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The Appeal Democrat: Dozens of eviction notices go to Yuba mobile home owners

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Dozens of mobile home owners in Villa Seville mobile home park in Olivehurst received 60-day eviction notices Wednesday, according to the park owner’s attorney who prepared them.

Sacramento attorney Joseph W. Carroll said his client’s goal is to rescind all the notices and not evict any of the resident/homeowners so long as the residents correct violations identified by the state agency that regulates mobile home parks.

“My client only served the 60 day notices because the (California Department of Housing and Community Development) advised the park owner that its permit to operate would be suspended if any resident/homeowner did...

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“My client only served the 60 day notices because the (California Department of Housing and Community Development) advised the park owner that its permit to operate would be suspended if any resident/homeowner did not immediately correct the violations,” Carroll said.

Most Americans think that mobile home park residents rent their units, just like an apartment. But the truth is that probably 90%+ own their units outright and only pay the park owner lot rent. That’s why it’s so annoying when people blame park owners for the condition of the homes in the park, because they have no ownership nor control over them except by filing rules violations. And many states refuse to allow an owner to evict over rules violations so there is literally no way to get things done. In this case, the owner was told to fix the home or lose their license and, with no other options, they filed evictions to get the tenants to either make repairs or leave for the sake of the other residents.

Then to top it all off, the media spins it that the owner is “evil” to file the evictions.

What a screwed-up world we live in.

San Jose Spotlight: San Jose says mobile home park owner can’t raise rent

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A San Jose mobile home park with hundreds of spaces has failed to get city approval for a proposed rent increase.

Officials with the San Jose Rent Stabilization Program have denied the Golden Wheel Mobile Home Park owner’s request to raise rents on low-income residents by $60 per month for at least 12 years. Under the city’s mobile rent policy, property owners can raise rents up to 7% without city approval. With tenants at the mobile home park paying as low as $595 per month, the proposed rent increase would’ve been about 10% for the lowest income tenants, according to San Jose housing officials.

Jeff Scott, spokesperson for the housing...

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Nick Ubaldi, regional manager for Harmony Communities, which oversees the 221-space mobile home park, said they don’t agree with the denial because they need to recoup the money invested in recent renovations made to the park. “Over $1 million was recently invested in the park. The ordinance forces rents well below market rate, making it difficult to operate a park of this size,” Ubaldi told San José Spotlight. “By denying this increase, the city has set the business back, discouraged further investment and ultimately put residents at risk as the park deteriorates over time.”

Of all the stupid things that bureaucrats have approved over the decades, the top of the list has to be rent control. All it does is create a lower-quality housing market, eliminate new construction, and makes all property owners perpetually weighing the option of closure. Nobody can intelligently argue that rent control is smart – just look at how many famous economists have blasted it over the years – and, when pressed with explaining how it’s beneficial, they simply try to distract with name calling and old, worn-out Democratic messaging.

At some point the people who live in California and other rent control states are going to have to vote to eliminate this idiocy – or live with inferior housing options for an eternity.

As for this mobile home park, I imagine they will be tearing it down for redevelopment. Who would blame them?

News Break: Florida Mobile Home Park’s Future in Doubt as Developers Eye Major Project

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In Florida, plans are underway to transform the Seville Mobile Home Park—a long-standing community asset—into a major mixed-use development. The 8.5-acre site, located at 515 N. Federal Highway and 426 N.E. 5th Street, currently accommodates 130 mobile homes and 35 RV lots, but developers envision a bold new future for the area.

A Vision for Transformation

The proposed project aims to significantly increase the site’s density by rezoning from a Regional Activity Center (RAC) Neighborhood designation to an RAC Corridor classification. This change is intended to allow for a higher concentration of development, paving the way for a vibrant...

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Preliminary plans suggest that the new development could include up to 750 residential units, alongside roughly 25,000 square feet of retail and 44,000 square feet of office space. 

So let me get this straight. The choice is either to keep a 130-space mobile home park on that property or replace it with all the items named above. I don’t think the title “Future in Doubt” is accurate, right? There’s no “doubt” about it. Another park bites the dust.

