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Maine Public: Bangor residents are second group in Maine to purchase mobile home park under new state law

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Residents of a mobile home park in Bangor will be the second group in the state to purchase their community under a new Maine law.

Residents of the Cedar Falls Mobile Home Park voted over the weekend to purchase their community for $8 million, using grants from Maine Housing and the city of Bangor, as well as loans from the Genesis Community Fund and a group of non-profits and banks led by Bangor Savings Bank.

Nora Gosselin, director of resident acquisitions for the non-profit Cooperative Development Institute, which helped residents purchase their park, said the deal will allow for the preservation of affordable housing for nearly 130...

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Residents of a mobile home park in Bangor will be the second group in the state to purchase their community under a new Maine law. Residents of the Cedar Falls Mobile Home Park voted over the weekend to purchase their community for $8 million, using grants from Maine Housing and the city of Bangor, as well as loans from the Genesis Community Fund and a group of non-profits and banks led by Bangor Savings Bank.

Then, once the celebration is over, comes the ugly reality that they have an $8 million mortgage to service every month using their meager collections and untold maintenance surprises, all falling on a group of people who have never successfully managed anything in their entire lives. Kind of sounds like the Biden administration, right? With the same ending, no doubt.

Realtor: Barbara Corcoran Reveals Million-Dollar Trailer Home Has Been ‘Entirely Destroyed’ in California Wildfires: ‘My Heart Breaks Again and Again’

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Real estate mogul Barbara Corcoran has voiced her heartbreak after her beloved million-dollar trailer home was “entirely destroyed” in the deadly California wildfires that began ripping through the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles on Jan. 7.

Corcoran, 75, shared the “devastating” update about her mobile home in a series of social media videos, revealing that the Palisades Fire had obliterated her property, as well as the entirety of the ultraexclusive trailer park in which it was located.

“The devastating fires in L.A. have taken so much from so many this week,” the “Shark Tank” star wrote while sharing a video of the blaze...

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Have you noticed that the follow-up footnotes to the “Shark Tank” cast hold nothing but bad endings? Mark Cuban revealed that he spent $20 million on start-ups during his decade on the show yet collectively never made any money from any of them. Meanwhile, Daymond John’s FUBU – his personal business – went down the drain. And then it was revealed that Barbara Corcoran was living in a mobile home in California, which now has burned to the ground.

I would recommend that people read actual biographies of real, successful investors going forward and steer clear of the televised “reality show” versions that are fictional at best and give about as much insight into successful entrepreneurial ventures as I could give on quantum physics.

Idaho Press: Boise dedicates $6.7 million HUD award to preserve city-owned mobile home park

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The city of Boise announced Tuesday the receipt of $6.7 million to be dedicated to its affordable housing goals.

The award comes from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), with Boise being one of 17 nationwide recipients that will dedicate the funds to “maintain, protect and stabilize affordable hosing,” a news release from the city said. Boise’s award will be used to preserve and maintain the Sage Mobile Home Park, a 2-acre mobile home park on the Boise Bench that houses 26 families and was originally purchased by the city in 2022.

“Keeping Boiseans in their homes is one of our top priorities when it comes to...

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The city of Boise announced Tuesday the receipt of $6.7 million to be dedicated to its affordable housing goals. The award comes from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), with Boise being one of 17 nationwide recipients that will dedicate the funds to “maintain, protect and stabilize affordable hosing,” a news release from the city said. Boise’s award will be used to preserve and maintain the Sage Mobile Home Park, a 2-acre mobile home park on the Boise Bench that houses 26 families and was originally purchased by the city in 2022.

This is so stupid that it would make Gavin Newsom jealous. Boise, Idaho is going to spend $6.7 million to upgrade a 26-space mobile home park? That’s over $250,000 per mobile home! You could literally give each resident a mortgage-free, 3 bed/two bath brick home on an acre of land as opposed to wasting a quarter million dollars per trailer. How is this kind of stuff even possible? Talk about government waste! But where I’m really lost is that this park is already owned by the City of Boise. So are they saying they let the park fall apart to the point that it will take $6.7 million to put it back in usable condition? Surely the writer has these numbers wrong.

Ithaca Times: Working Group Aims to Keep Manufactured Housing Affordable & Sustainable

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The Tompkins County Legislature’s manufactured housing working group is working to address issues surrounding manufactured housing in the county, focusing on the need to improve energy efficiency, affordability, and community ownership.

Working group member Danielle Eiseman told the Ithaca Times, "The working group was created after the legislature brought up concerns about the energy costs and needs of constituents living in manufactured homes [and] we've been exploring these issues more deeply ever since." She added, “Since October 2022, our small informal group has been exploring a lot of the problems surrounding residents living in...

