas, Edward, Bruce and Robert, the lands are referred to as the “Crown Jewels” of properties owned by...

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While the Lakeshore Road property has operated as a mobile home park for many years, according to court documents the sons are all in agreement that it “is not the most lucrative use of the lands, and that the lands have significant redevelopment potential. It appears that the Lands are worth tens of millions of dollars.

Yup, that pretty much sums it up. At what rent would remaining a mobile home park have been an option?

The Colorado Sun: Boulder County’s Sans Souci mobile home park jumped at Colorado’s “opportunity to purchase.” Here’s how it’s going.

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To the west, tree-dotted open space rolls uninterrupted toward picturesque peaks veiled in a spring morning mist. To the east, the intermittent whine of traffic reminds that a thread of busy state highway connects the Sans Souci Cooperative mobile home park to nearby Boulder.

This community of 62 households, largely older and low-income, offers proximity to both nature and convenience — and that, coupled with manageable lot rents, has long made the park a refuge befitting its French translation, “without worry.” 

It has been nearly three years since the park’s residents, bolstered by statewide legislation aimed at preserving such...

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Nearly three years after buying their community, residents find themselves confronting infrastructure, governance and management challenges

I’ve been preaching about the fact that residents owning their own mobile home parks was a recipe for disaster for years. There’s nobody less suited on earth to manage a mobile home park than a committee of residents – they will always vote “no” on raising rents and, as a result, the condition of the park will go down the drain. I’m glad this writer was brave enough to expose the truth, and I’m betting that a bunch of non-profits that have been hit up to personally guarantee the debt on these deals (which is the only way they happen) are breathing a sigh of relief that they refused to sign on.

Daily Montanan: Manufactured housing advocates skeptical of new development outside Belgrade

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A new manufactured housing development outside Belgrade is calling itself an “affordable housing solution” for Bozeman. But manufactured home resident advocates worry prices are already high and could go up– a reported pattern the developer has done in other locations.

Cameron Crossing, a Three Pillar Development community, was unveiled Tuesday with new manufactured homes starting at $200,000. In a press release, the company said this development would serve as an “affordable housing solution for Bozeman.”

“At the heart of the grand opening event lies Cameron Crossing’s dedication to providing affordable homes tailored for Bozeman’s...

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“We are all aware of tactics like lost rent checks, unfair evictions, harassment and retaliation,” Newman said.

You always see this garbage in most of these articles, and let’s just refute it point by point:

  1. Mobile home park owners have no “tactics” except to rent lots for a monthly rent.
  2. Tenants are the ones claiming that rent checks have been lost and that evictions are unfair – park owners simply want their rent by the due date with no such theatrics.
  3. Mobile home park owners simply want to be a parking lot. That have no desire to get personally involved with any resident and to have “harassment and retaliation” you would have to engage in personal discussions. Have you ever had a “personal discussion” with the airport parking lot personnel? Park owners want nothing to do with this nonsense.

The article is all about how $900 lot rents are unfair in a market in which homes cost $950,000. If you can’t afford $950,000 home prices and $900 rents I have a suggestion: move to a cheaper place to live. Montana is ranked as the 8th most expensive housing cost state. Here it is straight from Wikipedia:

Montana home values are 51% higher than pre-pandemic levels, which is higher than the U.S. average of 40% and ranks eighth highest of all states.

Boothbay Register: Resident owned mobile home parks - A place to call home

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Nothing's easy when it comes to producing affordable housing in Maine.  It’s encouraging to see the Maine legislature and government at work – creating programs, regulation and tax policy - to protect or build more housing which Mainers can afford and claim as a place to call home. 

One bill sponsored by Senator Cameron Reny (D-Lincoln County) - LD 1276 An Act to Create and Sustain Jobs and Affordable Housing Through the Development of Cooperatives and Employee-owned Businesses – is promising.  It takes a hard look at the potential for mobile home parks to be part of the solution, especially for Resident Owned Communities (ROCs).  With...