The Colorado Sun: Colorado School of Mines project hopes to warm houses, lower bills in mobile home communities

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It gets cold in Lake County’s high country, and getting warm when you live in a mobile home is expensive. Just ask Armando, whose monthly utility bill for his two-bedroom manufactured house heads toward $300.

“It’s the biggest bill,” said Armando, who like other residents of the predominantly Latino home park asked to be identified by only his first name out of concerns about the Trump administration’s immigration policies.

That bill, however, is dropping thanks to a pilot project spearheaded by the Colorado School of Mines aimed at bolstering energy efficiency across the community through a combination of improvements to the units and a...

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It was all sounding good until the woke scam surfaced:

… and a switch to electric appliances.

While I have written articles on the many ways to improve mobile home energy efficiency for the past two decades (better weatherstripping on doors, more caulk around windows, thermal switch covers, plastic over windows, etc.) there is absolutely nothing to be gained by changing appliances from gas to electric. Zero. That’s the now-defeated mantra of the Biden administration, in which they wanted to mandate that you could not use gas appliances because it did not fit in with their “green agenda”.

The bottom line is that anyone can make a mobile home have lower utility bills with simply a few parts, a caulk gun, and a bit of knowledge. But don’t for a minute think that buying all new electric appliances is part of that program. The cost of the appliances alone would offset the energy saving of all the other common-sense items for the next decade or more.

Duluth News Tribune: Owner seeks to close Hermantown mobile home park

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HERMANTOWN — The owner of a mobile home park that has fallen into disrepair is now threatening to close the operation rather than execute court-ordered repairs.

Elevated Management LLC and its owner, Steve Schneeberger, have notified residents of Maple Fields Mobile Home Park that they must vacate their homes, a move that has triggered additional legal action.

A Monday court filing on behalf of affected residents asks Judge Shawn Pearson to block the proposed evictions and nullify notices that have been sent. The plaintiffs’ attorney, Peter LaCourse of Justice North, noted that the court, in its Dec. 20 and 27 rulings, had barred Elevated...

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And another park bites the dust.

CBS NEWS: Colorado mobile home park residents stop corporate purchase, buy their own park

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For about seven weeks now the residents of the Meadowood Village Mobile Home Park in Littleton have been in charge of their own destiny after purchasing their park.

"A lot of people did not think we would make it. Us included at many times," said Sandy Cook, President of the Meadowood Village Cooperative. "We're now the proud owners. 92 homes. 139 people of Meadowood."

Meadowood Village was faced with the sale of the property a year ago when a Utah based company offered 18 million for the property. Colorado however has a law that enables the residents of mobile home parks to make their own offers. If they can match a buyout, they can buy...

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Once they matched the 18 million dollar offer, the board had to find the money. Meadowood knew they would have to carry a big mortgage. The question was, could they get enough grants and low interest loans from local, county and state government overseeing federal dollars to finance what they needed? The final piece turned out to be a $3.475 million low-interest loan from Colorado's Department of Local Affairs."DOLA was our last piece. When we got our DOLA award, had it not been for our DOLA award we would not have made it," Cook explained.

Let me first say that I am not in any way opposed to residents buying their mobile home park. What makes me mad is that the media tries to make it a "David vs. Goliath" story under which the residents slay the corporate landlord. Clearly, the seller in this story was more than happy to take the $18 million regardless of who gave it to them. But there's no biblical moral here. The lot rent that residents will be paying, however, is THE EXACT SAME AMOUNT as they would under a corporate buyer – perhaps even more. Here's the simple math behind that statement:

  1. All of the operating costs of the mobile home park are the same regardless of ownership (water, sewer, electricity, gas, insurance, repair, etc.). You don't get a "resident-owned discount" on any of these.
  2. The monthly mortgage payment on the roughly $15 million mortgage will be identical no matter who the borrower is.
  3. You add these two together and you come to the same monthly number no matter if the residents own it or a professional investor owns it.