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According to Brown, “What it really came down to, for me, was that this is truly affordable housing that you can own…[and] when investors buy these parks, they raise the rents and don't improve the infrastructure [and] it leads to ongoing issues for the residents.”

I have some basic factual problems with this often repeated, but factually incorrect, statement that include:

  1. When a park sells – whether to an investor or a non-profit – a giant mortgage is placed upon it. This requires a huge increase in rent to pay it off. Mom and pop could charge a tiny rent because they owned the park free and clear. So the only way that you can stop rents from going up, in the event of a park sale, would be for mom and pop to give the park away for free. Unlikely to happen.
  2. An investor and non-profit both have to pay the exact same water rate, sewer rate, electric rate, trash fee, property tax, insurance premium, repair bills – every single line item on the P&L. As a result, they both have to charge the same rent to cover those costs.
  3. If you read these articles every week, you will note that just last week the non-profit admitted that the tenants will be paying the same – or more – rent by buying the park themselves.
  4. Investors are much better managers and stewards of a property than the residents are. The residents lack the discipline to file evictions, make tough choices on rent levels, and enforce the rules.
  5. Professional investors, in fact, are the ONLY ones out there fixing aging park infrastructure and taking these old properties to the next level.
  6. I am yet to see a single park in the United States, purchased by a professional investor, that is not far nicer now than when they bought it.  

Would a “working group” accept these factual statements? Never. Common sense is left at the door when these types of committees get together. But the facts are still the facts and even if just one person reads this and understands the truth now, then it was worthwhile writing this. We can’t allow these lies to continue.

Idaho Statesman: Residents worry as Boise-area mobile home parks fade away. This may be the next to go

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J.R. Thompson is known as a bit of a handyman around Elm Grove Mobile Home Park near downtown Meridian. The 43-year-old journeyman carpenter has lived in the park at the corner of Fairview Avenue and 3rd Street for two years while saving up to buy his own land. You can often find him making fixes for his neighbors around the park. “I’m kind of the guy that does everything for them, as far as maintenance stuff,” he told the Idaho Statesman while working on a portable carport for one of his neighbors. Overall, he’s liked living there. “It’s not the prettiest to look at, but we all get along here,” Thompson said. Most importantly, he said,...

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The mobile home park — already listed as “permanently closed” online and no longer accepting new tenants — is slated to be redeveloped into a 90-unit apartment complex in the next few years, eliminating one of the most-affordable housing options in the city. Average rent in Meridian is almost $1,500 a month, according to Apartment List, while residents on the 40 lots in Elm Grove own their homes and pay $590 a month.

And here’s another park closing for redevelopment. People who don’t own parks have no idea how strong the demand is for redeveloping the land they sit on. The typical mobile home park has a strong suburban location with great frontage and access to all utilities, which is perfect for apartments. And, as the writer duly notes, 90 apartment units at $1,500 per month is a whole lot more revenue than 40 lots at $590 per month. But the existing park didn’t need millions of dollars in construction capital and interest costs and there probably was a lot rent number that could have saved it. Was it $700? $750? Somebody should have asked when the first hint was given that the park might sell. Instead, the park is yet another victim of greener pastures and an escape from criticism.

Seven Days: Nonprofit Seeks Land for New Manufactured Home Park

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A nonprofit that helps mobile home park residents create owner cooperatives is looking for land for a new park.

A private donor gave the Cooperative Development Institute $50,000 to jump-start the project, which is expected to cost millions of dollars and take years to complete. CDI has identified suitable land in southern Vermont that could accommodate 200 new manufactured homes, Jeremiah Ward, CDI’s water infrastructure support program manager, said this week. He declined to identify the location of the potential site, noting that purchase discussions are in their early stages.

Ward said the donor, whose name was not revealed, asked CDI’s...

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A nonprofit that helps mobile home park residents create owner cooperatives is looking for land for a new park.
A private donor gave the Cooperative Development Institute $50,000 to jump-start the project, which is expected to cost millions of dollars and take years to complete.

Only an academic would be excited about a $50,000 donation to fund a study of a multi-million-dollar project. They will no doubt use the $50,000 for a feasibility study that will tell them – no matter what the truth is – that the concept of building a new park is absolute genius. Then, with the $50,000 gone, they will spend years forming committees and having endless discussions. At some point, to justify their existence, they will start passing the hat to raise millions of dollars for the actual construction, which will quietly never be mentioned again when they top out the fundraising at maybe $100,000. In the end the donor might have been better off just burning the $50,000 and grilling a hot dog on it. At least there would be a nicely cooked hot dog to show for it.