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One bill sponsored by Senator Cameron Reny (D-Lincoln County) - LD 1276 An Act to Create and Sustain Jobs and Affordable Housing Through the Development of Cooperatives and Employee-owned Businesses – is promising.  It takes a hard look at the potential for mobile home parks to be part of the solution, especially for Resident Owned Communities (ROCs).

Maybe Senator Reny should call those residents at Sans Souci in the article above before he makes a fool of himself.

The Real Deal: Developer proposes 978-unit apartment complex on Fort Lauderdale mobile home park

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A developer wants to build a 978-unit apartment complex at the Pan American Estates Mobile Home Park in Fort Lauderdale. 

Saulo Perez, a South Florida-based real estate developer, proposes the project on the 22.8-acre mobile home park at 150 Northwest 68th Street in the Cypress Creek neighborhood, according to city records. 

The Fort Lauderdale Development Review Committee is expected to vote on the project at its meeting on Tuesday. 

Designed by MSA Architects, the project would be developed in three phases. Phase I would have 329 apartments in five five-story buildings and a lake. Phase II would have 290 units in four five-story...

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I have been preaching this narrative for years now, and if mobile home park lot rents don’t go up substantially this will be the story of every mobile home park in the U.S. with a good location. Based on a standard mobile home density of 10 units per acre, this park has the capacity of about 220 mobile homes (it’s on 22 acres). But the apartment developer is going to build 5-story towers and that creates 978 apartments on that same tract. At $2,000 per month rent, the apartments are a no-brainer to be a more valuable use of this land. The sooner the American public realizes that the only defense available against re-development of mobile home parks is significantly higher rents, the sooner that residents of parks like this don’t become homeless.

WBIR: 'It's heartbreaking' | Maryville mobile homeowner says eviction left her scrambling

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MARYVILLE, Tenn. — Inge Marie Sands moved to the U.S. from Germany in the 1960s and eventually settled in Maryville. 

Sands, and her late husband, purchased a mobile home and rented a lot off Temple Road for around 23 years. Then, she received an eviction notice in January. 

"It's expensive to move, and it's an expense that, you know, well, there goes my life savings," Sands said. "I had to pay to move, and I hope I can pay last month's bills — let's put it that way."

Earlier this month, 10News spoke to homeowners of the Thorn Hill Mobile Home Community, and they said they received eviction notices right before Easter. In many...

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Landry said in a statement. "Mr. Batz ultimately decided to discontinue the operation of the mobile home park on his property, which he is within his rights to do so.

Was there a lot rent amount that would have convinced the park owner to stay in operation and not develop into a new use? Do you see a trend in this week’s articles?

Littleton Independent: Hoping to avoid corporate takeover, Meadowood Village residents try to buy their mobile home park

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There was not an empty seat in the Littleton City Council chambers at a recent meeting as over a dozen passionate seniors took turns sharing stories about how they love their mobile home community. Worried that a corporate bid to take ownership of Meadowood Village could break apart their community, they asked the city for money to help them purchase the land instead.

Several dozen residents from the mobile home park — which is located on the west side of Santa Fe Drive just north of Breckenridge Brewery — filled the room. The residents, mostly older folks, recently received notice of a corporation’s intent to buy the park.

“If we are...

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Great business model, right?

“Our goal here is to not let one resident have to move because they can’t afford to stay here,” she said “That’s why it got so critical for us to assure that we stay the community we are.”

Translation: “We’re not going to evict anyone for non-payment and we’re also going to vote “no” on any rent increase so this park will go bankrupt at record speed”.

This is the next Sans Souci just waiting for an idiotic non-profit to guarantee their loan.

ABC Action News: Insurance industry leaders say no relief in sight for 'highest risk' manufactured homes in Florida

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LARGO, Fla. — Largo resident Teri Jones emailed ABC Action News after seeing our coverage on Florida's fractured insurance market, wanting to share her experience: seeing those premiums rise every year.

"The owners of mobile and manufactures home are experiencing the same thing," she said. "I live in a 55+ community where it's no longer affordable to have insurance."

She chose to retire in a mobile home four years ago, but now she's worried about her future.