The only difference between the two options is the bizarre concern that somehow the corporate owner is buying it for land development. While that's true in some cases (like last week's $1 million per lot park sale) that's very much a rarity. So what's the benefit to the residents with these transactions?

I would suggest that the lot rent will be HIGHER under resident ownership, as the tenants are lousy managers of these properties and will allow the delinquency to go up and the needed cap-x repairs to go down. It would be like letting the guy in row E fly the American Airlines jet and expect the same outcome as the highly-trained pilot. But when the media pretends that the residents are just as good pilots as the professionals, it demeans those who actually know what they're doing: the corporate investors. And that's simply not true. Go drive a "tenant owned" community and tell me how it compares to one owned by a corporate owner. You won't be impressed.

On the subject of longevity of the park not becoming redeveloped, the worst part of these stories is that they fail to tell the truth about an essential fact: these "tenant-owned" deals are not built for long-term financial survivability. When a corporate owner buys a mobile home park they typically do so with 10-year notes structured at 70% LTV. When the tenants buy the park, the financing is typically cobbled together from short-term notes (typically 3 to 5 years in duration) and other flimsy hand-outs. As a result, the deals will probably go back on the market again since they can't get them refinanced under a traditional structure and the non-profits lose interest and refuse to keep going with personal guarantees and grants.

I wish that, just once, somebody would have the guts to tell the truth about resident ownership! Again, I have no problem with it as a seller, but the lies have had a negative effect on the industry with many state governments and that part of the story has to end. Many blue-state bureaucrats have bought into the false "landlords are evil" manipulation over time, which is just plain wrong.

13 News: Pima County awaits $3 million in federal funding for mobile home repairs

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TUCSON, Ariz. (13 News) - Pima County officials are waiting on $3 million in new federal funding to continue crucial repairs on mobile and manufactured homes in low-income communities, but uncertainty surrounds when the money will arrive.

The funding comes from the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Preservation and Reinvestment Initiative for Community Enhancement (PRICE), a first-of-its-kind $225 million grant competition designed to preserve and revitalize manufactured housing communities nationwide.

The Pima County Home Repair program specifically targets neighborhoods near Benson Highway and in the Flowing Wells area,...

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It’s a great idea to repair old mobile homes at no cost to the owners. I hope more states can replicate this initiative.

BANGOR DAILY NEWS: A rural mobile home park could be Maine’s 3rd bought by residents under new law

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Unable to afford the upkeep of her home in Poland, Elaine Therriault sold the house in 2018 and bought a mobile home with the profit.

Life has become a lot more affordable since then for the 62-year-old, who supports herself and her grandson with her disability payments. At West Village mobile home park, the 42-lot community in Monmouth she moved to, lot rents are only $300. That’s a rare find among mobile home parks, which have seen sharp increases in lot rents in recent years.

When Therriault learned last November that the aging owners of West Village planned to sell the park to an unknown buyer, she grew concerned. She had heard...

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“The rent will be based on the expenses of the park, not somebody making somebody’s wallet grow bigger and bigger.”

The tenants are buying the park for $1.9 million. There are 42 total lots and $300 lot rent currently. So each lot will be burdened with around $45,000 of debt. Interest rates are currently around 7%. So let’s calculate the real numbers for a minute:

  • The 30-year mortgage payment for each lot will be around $300 per month all by itself. Add on water, sewer, taxes, insurance, management, trash, repair and maintenance, etc. and that’s about another $200 per month. And that leaves no money for cap-x repairs to roads, trees, water and sewer lines, etc.

The article refuses to say what the new lot rent will be under the tenants’ ownership, but it looks to me like around $500+ per month just to break even. And I have no clue how they will be able to pay for any major repairs at all.

Does anyone at the Maine non-profits educate the residents on what the lot rent will rise to after closing? You know the answer is “no”. Because if they did the tenants wouldn’t be buying these parks.