Bay News 9: Pines Trailer Park to close but residents left in limbo with no set date

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MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — After years of weathering storms on Anna Maria Island, a mobile home park is set to close.

Residents of Pines Trailer Park say the property management company sent them an email announcing the closure, but didn’t provide a firm date. The email also mentioned the possibility of continued residency for some.

Pines Trailer Park is set to close according to property management It’s residents received an email from Pines Park Investors LLC on Jan.  4, but the letter also mentioned the possibility that some residents could extend their month-to-month residency for up to a couple of years

These waters are calm now, but...

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The management team is concerned about the long-term viability of the park.“The cumulative impact of delinquency, loss of units, and the need for significant investments makes it clear that the park’s current model is no longer feasible," the letter said.

Most residents – and certainly the media – don’t seem to realize that a mobile home park is a business, just like any other form of commercial real estate. Any business that does not make money ultimately shuts down. And any use of land that has a more profitable replacement will ultimately be redeveloped. In so many of these articles the attitude is that the mobile home park owner is somehow a governmental non-profit. They’re not. Nor did they ever ask to be.

Courier Journal: Metro Council rezones trailer park after developer commits funds for displaced residents

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Louisville Metro Council members approved the rezoning of a mobile home park in the South End on Thursday after tabling the case in order to find additional assistance for residents who will soon be displaced.

Residents of the Woodland Estates Mobile Home Community learned about the park’s rezoning last year after the park owner reached an agreement with Core5 Industrial Properties, which filed plans to build 1.2 million square feet of warehouses on the property. The rezoning case went to a vote during the council's Dec. 12 meeting but was tabled after some members voiced concerns over the residents' abilities to handle the financial...

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Residents of the Woodland Estates Mobile Home Community learned about the park’s rezoning last year after the park owner reached an agreement with Core5 Industrial Properties, which filed plans to build 1.2 million square feet of warehouses on the property.

And another park bites the dust. Seeing a trend here? Guess why? The lot rents were too low to beat out the industrial redevelopment option.

WFTS Tampa Bay: Residents of Winter Haven’s Lucerne Lakeside park frustrated with rent hikes and fines

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WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — Michael McBride moved to Lucerne Lakeside 55+ mobile home community because he was enticed by the beautiful property.

“It was nice. It was cleaned up. It seems like it was being taken care of well. Yards were mowed immaculately, weed eating everything,” McBride said.

He said that all changed when a new owner took over, and now the property is not being kept.

“Septic line broke that was running, it filled up in the tank and was running out into the canal. The garbage cans are overfilled because they're not big enough for it. Not enough garbage cans to accommodate 140 people,” McBride said.

Residents reached out to ABC...

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It’s good to see that the “Free Rent Movement” folks are back from their Christmas break. Here are some of the basic common-sense contradictions contained in this article:

Residents reached out to ABC Action News because they say several ongoing issues may force them out, including receiving fines for parking on lawns and not keeping the grass cut.

So let me get this straight. People are going to have to move out because the new owners are requiring them to mow their lawns and not park their cars in their yards? That’s maybe the dumbest quote so far this year. Where in America do you not have to mow your yard and not park in it? If that’s your goal as a resident, then you need to move out of this nice property and into a trailer park with no skirting and gravel roads. You’ll find one under the bridge and down by the river.

Lewis said the rent has continuously increased despite most residents having fixed incomes. In 2022, the lot rent was $566; this year, it’s $694. She said the fees also vary month to month.

The rate of inflation under the Biden administration – which covers the period 2022 to 2024 – was 20%. That would make a $566 rent $679 per month – which is pretty much exactly where it is now. You might say “but that’s just over three years’ time and not four” but remember that Biden had not screwed up inflation that much in his first year as he inherited a nearly 0% rate. If the residents don’t like the 20% inflation result then maybe they should have worked more diligently on the Trump re-election campaign in 2020.

Anna Maria Island Sun: Owner closes Pines Trailer Park

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BRADENTON BEACH –  Pines Trailer Park residents who recently received city approval to repair their hurricane-damaged mobile homes received a letter on Jan. 4 from Pines Park Investors LLC stating that the park will be closed.

The letter from Pines Park Investors LLC, whose manager is Shawn Kaleta, was received by Pines homeowners on Jan. 4 and reads in part:

“Over the past months, we have conducted extensive financial modeling and assessments to determine the viability of maintaining the park,” according to the letter. “Unfortunately, we have come to the difficult conclusion that Pines Park is no longer sustainable as a trailer park and...

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“Over the past months, we have conducted extensive financial modeling and assessments to determine the viability of maintaining the park,” according to the letter. “Unfortunately, we have come to the difficult conclusion that Pines Park is no longer sustainable as a trailer park and must be closed.”