"This is our little home and we want to stay here," Jones said. "I don't want to go anywhere else but I want to live here at least partially affordable."

RATES STILL RISING

However,...

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The handwriting is on the wall that a ton of mobile home parks in Florida are going to be redeveloped simply because they can no longer obtain insurance. Nobody is going to own parks in the absence of protection from liability and property damage. Even if owners were that crazy, their lenders will refuse to renew loans or grant new ones without proper insurance. This problem has been building for years, as the U.S. legal system has allowed far too many ridiculous judgement and gaming of the system. Since Florida is tied with California for the second largest number of parks in the U.S., you will start seeing endless articles about mobile home park redevelopment in Florida starting soon – such as the first article in this week’s news stories.

KSL TV5: Moab trailer park residents forced into eviction by city after insurance complications

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MOAB — After six years of a promised affordable housing project in a Moab trailer park, residents were notified by the city on April 17 that not only would they no longer receive new housing, but would also face imminent eviction by July 1.

In a Facebook post made by the city, it passed the reason for the eviction to the insurance carrier of the land. The city said it “will not insure the trailer park after June 30; the city cannot carry that liability without insurance.”

A resident of the trailer park, Marjorie Begay, had been hearing rumors of the devastating news beforehand. Begay said she has lived on Walnut Lane since 1998.

She said...

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In 2018, the city of Moab purchased the land on Walnut Lane that now houses 26 trailer homes. The city embarked on the project, according to reporting from The Moab Times, which became consistently problematic. The goal was to upscale the land to an 80-unit affordable housing complex which would rehouse not just the current residents, but additional tenants. At one point, the developer selected for the project expected to be able to house 288 people, but the rent prices projected were less than “affordable,” according to the Moab Sun News.Wojciechowski said the city’s current plans consist of tearing the trailers down after the residents leave.Unfortunately, a significant portion of the trailers currently on-site are in extremely bad shape (many of which were in even worse shape when the city initially purchased the property), and likely wouldn’t survive a move without significant structural damage,” he said. “Many of the trailers are also old enough that they contain asbestos.”

Even the City of Moab can’t justify not redeveloping the mobile home park’s land. Low Lot Rents = Homelessness. How’s that for a bumper sticker?

https://www.delawareonline.com/story/news/2024/04/12/pine-haven-mobile-home-park-owners-lied-to-residents-must-pay-damages-lincoln/73294439007/: Lincoln mobile home park owners lied, tried to evict residents. Now they owe $800K

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Blue Beach Bungalows, owner of the Pine Haven mobile home park in Lincoln, has been ordered to pay over $800,000 in penalties and rebates for violating the state's Consumer Fraud Act and other laws, the Delaware Department of Justice said Thursday.

The Justice Department said Blue Beach repeatedly told residents — many of whom lived there year-round — that the park was actually seasonal, and used that false claim to threaten to evict residents and destroy their property. Blue Beach continued to do so even after a cease-and-desist motion was issued by the Consumer Protection Unit on April 3, 2023, according to court documents.

Blue Beach...

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I’m sure the park owner will appeal and the next jury may come to a different conclusion. The writer, of course, does not mention that the park owner can appeal until the final sentence. It’s not over until it’s over.

WFMY News 2: Mobile homeowner calls WFMY News 2 after home rips apart during move

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BURLINGTON, N.C. — Margie Van Houten isn’t one for change. This applies to most things, but certainly her living arrangements. She has lived in the same trailer and mobile home park for 18 years.

“It was very memorable,” Van Houten said.

The trailer and park had become home, so it wasn't easy when Van Houten was informed of a change in her living arrangement.

“The landlord sold the property to another person, and he told me I had to move,” Van Houten said.

After searching for a place to go, Van Houten found a nearby mobile home park where she could take her home. The best part of the move was that the owner of the new trailer park...