WIRED: DOGE Staffers at HUD Are From an AI Real Estate Firm and a Mobile Home Operator

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On February 10, employees at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) received an email asking them to list every contract at the bureau and note whether or not it was “critical” to the agency, as well as whether it contained any DEI components. This email was signed by Scott Langmack, who identified himself as a senior adviser to the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Langmack, according to his LinkedIn, already has another job: He’s the chief operating officer of Kukun, a property technology company that is, according to its website, “on a long-term mission to aggregate the hardest to find data.”

As is...

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Another DOGE operative WIRED has identified is Michael Mirski, who works for TCC Management, a Michigan-based company that owns and operates mobile home parks across the US, and graduated from the Wharton School in 2014.

It’s interesting that WIRED is trying to publicly shame a DOGE worker because he is associated with mobile home parks. Using that argument, I guess Sam Zell was an even bigger loser because he was the largest owner of mobile home parks in U.S. history?

I would love to compare the credentials of this WIRED journalist with those of the “trailer park” guy.

OPB: Manufactured home park residents pray for relief as lawmakers aim at rent

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Neatly trimmed hedges and green Astroturf lawns line the winding streets at Cascade Park Estates in Southeast Vancouver. But the tidy façade in mobile home communities like this one hides the stress of some older residents who worry about being priced out of one of the few places they can afford to live.

Sharon Pevey, 77, moved to Cascade Park Estates seven years ago. She was divorced and needed a place to live quickly. She paid $140,000 cash to buy her pale yellow, 1,400-square-foot mobile home. As with most manufactured home parks, she had to pay rent for the lot her home sat on, priced at $525 per month, plus property taxes. It was...

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Sharon Pevey, 77, moved to Cascade Park Estates seven years ago. She was divorced and needed a place to live quickly. She paid $140,000 cash to buy her pale yellow, 1,400-square-foot mobile home. As with most manufactured home parks, she had to pay rent for the lot her home sat on, priced at $525 per month, plus property taxes. It was expensive but she could manage since she runs a hair salon across the river in Portland.Soon after she moved, the rent increases started. They climbed each year, and today she pays $1,350 each month “for a piece of dirt that this house sits on,” Pevey said.

The Free Rent Movement folks are gearing up for another run at rent control in Washington state. Expect more articles like this shortly. Of course, the one item that nobody wants to address is how long do you think this mobile home park will last if they institute rent control? Not long. It will be torn down quickly and made into a better use with no rent control restrictions. Let’s see how stupid the bureaucrats in Washington really are this time around.

BANGOR DAILY NEWS: Warren puts controversial mobile home park proposal on hold

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Thursday night’s Planning Board meeting in Warren generated strong opposition to a proposed 22-lot mobile home park off of Route 1.

The Planning Board unanimously decided to delay the vote on approving the park to allow the developer time to make changes, including adding in plans to visually block the park from abutters.

While Maine has a number of mobile home parks, few new ones have been proposed in recent years even as the state — and particularly communities along the coast — have taken broader steps to address a critical housing shortage that has made living unaffordable for many residents.

When mobile home parks have gotten recent...

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Thursday night’s Planning Board meeting in Warren generated strong opposition to a proposed 22-lot mobile home park off of Route 1. “How are the people that live around this and own property that pay taxes, how are we benefiting from this? Because I pay taxes on waterfront property. And I want to know, like, how am I benefiting from this? What am I benefiting from this?

It’s interesting that Maine – which holds itself out as some type of liberal oasis of original thought – goes berserk with the mere mention of a new 22-space mobile home park.

This exemplifies why virtually no mobile home parks have been built in the U.S. in over 50 years.

Minneapolis Fed: Learning from the first (and only) manufactured housing boom

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Just over the city line from Minneapolis, Tim Schroeder has some affordable housing to show off—market-rate, no subsidy required. He leads the way into a new, 1,200-square-foot manufactured home. The closing is scheduled for the next day.

“You could imagine kids doing their homework at the counter,” said Schroeder, gesturing to the large kitchen island across from a farmhouse-style sink. “The parents’ suite is in the back.” Schroeder is president of Performance Realty Inc., the California-based owner of Urban Grove in St. Anthony, Minnesota. The realty firm acquired the 100-lot community in 2023 after a controversial prior sale nearly led...