Yes, this is exactly what I predicted months ago. FEMA and city governments have suddenly realized that all they have to do to get rid of mobile home parks is simply demand that every home be raised above the base floodplain elevation (BFE) – one home they even wanted to be elevated 12’ in the air – which costs a fortune and that no resident or owner can possibly afford. It’s really a clever scheme in that you can disguise closing down “trailer parks” while blaming it on simply looking out for the residents’ future happiness. If that’s not FEMA’s intention then they need to immediately cut out this nonsense and get these people back in their homes as quickly as possible. Have you ever heard of such a thing from a group supposedly devoted to helping those in need? That would be like the police showing up at your house and saying “sorry, but I can’t stop that burglar from strangling you until you replace your deadbolts, because it might happen again”.

News Center Maine: Bangor mobile home residents secure funding to buy park

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BANGOR, Maine — Residents of Cedar Falls Mobile Home Park in Bangor have secured financing to buy the land their homes sit on.

Last year, they successfully submitted an $8 million bid to prevent the property from being sold to a Canadian developer that planned to increase monthly rent by $35 a year.

This opportunity stems from a 2023 Maine law requiring park owners to give residents a 60-day notice before a sale, allowing them to submit an offer to buy the property.

Ronnie Pinkham, president of the Cedar Falls Resident Cooperative, said the group has made significant progress. "We're on the right road to success," she said.

Last...

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So check this out. The residents are paying $8 million to buy their mobile home park to fend off a $35 per month lot rent increase:

Residents of Cedar Falls Mobile Home Park in Bangor have secured financing to buy the land their homes sit on. Last year, they successfully submitted an $8 million bid to prevent the property from being sold to a Canadian developer that planned to increase monthly rent by $35 a year.

And now they just figured out that, upon buying it, they will have to raise the rent more than $35 per month:

With the interest on the loans and $300,000 in repairs that need to be done on the property, lot rent will have to increase.

So here’s the moral. When the tenants buy the park, the combination of mortgage and operating costs requires a rent that is just as much – or more – than when a professional owner steps in. But here’s the bigger problem. Residents are lousy managers as they refuse to evict for unpaid rent, make tough decisions that anger their neighbors, or vote to spend money on cap-x repairs, so the tenants pay not only more rent per month but their quality of life in the park is actually lower. Pretty stupid concept, right?

Ashland News: Mobile home dwellers rally against rent hikes, hopeful for proposed legislation

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When 83-year-old Kayla Starr moved into Candlewood Park in Talent four years ago, the quiet “55 and older” mobile home park came with minimal maintenance and no amenities, but space rent for an older doublewide was an affordable $515 per month.

Starr, who has lived in the region for four decades, was drawn to the quiet neighborhood along Colver Road with a sense of community and enough space to grw some vegetables to help with monthly food costs.

Four years later, she’s one of thousands of mobile home park dwellers around the state facing exorbitant space rent increases and corporate ownership or management who impose, residents say,...

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First of all, Oregon already passed rent control in 2019. But to the “Free Rent Movement” folks that’s not nearly enough. Now they want to persuade you that mobile home park owners should not even be able to raise rents even in-line with inflation. And their rationale is that old moms and pops never did it so new owners shouldn’t be allowed to either:

“Corporate investment in these parks is really a nationwide issue. … You used to have traditional park owners who were regular people, who maybe lived in the same parks they managed and had a sense of pride in their parks. Residents often thought of park owners as extended family,” Marsh said.

Based on this logic, when you’re Grandmother dies you should be required to maintain their Reader’s Digest subscription and monthly membership to the Lucille Ball fan club. No, the truth is that the “mom and pop quantitative easing” is ending. It’s over. Residents will now have to deal with the real world where nobody operates mobile home parks at a loss anymore and every property is subject to redevelopment if there’s a more profitable use. I remember when a Duke University professor was writing an academic paper on mobile home parks and called me and asked “why do mom and pop owners charge rents that are so ridiculously low?” to which I said “because they view themselves more as philanthropists than landlords, I guess”.

Looks like Oregon wants to get rid of their mobile home parks because, if they pass this, any sane new park owner will simply redevelop into a use that has no such restrictions.

Or is that actually what they’re hoping for behind closed doors? We’ll see …

Observer-Dispatch: Could mobile homes be part of the solution to Oneida County's affordable housing shortage?

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The area’s latest ribbon cutting for an affordable housing project didn’t take place in any of the usual venues and it didn’t look like any of the usual projects that celebrate their affordability.

Most of those projects are apartment buildings or multi-family dwellings (such as Johnson Park Green Community Apartments or the Olbiston Apartments in Utica) located in either Utica or Rome on city streets.

