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The city of Aspen is considering another contribution to a resident-ownership model purchase of a mobile home park, less than a year after the closing of the Aspen Basalt and Mountain Valley mobile home park purchase that the city assisted with.
The Cavern Springs mobile home park in Glenwood Springs has received an offer to purchase the land underneath the park from an undisclosed buyer for a price of $23 million.
“Once this park is sold again to an outside entity … it will no longer be affordable,” Katherine Coe, project organizer at Mountain Voices Project — the presenting organization — said. “We know this from experience … and we...
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Do any of these non-profit groups own a calculator? At $23 million to buy a 98-lot park, that equates to around $230,000 per lot. Wouldn’t it be better to simply move these 100 households to a cheaper state and buy them each a stick-built house of their choosing for $230,000 and give it to them debt-free? Aspen is fun for wealthy people, but I doubt that it’s that great when you’re working in a tire shop. Why not give these households a quality-of-life upgrade for the same money? Or is the goal simply to “defeat landlords” at any cost?