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“Our analysis strongly supports those who have argued since the 1930s (at least) that the only chance of building homes that are ‘affordable’ is in a factory,” write Schmitz and his co-authors.3 “Our analysis shows that there is not only a chance, but that it’s possible. It’s been done.”

A rare, positive, factual story about the mobile home park industry. How refreshing.

The St. Pete Catalyst: Embattled townhome development’s second phase approved

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Eight-year-old plans to transform the former site of a delipidated St. Petersburg mobile home park into a sprawling townhome community are now entering the second of four phases.

City Council members unanimously approved a site plan for the  Avenue Townhomes at their Feb. 20 meeting. The scaled-down project will now offer 92 units at the former Lamplight Mobile Home Park in a coastal high-hazard area of northeast St. Petersburg.

Pinellas Park-based Belleair Development Group (BDG) completed construction on the ambitious project’s first phase in December 2024. Founder and president Carlos Yepes said the city has a...

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Out with Lamplight Mobile Home Park and in with expensive townhomes. Was there a higher lot rent level that would have kept Lamplight intact? That’s the big question that nobody wants to talk about.

The Post and Courier: North Charleston community sells for $15M, former Berkeley County YMCA fetches $1.2M

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A 146-unit manufactured housing community in North Charleston has changed hands for the first time in more than two decades, fetching $15 million.

Sherwood MHC at 2215 Hayne St., across Rivers Avenue from Trident Technical College, includes 119 tenant-owned homes, 17 rented park-owned homes, nine vacant mobile home lots and an office.

The trailer-park-owned homes have an average model year of 2013.

Marcus & Millichap's Charleston office represented the seller, Daniel Island-based Sherwood Community LLC, which purchased the property in 2004 for $1.3 million.

The new owner is Clearwater, Fla.-based Sherwood LE LLC.

Dan Hellberg, vice...

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A 146-unit manufactured housing community in North Charleston has changed hands for the first time in more than two decades, fetching $15 million. Marcus & Millichap's Charleston office represented the seller, Daniel Island-based Sherwood Community LLC, which purchased the property in 2004 for $1.3 million.

How do you turn $1.3 million into $15 million in twenty years? Buy a mobile home park in Charleston, SC.

Anna Maria Island SUN: Pines residents ask commission to deny zoning change requests

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BRADENTON BEACH – Pines residents asked the city on Feb. 20 to deny any future land use or zoning change requests for the Pines Trailer Park by Pines Park Investors LLC or its manager, Shawn Kaleta.

Mayor John Chappie told The Sun that no such requests had yet been submitted, but City Attorney Ricinda Perry said at a Jan. 16 Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) meet­ing that the property owner had confirmed the planned redevelopment of the parcel.

“I can tell you preliminarily it’s looking like some type of mixed-development that’s going to salvage as much of the character that’s there,” she said, adding that a rezoning would be...

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In a Jan. 27 letter to the Pines Trailer Park Homeown­ers Association (HOA), Pines Park Investors LLC offered to sell the mobile home park to the residents for $75 million. Commissioners said they support the continued exis­tence of the Pines, but don’t have the authority to interfere with private ownership of the park.

This park has 86 lots. That’s nearly $1 million per lot. There’s no way on earth this park is not being torn down, and no way on earth the city government is going to support denying legal zoning for this giant improvement in their tax base. There’s not a thing the residents can do or say to stop this freight train.

WLTX: Some Red Bank residents face eviction notice, but one legal expert says they can't be kicked out

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LEXINGTON COUNTY, S.C. — Residents of a mobile park home in Lexington County say they have just days to leave after their property was sold last week. The next day, they received a notice telling them to vacate, leaving them with many unanswered questions.

“There is no way a person can move a mobile home that they own or even locate somebody moving in a 10-day time frame," said resident Nancy Benway.

Nancy and Edward Benway have lived at Taylor’s Rental for seven years and have never had any issues until now.