But the ribbon cutting for Adirondack Ridge took place on Hulser Road in the Town of Trenton last Tuesday with sweeping views of the countryside from the 212-acre site. Adirondack Ridge is a mobile home park owned by Teton Management Corp.,...

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And many mobile-home owners rent the land on which their home sites, she said. If they fall behind in their lot rent, they can be evicted. “Oftentimes, they can’t afford to move their own mobile home because that’s expensive … So they lose their home,” she said.

Did this writer even read their copy before they turned it in? Check out this logic. “if the resident is unable to pay the lot rent then they might not be able to relocate their home”. So if they’re too broke to pay rent why in the world would they even think of moving their mobile home? Yank it around on a bicycle?

What always blows me away with this narrative is this simple question. If they can’t afford the rent, why not sell their home right where it sits to someone who can pay the rent? Why abandon it when you could sell it? That seems like the dumbest thing they could do, right? There’s really no rebuttal to this. I posed this question to a frothy woke journalist once and they couldn’t even come up with a retort.

West Virginia Watch: To save affordable housing, states promote resident-owned mobile home parks

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LIBERTY, Mo. — Over her 25 years living in a quiet suburban mobile home park, Kristi Peterman got to know the neighbors directly next door and a few across the street.

But since she and her neighbors collectively purchased the sprawling park outside of Kansas City from its longtime owner in 2021, she’s gotten to know just about every resident.

“It’s a community, and not just a neighborhood,” she said. “A neighborhood is a group of houses or homes that are in proximity of each other. A community is something entirely different.”

Housing prices are soaring across the country, and the shortage of affordable housing is a primary concern for...

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There are two main factual problems with this article:

Millions of Americans own mobile homes but rent the ground beneath them. And despite the “mobile” moniker, these factory-built homes are difficult and costly to relocate. That makes owners of such homes particularly susceptible to rent hikes — especially as longtime communities get bought up by big investors.

#1 The fact that mobile homes are “not easily moved” has nothing to do with being “susceptible to rate hikes”. There is no form of housing that is actually “mobile” yet every other sector (single-family, condominium, apartment) is somehow different? Why is that? Well, it’s not. People live in mobile homes because they are inexpensive and NOT because they think they can attach them to their Buick and drive off at the drop of a hat. The reason mobile home park lot rents go up is simply economics: when your rent is $300 per month on average in a country where the average single-family home is $400,000 and the average apartment is $2,000 per month then you can literally double the lot rent and still be 70% less than every other option. And that’s why rents go up and people still flock to mobile home parks: because we’re the cheapest form of housing on earth. Sure, residents would like the rents to remain ridiculously low in perpetuity, but the failings of mom and pop to set proper rent levels is not going to survive the next generation. When mobile home park lot rents no longer offer a great value, then people will stop living in them and owners will have to lower prices to remain competitive. It’s called basic economics. But it has NOTHING to do with mobility.

Residents at Liberty Landing were “phenomenally lucky,” Peterman said. The park’s longtime owner was looking to get out of the business and suggested the resident-owned model. Working with a nonprofit organization, residents bought the park by securing a $9.5 million loan — debt that is being repaid by monthly lot rents.

#2 When the residents buy the mobile home park their lot rent ends up exactly the same – or higher – than when the ‘evil corporation” does. They have the same mortgage payment, utility cost, insurance cost, property tax – everything. But, unlike the corporate owner, they are lousy at collecting rents, fixing things, and budgeting, so residents end up actually paying more yet having a lower quality of life. Makes sense, right?

I went on a wokester podcast a few years ago and pointed out both of these factual issues to the host who then refused to debate either of them because there’s no defense to the simple truth. So instead, he just edited that part of the discussion out and simply stuck with the generic “Free Rent Movement” slant that “corporate owners are evil”. But I invite anyone who wants to debate this to contact me. I would love to hear an intelligent argument on how 2+2=5.

STUPIDITY INDEX: 10

M Live: 5 things to know about Kalamazoo County’s mobile home park project

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KALAMAZOO COUNTY, MI — Kalamazoo County’s Public Housing Commission unveiled four new modular homes in Sugarloaf Mobile Home Park in November.

Kalamazoo County’s Public Housing Commission launched the $700,397 project in July as a way to quickly add needed housing in the area. The county needs about 7,750 more homes by 2030 in order to meet population trends, officials said in 2022.

The Schoolcraft Township park, 11443 Bonnie Drive, will host a total of 10 county-owned modular homes for low-income families.

 

Funding for the project came from the county’s 2015 housing millage, said Public Housing Commissioner David Anderson. That...