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Can an old dilapidated mobile home break apart in transport? Sure, I’ve had it happen myself on an old home I was moving in to fill a vacant lot. The moral is simple: don’t move old mobile homes in poor condition. When a tenant can’t afford the rent they need to sell their home in its current position and move to somewhere they can afford. Mobile homes were meant to be moved one time only – straight from the factory to the vacant park lot. After that you have to be very careful. Looking at the photo you can see that this home was not in a condition to be moved.

FOX 5 / KUSI: National City mobile home rent control ordinance set to expire this year

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NATIONAL CITY, Calif. (FOX 5/KUSI) — A rent control measure for tenants of National City’s mobile home parks is set to sunset at the end of this year, but there is now conversations around making the relief for those residents more permanent.

National City has four mobile home parks with about 400 families living within them.

“A lot of elderly people around there and then we live there because we don’t have no choice,” said Socorro Jimenez, a mobile home park resident in National City.

Though it is considered one of the most affordable options for renters, mobile homes are not included state rent control laws.

“Individual cities have...

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Classic quote by a resident:

“We live there because we don’t have no choice”

That quote sums up the new “victim” society we live in where everybody is not in control of their life but simply a victim of some other evil individual or group.

As for the article, hopefully the city council will not be swayed by the eloquent tenant quoted above and realize that rent control results in wrecking balls tearing mobile home parks down.

Yahoo!: Seniors living on fixed incomes say they're being priced out of California mobile home park due to rent hikes

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Senior citizens living in a California mobile home park are being forced to ditch their retirement pads due to “unaffordable” rent hikes.

“Nobody wants to move,” Karyn Keyser, a resident at the Skyline Ranch Country Club in Valley Center, told ABC 10 News.

She described the “upscale” mobile home park as a “fantastic place to live” — with its golf course and other luxurious amenities — but sadly, Keyser says she can’t afford to live there much longer.

Keyser owns her mobile home but rents the plot of land it sits on. She says the rent, without signing a new lease agreement, has gone up from $955 to nearly $1,600.

“I'm on disability; my...

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The title says it all. As I’ve said every week, if you retire in California, you do so with full knowledge that it’s one of the most expensive places to live on earth. If you can’t afford to pay absurdly high prices for everything from mobile home park lot rent to hamburger meat, you need to sell your home and move to a cheaper state, which abound but mostly not in the American west.

Maine Public: Residents' offer to purchase two Old Orchard Beach mobile home parks has been rejected

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An offer from residents of two mobile home parks in Old Orchard Beach to buy the properties has been rejected by the current owner.

Residents of Old Orchard Village and Atlantic Village learned earlier this year that the owner had a pending offer of $40.4 million for the neighborhood. A state law enacted last fall gives residents a chance to form a cooperative and attempt to buy the parks themselves.

The Old Orchard residents formed the Seacoast Village Cooperative and matched the $40.4 million offer but learned Thursday that it had been rejected.

"The residents met every obligation," said Nora Gosselin with the non-profit Cooperative...

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Our thoughts on this story:

The park owner got a legitimate offer of around $40 million for his 370-lot park. The tenants mistakenly thought that simply by saying they would match the price the park owner would opt to sell to them. But here’s the catch:

  1. The park residents have no money.
  2. The park residents have no experience in buying or operating parks.
  3. For the tenants to buy the park will require non-profit subsidies and loan guarantees.
  4. Putting all this together will take a year.
  5. he corporate buyer can probably close in 60 days with no time, effort or risk to the seller.

There is a thing in life called “time urgency” and if the seller waits a year for the tenants to buy the park and they then fail miserably (which is a 99.9999% certainty) the seller will lose the good corporate buyer who will have moved on. Once again, any sane person would understand that.

WATE: Notice to vacate leaves Maryville mobile home park residents with few option

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MARYVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) — Families who own mobile homes at a park in Maryville have been told their property leases will end in three months on June 30. As a result, they will either move their homes or sell them to the property owner.

The lives of about a dozen Blount County families have been turned upside down by the unexpected notice. These homeowners and others have some tough decisions to make. They live at the Thornhill Mobile Home Community in Maryville.

Ann Wade, 85, moved here when the park was new in the mid-80’s. She and others who own their trailers received this expiration of lease and notice to vacate two weeks ago.