They said the rent was always paid on time and in advance, but receiving this notice without prior knowledge was the last...

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"The minimum amount of notice they need to be given is 30 days, and outside of a nonpayment of rent situation, there really is no way they should have given a ten-day notice," Protheroe said.

Taylor's Rental Mobile Home Park is being torn down for redevelopment. And all that the media can come up with is the suggestion that tenants were given ten-days advance notice to leave and some personal injury lawyer claims they should get thirty. Big Deal. Nobody's going to benefit from an additional 20 days of notice. But they might still have their homes in Taylor's – potentially for a lifetime – if the lot rent would have been higher. That's the big issue here: simply how high mobile home park lot rents need to be to prevent parks from being redeveloped, right?

Bangor Daily News: New mobile home park proposed in the midcoast

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Across the midcoast, developers are trying to get a variety of new homes, condos and apartments built to address the region’s housing shortage. 

Another project is now in the permitting stages in the Knox County town of Warren. But it would look different from other developments that are underway in the region. Rather than constructing homes from the ground up, a developer is instead trying to build a new mobile home park, with 22 lots that would be rented out to residents. 

Residents will have a chance to learn more about the project at a public hearing on Feb. 27, which one local official said he expects to be well-attended. The project...

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But there is a growing movement to develop more mobile and modular housing in Maine Despite the negative perception some people may have of them, advocates say they can help alleviate the housing crisis while providing better living standards and cheaper rates than similar developments. 

Is the demand for affordable housing finally so high that even city officials are starting to overcome their "stigma" against "trailer parks"? Possibly so. The U.S. housing crisis is so severe that all bets are off.

Global News: Regina trailer park residents worried after eviction notices served

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Many residents of Glen Elm Trailer Court in Regina are now worried for their future after some residents received eviction notices due to failed water and sewer pipes.

To add to their anxiety, the court also sent out letters saying it will no longer accept new leases — meaning if someone moved out of a lot, it will not be repurposed.

To safeguard their mobile homes, the residents have created a community association to find solutions.

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Another mobile home park bites the dust. Seeing a trend here?

The Real Deal: Developer plans 750-unit multifamily project in Hallandale Beach, amid continued redevelopment of South Florida mobile home parks

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A developer could replace the Seville Mobile Home Park in Hallandale Beach with a 750-unit mixed-use, multifamily project, amid a surge in the redevelopment of South Florida mobile home communities. 

Seville General Partners, led by Paul Rosen, is asking for a rezoning of the 7-acre site at 426 Northeast Fifth Street and 515 North Federal Highway that would allow for six mid-rise buildings, according to city records. The preliminary plan is for the project to include 25,200 square feet of retail and 44,200 square feet of offices. An official project application and site plan have not been filed. 

On Wednesday, the Hallandale Beach...

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Another mobile home park bites the dust – a victim of lot rents that were too low to justify staying in that capacity. Will people ever learn this simple lesson? Doubtful. It’s been a common theme since I started doing this weekly News Review.

Luminaria: ‘Suffering hidden from view:’ Mobile home and RV residents in Pima County die from heat at high rates

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Rincon Country RV Resorts on the southwest side of Tucson is surrounded by gently rolling hills populated with saguaros. On the highest hill stands a small church with a white cross. 

On the last day of June 2023, Norman Butka, a resident of the community, was found dead in a shed next to his home. The temperature was 105 degrees. 

The next month, on July 12, Charles Jerabek, staying in an RV near Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, was found dead amid low lying mesquite and scrubby palo verde trees. Heat contributed to his death, according to medical examiner records. 

Less than a week later, on July 19 — with the temperature hitting 112...

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The medical examiner’s determination of what contributed to the death in each case: environmental heat exposure. Arizona Luminaria requested and analyzed heat-related or heat-contributed death data provided by the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner to gain an understanding of the lethal impacts of heat on mobile home residents. 

This sounds like the beginning of one of those studies that DOGE has been racing to defund.