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A two-bedroom, two-bathroom home will cost $870 a month to rent, while a three-bedroom will run $920 a month, commissioner Gwendolyn Hooker said. The housing commission owns the homes, but not the lots they sit on. Monthly rent includes a $440 lot rental fee. The home rent portion of the new homes would go directly to the housing commission, plans state.

I’m more than confused on how this is any different than what park owners who embrace rental homes have already been doing for the past 50 years? I guess it’s fine for the county to join in as it fills vacant lots without any cost to the park owner, but how is this even worthy of media time?

STUPIDITY INDEX: 5

ABC 13 News: FEMA struggles to meet deadline with only three of 26 families placed in mobile homes

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ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — Here is an update on FEMA's progress on placing families in mobile homes.

A top FEMA official pledged he would try to get 26 Helene-affected families placed in mobile homes by Christmas.

Progress is slow-going at the site in Black Mountain.

FEMA officials confirm only three families are in trailers out of 26 trailers total.

FEMA reports weather and utility connection issues have caused delays in the final installation.

A spokesperson writes, “23 families have been identified and required background checks are taking place. We are continuing to work and get families into these homes as quickly as... Read More

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Here is an update on FEMA's progress on placing families in mobile homes. A top FEMA official pledged he would try to get 26 Helene-affected families placed in mobile homes by Christmas. Progress is slow-going at the site in Black Mountain. FEMA officials confirm only three families are in trailers out of 26 trailers total.

Does anyone on earth still seriously believe that the Biden administration can get anything done properly?

STUPIDITY INDEX: 8

MyChesCo: $225 Million HUD Investment Targets Manufactured Housing—A Game-Changer for Millions of Americans

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Manufactured housing has taken center stage in the U.S. housing crisis, and for good reason. With over 22 million Americans living in these homes, they are one of the most critical and affordable housing options for millions. Recognizing this, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has announced a groundbreaking $225 million in grants as part of its Preservation and Reinvestment Initiative for Community Enhancement (PRICE) program. This first-of-its-kind effort invests in manufactured housing communities (MHCs) to preserve, revitalize, and expand options for low- and moderate-income families, with a...

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The grants will fund bold projects such as replacing old units with new, energy-efficient homes, expanding existing MHCs, and creating entirely new, resident-driven communities.

First of all, Biden is leaving the building in a few weeks and I doubt this program will ever get funded as I assume Trump will undo every single thing Biden does in these final days (and for good reason).

But even if it did actually see daylight, there ae four basic problems with this concept:

#1: $225 million is not a game changer for “million of Americans” unless the plan is to give $10 to each of the 22 million folks who live in mobile home parks. Has that title been puffed up enough? In reality, most private equity groups alone have already poured more than $225 million into their own mobile home park portfolios via cap-x projects and with much greater impact (and no credit from the media).

#2: Nobody on earth cares about “energy efficiency” projects that cost more than they save and are part of the whole “green agenda” that was summarily flushed down the toilet on November 5th.

#3: The Federal government has no power to influence community zoning and has proven to be completely impotent when it comes to park expansions since the day Biden took office.

#4: There is no such thing as “entirely new resident-driven communities”. That’s the same “word salad” nonsense Biden shouted about for four years. None of it happened. His time is now over. Give it up.

STUPIDITY INDEX: 8

Miami Herald: Outrage and fear in Sweetwater as thousands fight an order to vacate their mobile homes

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Earlier this month, less than 24 hours after aging into double digits, Jacobo Cardozo Yate found himself standing on the side of West Flagler Street, near the start of the six-lane divided highway that bisects Miami-Dade County’s urban core. The day before was his 10th birthday. Jacobo admitted the occasion had been “a bit sad” because “everyone is nervous.” Ultimately, he didn’t get what he wanted.

The day before was his 10th birthday. Jacobo admitted the occasion had been “a bit sad” because “everyone is nervous.” Ultimately, he didn’t get what he wanted.

Read more at:...

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To that end, Jacobo and roughly three dozen of his neighbors gathered on Dec. 21 outside their community, a 900-home trailer park, to protest its imminent closure. The park’s owner, CREI Holdings, informed residents last month that they had until May 19 to vacate their homes, continuing a statewide trend of trailer parks shuttering to make way for development.

If residents don’t want mobile home parks to be redeveloped, the only answer is to have much higher lot rents. Yet all the residents say – supported by the media – is that higher lot rents are “evil”. You can’t have it both ways. As I’ve been writing for years, LOW LOT RENTS = REDEVELOPMENT. You can either accept that reality or not, but it’s not going to change. There are too many other, more profitable uses for the land that most mobile home parks sit on.