“The...

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There are two sides to every story and this article only presents one. I’m pretty sure that any sane adult can guess that the reason these twelve leases were terminated is for plenty of factors that are conveniently not discussed (such as the homes being in poor condition, rules enforcement, non-payment of rent, etc.).

When a park owner non-renews a lease it costs them around $10,000+ in lost rent and lot preparation for a new home, not to mention the pain and suffering of bringing in a home and getting it sold. The last thing a park owner wants to do is to non-renew a good, paying tenant. I’m betting these were anything BUT good, paying customers and there’ no way the owner could keep the business functioning with these folks as residents so they bit the bullet and are going to sacrifice around $120,000 to get rid of the people that are ruining the quality of life for all the other residents.

If the reporter had bothered to show pictures of the homes of the people that were interviewed the cause of the non-renewals would probably be clear.

Boothbay Register: Who is taking over Maine’s mobile homes, and why

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Manufactured housing and manufactured housing parks (MHPs) are some of the last truly affordable, unsubsidized housing options in our state. Many older Mainers, people with disabilities, young families, and veterans live in these parks. Additionally, many tenants of MHPs either own the home themselves, or have a rent-to-own agreement, making manufactured housing an important and accessible path to home ownership.

What’s happening across our state to residents of these parks is changing this dynamic. Out-of-state companies, and real estate investment speculators, are buying mobile home parks and increasing lot rents right away, with...

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I’ve seen responses from these companies saying, “If tenants were genuinely concerned with the price of the lot, they would move.” This shows a complete disregard of the cost to move a manufactured home. If tenants try to move, it can be expected to cost anywhere from $1,500 to $10,000 depending on the home, and this is only if they are lucky enough to find an available lot elsewhere.

Wow, this reporter must be reading my weekly news reviews as I’m the person that said “if you can’t afford to live in the park you need to move”. But I never said to “move the home”. In fact, I regularly say that you should NEVER move the home but, instead, sell the home to someone that CAN afford to live in the park (just like all single-family and condo owners do). When I say that you “should move” I am talking about the inherent common sense of moving to a city or region that meets your budget. It blows my mind when people appear in articles complaining that they can’t afford to live in that city, as though it’s society’s responsibility to ensure they can afford to live wherever they want. That’s as stupid as somebody with $10 in their pocket complaining they can’t eat at the local steakhouse – just go to McDonald’s like everybody else does. Maine is an extremely expensive state to live in – among the most costly in the U.S. If you don’t have a large income in retirement you should move to a cheaper state like Arkansas. It’s not rocket science.

Valley News Live: Jamestown Mobile Home Park Proceeding With Evictions

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FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) - At time of publishing on Thursday, April 11, residents of the Western Park Village mobile home park in Jamestown felt trapped in limbo, not knowing if their eviction notices were going to be enforced.

That doubt seems to have dissipated as of Monday evening, as Pamela Syverson has reached out to Valley News Live to inform us that a follow up notice has been delivered by local deputies that she has three days to vacate the premises.

Syverson is the Jamestown mom that was served her initial eviction notice as it was deemed that her flower beds, which she built out as a memorial to her murdered son, Gunnar,...

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Some park residents have a real knack for taking advantage of gullible reporters. When I was filming with National Geographic, a resident saw the camera crew and told them that the evil landlord had turned off their gas. They filmed a segment with that resdient but then had to delete it when, in fact-checking the story, they found that the truth was that the resident had not paid the gas company, not the landlord.

I’m willing to bet $100 that there are some really good reasons these tenants are being evicted and that it’s not just some whim of the park owner – but the reporter did not bother to explore what those issues might be. Shocker.

Aol.: Manufactured home community sells for nearly $70 million in Manatee

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A manufactured home community in Manatee County near Palmetto has been sold to a Virginia-based real estate company for $69.9 million, according to property records.

Country Lakes Village and Country Lakes Village II were noted as part of the transaction. The 55-plus community consists of more than 470 lots near the 6100 block of Bayshore Road.

Country Lakes Co-op Inc. sold the property in late July to CS1031 Country Lakes Village MHC, DST.

That holding company uses the same Virginia mailing address as Capital Square, a Virginia-based "national real estate firm specializing in tax-advantaged real estate investments."

Capital Square did...

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A 44-story office buildng in St. Louis recently sold for $3.5 million. A 500,000 square foot regional mall just sold for $7 million., And here’s a mobile home park selling for $70 million. How can a mobile home park be worth 20 times more than an office building and ten times more than a regional mall? Several reasons:

  1. Mobile home parks are based on affordable housing, which is the most in-demand form of real estate in the U.S. Meanwhile, nobody wants office space or retail space today.
  2. Mobile home parks have no risk due to technology – you can’t live in the “cloud”. The internet is what killed office and retail.
  3. Mobile home park rents have plenty of room to double and triple in the years ahead as they are ridiculously low ($300/mo. average lot rent vs. $2,000/mo. for apartments). Meanwhile office and retail rents per square foot are plunging.
  4. Mobile home parks never become obsolete or require big capital expenditures as they are just a parking lot for mobile homes. Office and retail properties become dated and need giant, continual investments on such things as roofs and foundations.

Who would have ever thought that mobile home parks would be more valuable than office towers and regional malls? Pretty much any mobile home park owner.

Maine Public Radio: Old Orchard Beach residents want to buy their mobile home parks for $40M. More face similar hurdles

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Sandy Ossolinski, 67, lives about three miles from the beach. Still, she's filled her home with reminders that it's not far away. She points to the jar of seashells in the living room of her two-bedroom manufactured home in Old Orchard Village.

"I'm a beachoholic," she said. "So being this close to the beach is wonderful."

Ossolinski moved to Old Orchard Village four years ago, fulfilling a dream to move to Maine and live near the ocean. She's a retired teacher and pays $522 a month to rent the lot where her home sits.

It's a good fit for her, she said, and many of the other residents here on fixed incomes.

But in late January, Ossolinski...

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If you are paying $40 million for 370 lots, that’s over $100,000 per lot. No way those numbers are going to work at $552 per month lot rent. Whether it’s an institutional buyer or the residents buying it, that rent is going to double to justify that cost. This nonsense that residents can buy parks and somehow stop rent increases ends with a simple use of a calculator and spreadsheet. 

ABC 10 News San Diego: Seniors on fixed incomes priced out at mobile home park after rent hike

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VALLEY CENTER, Calif. (KGTV) — Senior citizens living in a Valley Center mobile home lot say they are being priced out after management raised the rent. ABC 10News spoke with multiple seniors on fixed incomes.

"Everybody loves it here," Karyn Keyser told ABC 10News. "Nobody wants to move."

Keyser has lived at the Skyline Ranch Country Club since 2019. The upscale mobile home park for seniors has a golf course and other luxurious amenities.

"It's a fantastic place to live, really," Keyser said.

The problem for Keyser, though, is that she won't be living there much longer. Without signing a new lease agreement, Keyser says her rent has gone...

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"During an independent analysis, the Park determined that in order to avoid continuing to run the Park at a loss given the ongoing expenses and costs, the Park was required to increase space rents. The Park’s analysis took into consideration the fair market values of rents, the expenses required to operate and maintain the amenities of the Park, and the Park’s ongoing and recurring expenses," Skyline Ranch Country Club Manager Chris Ingersoll said.

Well, the owner did not mince words in their accurate depiction of the situation. It’s just a cold hard fact that mobile home park lot rents are ridiculously low and unsustainable in most cases and will have to go up significantly to keep these properties alive. The alternative is to demolish the park and turn the land into a different use (apartments, of course) and in California that will not be hard to accomplish.

Antelope Valley Press: Higher rents in mobile home parks are OK’d

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PALMDALE — The Housing Authority — which includes all members of the city council — on Wednesday approved a system for increasing rent at Palmdale’s three city-owned mobile home parks, as well as a method for assisting those most impacted by the increase.