STUPIDITY INDEX: 10

News 5 Cleveland: 'That's it for Euclid Beach': Former mobile home park residents settle into new lives

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CLEVELAND — For Heather Malone, the Euclid Beach Mobile Home Community was an oasis.

She lived just steps from Lake Erie for 14 years in a tidy trailer surrounded by hand-painted statues and flowers. It’s the place where she found peace after striving for sobriety, where walking near the water helped her reconnect with herself.

In mid-November, Malone was one of the last tenants to leave, a witness to the final days of a place unlike any other in Cleveland.

Now the mobile home park is vacant. The land, off Lakeshore Boulevard in the city’s North Collinwood neighborhood, is being cleared to become part of a park. And the people who lived...

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Now the mobile home park is vacant. The land, off Lakeshore Boulevard in the city’s North Collinwood neighborhood, is being cleared to become part of a park. And the people who lived there – some for just a few years, some for generations – are settling into different homes scattered across the region and beyond. “This whole experience has been unprecedented,” said Isaac Robb, vice president of planning, research and urban projects at the Western Reserve Land Conservancy. The nonprofit bought the 28.5-acre site in late 2021 to protect it from development and bring it back into local hands. After a planning process, the land conservancy decided in early 2023 to close the park, which was half-empty and hemorrhaging money.

Wait a minute … I thought that the whole “tenants buying their own park” schtick was supposed to be a forever story of unicorns and gumdrops? Nobody mentioned the reality that the non-profit (who IS the owner and not the tenants since they put up the money and have their name on the mortgage) is free to re-sell the park or even tear it down if they want.

These residents would still have a home if they had let a corporate buyer be in charge. That was a costly mistake on their part.

WNDU: Habitat for Humanity looking to redevelop Mishawaka mobile home park

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MISHAWAKA, Ind. (WNDU) - New homes could be coming in the new year to Mishawaka courtesy of Habitat for Humanity.

Last month, Habitat purchased Oak Grove Mobile Home Park, which is located at McKinley Avenue and Byrkit Avenue on Mishawaka’s east side.

Habitat of St. Joseph County CEO Jim Williams told WNDU 16 News Now only 34 of the 117 lots at Oak Grove are occupied. Habitat is closing the mobile home park but working to relocate the people still living there.

Williams added the families will be invited to take part in the Habitat for Humanity program starting in January.

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Last month, Habitat purchased Oak Grove Mobile Home Park, which is located at McKinley Avenue and Byrkit Avenue on Mishawaka’s east side. Habitat of St. Joseph County CEO Jim Williams told WNDU 16 News Now only 34 of the 117 lots at Oak Grove are occupied. Habitat is closing the mobile home park but working to relocate the people still living there. Williams added the families will be invited to take part in the Habitat for Humanity program starting in January.

And here we have another non-profit that bought a park to “save the residents from the evil corporate landlord” and then summarily evicted everyone to build an apartment complex. Still thinking the “tenant-owned park” concept is a winner?

Bangor Daily News: Bangor residents will get $1M from state to buy their mobile home park

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The residents of a Bangor mobile home park are $1 million closer to owning their own community, thanks to funding from the Maine state housing authority announced Thursday.

The money will be appropriated from this year’s supplemental budget, which set aside $5 million in one-time funds to allow MaineHousing, the state’s housing authority, to support the purchases of mobile home parks by their residents.

“It’s a really good bargain for us in terms of creating affordable homes at a relatively low price,” MaineHousing spokesperson Scott Thistle said.

The move brings the residents of Cedar Falls, a 129-lot mobile home park on Bangor’s...

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The Canadian company that was outbid by the Cedar Falls cooperative told the Bangor Daily News it had only planned to raise lot rents by $25 to $35 a year and were responsible park owners.

If the tenants buy the park they will face lot rent increases much greater than what the corporate buyer was proposing. But don’t worry, there’s no way the tenants will be able to raise the $8 million down payment by the due date since the clock has almost run out and all they have cobbled together is $1.5 million. The tenants’ lack of fundraising ability has luckily saved them from their lack of park management skills.

KNOP: North Platte to transform rundown trailer park into new community park

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NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (KNOP) - From the opening of a new water park in Cody Park to the long-awaited construction of a recreation complex, the community of North Platte is making significant investments in parks and recreation. And city officials aren’t stopping there.

This week, the North Platte City Council approved the purchase of nearly two-and-a-half acres of land along 14th Street, just south of Madison Middle School, with plans to transform it into a park.

“We’re building a rec center, we’re building water parks, we have a lot of construction going on here in North Platte, which is great. The Northwest is kind of one of those areas...

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This week, the North Platte City Council approved the purchase of nearly two-and-a-half acres of land along 14th Street, just south of Madison Middle School, with plans to transform it into a park. “We’re building a rec center, we’re building water parks, we have a lot of construction going on here in North Platte, which is great. The Northwest is kind of one of those areas that doesn’t have a place where you can walk within ten minutes,” said Lyle Minshull, city of North Platte Parks and Rec Director.

When a city tears down a mobile home park it’s called “progress” and when a corporate owner does the same thing it’s called “evil”. Does anyone find that even the least bit hypocritical?

WITN 22: Biden-Harris Administration Unveils $225 Million Grant to Revitalize Manufactured Housing

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Funds to Repair, Upgrade, and Preserve Affordable Housing Across 26 States

WASHINGTON — In a historic move to preserve and revitalize manufactured housing, the Biden-Harris administration has announced $225 million in grant funding for 17 awardees across 26 states under the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Preservation and Reinvestment Initiative for Community Enhancement (PRICE) program. The initiative targets repairs, infrastructure upgrades, new home creation, and transitioning manufactured housing communities (MHCs) into resident-managed models.

A Lifeline for Affordable Housing

More than 22 million Americans...

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In a historic move to preserve and revitalize manufactured housing, the Biden-Harris administration has announced $225 million in grant funding for 17 awardees across 26 states under the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Preservation and Reinvestment Initiative for Community Enhancement (PRICE) program. The initiative targets repairs, infrastructure upgrades, new home creation, and transitioning manufactured housing communities (MHCs) into resident-managed models.

I guess it’s never too late to try and buy votes … or maybe it actually is.

The Bourne Enterprise: Appeals Court Sends The Park At Pocasset Case Back To Superior Court

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The Massachusetts Appeals Court remanded, on December 3, the lawsuit over ownership of the Pocasset Mobile Home Park to Barnstable Superior Court, renewing residents’ hopes of retaining control of the land beneath their homes.

Predating The Lawsuit

The Pocasset Mobile Home Park, also called The Park at Pocasset, has been at the center of a legal battle since early 2020. According to the Appeals Court’s decision, Crown Communities LLC entered into a purchase and sale agreement (PSA) with the park’s current owner, Philip Austin, to buy the park for $3.8 million in cash in 2019.

The next day, Mr. Austin notified residents and provided...

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Barnstable Superior Court ultimately found that the petition did not contain the requisite number of signatures and “the association did not meet its burden of proof.” Judge Michael K. Callan stated that the petition needed at least 41 signatures from owners living in the park to represent the required 51 percent of residents. Forty-nine signatures were submitted; of those, the court found that four were duplicates (from the same unit), five were subtenants (not owners), five were owners but did not live in the park, and four more freely rescinded and withdrew their approval. That left the association with only 31 signatures of support from resident owners. “No effort was made by any of the signature gatherers to verify whether the park residents who were asked to sign the petition were owners or simply tenants, subtenants, or guest residents at the park,” Judge Callan wrote in his decision.

Do you honestly believe that a group of residents who can’t even figure out the simple directions for signing a petition are competent to put together a non-profit and funding for a “tenant owned” property?

Vermont Public: A Colchester mobile home park rallied to become a village. A year later, here's what they've learned

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It’s been a little more than a year since the Westbury mobile home park in Colchester became the Village of Westbury — the first new village established in Vermont in nearly a century.

Westbury is a sprawling, tree-lined community with 250 mobile homes on the east edge of Colchester. Residents say they love Westbury’s abundance of quiet, nature, and wildlife — one resident recently counted 43 wild turkeys on their property.

Marc Juneau is a teacher who has lived in Westbury for eight years. He said he fell in love with Westbury the day his real estate agent brought him there.

“When I got out of the car to see the unit on Webley Street, it...

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But buying the park came with new challenges. The co-op was now responsible for the park’s maintenance and infrastructure needs, like water, electricity, roads and snow plowing. Because working-class Westbury is technically a private community, getting those services was complicated and expensive.

Sounds like the reality of “tenant owned communities” is finally kicking in. It all sounds great when the glossy P.R. people from the non-profits dangle the utopia of “let us buy your park for you” but then comes the sad reality that mobile home park residents are the worst property managers on earth, unable to collect rents or make tough decisions on rent increases. And that does not even count just a general lack of professionalism on capital expenditures and basic business sense. As I’ve said for over a decade: “TENANT-OWNED” PARKS HAVE THE SAME – OR HIGHER – RENTS THAN CORPORATE OWNERSHIP, BUT WITH A LOWER QUALITY OF LIFE. Want a second opinion? Read this article: https://coloradosun.com/2024/04/22/sans-souci-boulder-county-mobile-home-park-challenges/