The three parks — Boulders at Ranch I, Boulders at Ranch II and Boulders at the Lakes — have a total of 787 spaces, with three of these set aside for managers, according to the staff report.

Rents on the spaces have not been increased since 2008, when a cap of $400 per month was set; most spaces reached that maximum by 2013.

Operating costs have increased in the meantime, up 21%...

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PALMDALE — The Housing Authority — which includes all members of the city council — on Wednesday approved a system for increasing rent at Palmdale’s three city-owned mobile home parks, as well as a method for assisting those most impacted by the increase. Rents on the spaces have not been increased since 2008, when a cap of $400 per month was set; most spaces reached that maximum by 2013. Operating costs have increased in the meantime, up 21% from 2022 to 2023 and 17% this year. With the cap on rents keeping revenue stable for about a decade, the revenue is not keeping up with the costs of maintaining and operating the parks, Director of Neighborhood Services Sofia Reyes said during the authority’s March 20 meeting, when the matter was first introduced.

Holy Cow, here’s the City of Palmdale, California pushing back on critics to their recent plan to significantly raise the rents on three parks that the city itself owns. I never figured I’d see that – what a turn of events in today’s political climate. Groundbreaking.

King 5: Lynnwood mobile park residents feel pushed out after rent skyrockets

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LYNNWOOD, Wash. — Dorian Deutsch tends to her garden. It's not just a hobby. She needs the food because it's so expensive at the store. These days she can no longer afford meat.

Deutsch moved to Lynnwood's Royalwood mobile home park 10 years ago planning to stay for the rest of her life.

But her rent jumped from $640 to $740 last year. 

It's rising another $100 in June. 

The new property owner will add fees for utilities that used to be included in the rent.

The total, as of June, will be $948 per month -- nearly a 50% increase. 

Nearing 70 years old, Deutsch, a disabled Army veteran, fears what could come next.

"I took a...

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In an email to KING 5 Collective Communities said the rents are rising because they've already spent $650,000 on improvements and plan to invest another $1 million in 2024 for repairs and maintenance.
"The second part of our analysis is to compare our lot rents to the Federal Government's definition of affordable housing," the statement continued. "Every year HUD issues the average median income ("AMI") for every county in the country. For Snohomish County the AMI was $146K. HUD suggests that a household should spend no more than 30% of their income on rent/housing expenses. We've adjusted the AMI by two factors (50% of AMI and 30% of AMI) and compared what monthly rent should be based on those adjusted income limits. In Royalwood's case the new lot rent is 51% below the HUD suggested rent at 50% of AMI and 18% below the HUD suggested rent at 30% of AMI. While we understand the lot rents have increased we believe that Royalwood still provides a quality affordable housing option for our residents in the market as compared to other forms of housing in Snohomish County."

Bravo for the park owner putting it so accurately to the media and those who question the more than fair rent increases. Not all the residents in this park will be able to afford the necessary increases and those who can’t need to find an alternative housing option. That’s how an economy works. If you want the Wendy’s Baconator but don’t have $10 for it, you simply buy the less expensive burger – you can’t go to Wendy’s and say “you need to reduce the price of the Baconator so I can afford it”. If you have retired in California – the second most expensive state in the U.S. behind Hawaii – then high prices are part of the bargain. You can get this same housing option in Missouri for less than half that price. But it’s the resident’s responsibility to match their income to their location and not that of the property owner.

Crozet Gazette: Crozet Mobile Home Community Owners Hike Rent

Preview:

It’s been a little more than two years since Crozet Mobile Village on Park Road—now known as the Crozet Mobile Home Community (MHC)—was sold for $4 million by Richard Hevener, a businessman who had owned and run the place for over 40 years. Though the local representatives of Crozet MHC’s new parent enterprise, Roseland Communities, are rarely seen on the premises, the new ownership has made a strong first impression in one respect: they’ve raised tenants’ rent by 80%. 

While residents say Hevener held steady the amount most tenants paid to lease their lot at $250 per month for the last seven years of his tenure, Roseland immediately...

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 “I watched what was happening [with the recent sale], and I thought—well, this is an investment company, they’re not in it to be your friend.”

Here’s the hard reality: Crozet, Virginia home prices are $498,400 and the apartment rent averages $1,940 per month. And let me get this straight -- $450 per month is unfair? No, the park owner is not in the business of making “friends”, they are in the business of making money. They bought the park because they spotted the rent was ridiculously low at $250 per month just as a smart stock investor buys Apple when the price seems low compared to book value. The former park owner – who held it for 40 years – clearly did not run the park as a business. But any modern buyer is going to make this a sustainable investment-grade asset and that means the rents are going to go up. It’s also interesting to note that, based on any semblance of realism, the rents at $450 are still absolutely, ridiculously low and it’s a miracle the new buyer has not already gone much higher. 

HeraldNet: ‘Nowhere else to cut’: Seniors face 14% rent increases, in homes they own

Preview:

BOTHELL — In 2004, Susan Lockyer bought her manufactured home as a retirement plan.

Moving from Seattle slashed her monthly housing costs from $900 to $425.

Lockyer, 78, would still be paying “lot” rent, like many other manufactured home owners who lease the land under their houses.

With a Social Security payment of $1,419, she thought she could afford the rent increases, only $10 to $30 each year.

“This was a good plan. And it was a good plan for 18 years,” she said. “Until (GSC Investments) bought the park. The first thing that happened is the rent was raised $100. From $620 to $720.”

In June 2023, GSC bought Canyon in Bothell and...

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“This past legislative session, Democrats introduced House Bill 2114 in Olympia, seeking to limit rent increases by 7%. But opposition from Republicans and divided Democratic lawmakers stalled the bill. It passed the House, but didn’t make it out of committee in the Senate. Manufactured home owners are at the mercy of park owners who may raise their “space rent” each year with no limitations. It’s expensive, and sometimes impossible, to move a home. According to Forbes, moving a manufactured home costs $9,000 on average — even if the slight misnomer “mobile home” has stuck around.”

Yes, it’s expensive to move a mobile home, so don’t do it. Instead – if you can’t afford to live there – sell it like the owners of single-family homes and condos do. I mean you can move a brick house, too (I’ve seen it done on PBS) but why do it?

Obviously, people are mad that the State of Washington refused to enact rent control. That topic is now scuttled for a while. No offense, but it didn’t even come close to passing. The fact is that Washington is a really expensive state to live in. If you can’t afford to live there, then sell your home and move to a lesser expensive state. You can get a nice spot in a charming Missouri mobile home park for around $350 per month.

Aol: Inside new home-buying trend for Gen Z: ‘Houses before spouses’

Preview:

Meet the real estate experts who advise “houses before spouses” – recommending people buy homes with their friends to get on the property ladder.

Stephanie Douglass, 35, and Kristina Modares, 34, are co-founders of a real estate agency that specializes in helping millennials and Gen Z purchase homes with friends.

The duo started the company in 2019 after individually buying their first properties with pals and aimed to “break the barriers of traditional homeownership”.

Since then, Stephanie and Kristina have gone on to buy four properties together, which they say is an easier way to get on the property ladder.

Stephanie has bought an...

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Since our theme is “Fantasy vs. Reality” I had to include this idiotic article about young people speculating on homes in Austin, Texas. Yes, the same place that makes every list of the cities with the greatest odds for home price collapse, with articles such as this one: https://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/austin-house-prices-are-falling-but-experts-say-19378718.php. Want to destroy yourself financially? Buy a single-family home with maximum debt load in a declining market. I know that HGTV had on all these shows like “Flipping Vegas” BUT ARE YOU AWARE THAT THE SHOW STOPPED FILMING IN 2014? ALL THOSE EPISODES ARE REPEATS. The single-family home flipping ship sailed years ago when 3% mortgages walked the earth and I’m sure you’ll revisit this article three years from now and the ending will not be the fantasy that was suggested. Before any young person follows this article’s advice, they need to talk to an old person who saw what happened to Austin real estate in 1990 and again in 2000. Heck, you can just call me!