The simple fact of the matter is that Tucson is incredibly hot in the summer, and nobody can survive there without air conditioning. Google shows the temperature that can kill you from heat stroke is 104 degrees. So this is not a mobile home issue but simply an issue of older people not being exposed to 104 degrees or higher, which means you have to be indoors with the air conditioning on all day long.

If, in fact, more people are dying of heat stroke in mobile home parks than surrounding subdivisions, I would imagine it’s for one of several reasons:

  1. People in mobile home parks typically do their own yard work, whereas in subdivisions they hire it out. In many of the examples given, the park residents died outside in their yards, not inside.
  2. People in mobile home parks probably run their air conditioning less to keep their utility bills lower.
  3. People in mobile home parks like to be outdoors more, which was part of their attraction to living in what equates to a pseudo-RV lifestyle.

You CANNOT jump to the conclusion – as this writer did – that it’s solely because mobile homes are less energy efficient. That’s ridiculous. While mobile homes do have less energy efficiency than a comparable single-family home, that’s not going to take a home with the AC set at 75 degrees and leak enough cool air to drive the temperate to 104 degrees in the home. Give me a break.

Cal Matters: Mobile homes are some of California’s last affordable housing. Can they rebuild after LA fires?

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When the Palisades Fire tore through coastal Los Angeles last month, it obliterated not only the sprawling mansions of celebrities, but two seaside mobile home parks where hundreds of retirees and other long-time residents clung to a middle-class lifestyle in one of the area’s last bastions of affordability.

Now, post-fire, local and state officials will reveal just how far they’ll go to ensure the recovery preserves housing for Angelenos who aren’t rich. Their response could set a precedent as California faces a likely future of more frequent and intense natural disasters on top of a statewide housing crisis. And the fate of the two...

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“If we have to go invest $100 million to rebuild the park and we’re not able to recoup that in some fashion, then it’s not likely we will rebuild the park,” 

A bitter lesson in rent control is coming to California. The owners of the two mobile home parks that were completely destroyed in the recent LA fires may simply elect to rebuild into a different use rather than put back a property that is encumbered with ridiculous rent control requirements. It may be time for all the places that enacted rent control to rethink the concept and perhaps abandon it. There have been a huge number of studies done on the impact of rent control, and the overwhelming conclusion is that it is one of the worst ideas imaginable if you want to have well-maintained and abundant housing. Maybe residents in those states suffering under the suffocating confines of rent control will finally take action to get them repealed.

KXNET: State Senate approves bill giving accountability to mobile home owners

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On Monday, state senators said ‘yes’ to an idea that’s meant to give more protection to people living in mobile homes.

Bob Paulson from Minot sponsored Senate Bill 2385, which will provide more information to people living in a mobile home park.

This comes after complaints in recent years from people in Bismarck and Minot who say out-of-state companies have bought up their parks and then charged people higher fees for lot rent, water, and late fees.

This bill requires a park owner to provide information to residents, such as proper notice before eviction, as well as a ‘right to first refusal’ if the park is in the process of being...

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This comes after complaints in recent years from people in Bismarck and Minot who say out-of-state companies have bought up their parks and then charged people higher fees for lot rent, water, and late fees. This bill requires a park owner to provide information to residents, such as proper notice before eviction, as well as a ‘right to first refusal’ if the park is in the process of being sold.

Everyone needs to realize this is all built on a false narrative. Let’s explore where North Dakota is getting this all wrong:

  1. “Out-of-state companies buying up parks” is NOT what’s causing higher lot rents. What’s causing lot rents to go up is that, when you buy a park from the mom-and-pop owner, you put debt on it and that requires significantly higher lot rent to service the debt. In addition, professional owners must factor in – as dictated by lenders – higher levels of capital repair, regular maintenance, and management cost. It doesn’t matter who buys the park (local company, out-of-state company, or the residents) you end up at the same lot rent figure. All of these groups pay the same mortgage, utilities, insurance, etc. So let’s cut the false narrative that “out-of-state” owners have anything to do with it.
  2. The tenants knowing the ownership information on their park has no bearing on anything – that’s as crazy as pulling up to the window at McDonald’s and them telling you the name and address of the franchise owner before you order French fries. The only reason a tenant would want to know the owner’s name is to use that information to try and put a blitz of negative attention on them to try and manipulate some type of result that they think can be accomplished through harassment.
  3. The amount of notice required for eviction is set by the court. If you go to court, and the law says ten days’ advance notice and the park only used five days, then the judge will toss the case. This is just plain stupid to codify on park owners that which the court system dictates already.
  4. Tenants successfully buy the parks they live in maybe .000000000001% of the time. This is nothing but a delay tactic that causes inconvenience for sellers who must wait until the time expires before they move on to real buyers. I looked online and there are no actual stats on “resident-owned” parks in North Dakota, but I guarantee you it’s laughably small.

At a time when the nation has voted to end all the ridiculous red tape in America, it’s mind-boggling that politicians in North Dakota have apparently not received the message and want to still heap more on.

North Country Now: Canton supports grant to bring more manufactured homes to Church Creek

Preview:

ANTON– The town council has agreed to sponsor two grants for the rehabilitation of Church Creek manufactured home park.

Matt Welsh purchased the community in October of 2024, and appeared at Wednesday’s town board meeting via telephone to ask the town for its assistance in applying for two New York State grants to make infrastructure and other improvements in the park. 

The community is located roughly 3.5 miles west of the village of Canton on U.S. Highway 11. 

Park owner Welsh described the property  as “very scenic,” saying it has “a lot of potential” if it can receive the proper improvements. 

Welsh is seeking grant money through the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

This is exactly what states need to be doing. Giving grants to mobile home parks to replace aging infrastructure is the correct way to bring old parks back to life and to sustain affordable housing. This is exactly what bureaucrats should be working on if they really want to make a difference.

Bangor Daily News: Bangor mobile home park residents get loan to develop 28 empty lots

Preview:

After raising $8 million to beat out a corporate investor and purchase their own mobile home park, a Bangor co-op will get another $3 million loan to develop some of the park’s empty lots.

The loan is coming from MaineHousing, the state housing authority, according to a news release from the Co-operative Development Institute, a Massachusetts nonprofit that helped the residents fundraise.

“We see this as a really good investment for us, for the number of homes that it’s able to create for that amount of investment. It’s a good deal,” said Scott Thistle, MaineHousing’s spokesperson.

MaineHousing already gave the Cedar Falls co-operative...

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Our thoughts on this story:

These folks may be in WAY over their heads, thanks to pandering non-profits that tend to build deals that are not sustainable based on the laws of economics. While there’s not a whole lot of detail given on this “tenant-owned” transaction that was built from cobbled together non-profit loans, here’s what we do know (based on this article) and why it should be of concern to those with actual real estate experience:

  • There are 129 lots but only 48 of those are occupied.
  • They paid $8 million for basically 48 occupied lots which equates to nearly $200,000 per lot.
  • Of the remaining 81 lots, only 28 of those have utilities.
  • They are spending $1 million to get those 28 lots ready, which equated to around $40,000 per lot.
  • When you put a home on those 28 lots, you’ll be in them turnkey at around $120,000 each.
  • That $120,000 does not include the lot rent.
  • The average home in Bangor, Maine sells for around $200,000, but if you go to Realtor.com you’ll see that there’s a whole lot of single-family inventory selling for far less, like this nice one for $120,000: https://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/156-Essex-St_Bangor_ME_04401_M32376-24560

So I guess my question would be “what was the goal here?”. If the goal was to provide affordable housing, then clearly that didn’t happen as the residents are now burdened with more debt and total housing payments than what they would have ended up with if they had bought a nice colonial home in town with a yard and a simple walk to a quaint restaurant.

I think the real goal of most of these “tenant owned” transactions are simply for the involved non-profits to believe they have “defeated” capitalism. Well, I don’t think it’s working. There’s no way this deal will survive 5 to 10 years financially. The residents will be crushed under the debt load and the non-profits will grow weary of their complaints and the risk of the debt guarantees. I’ll bet $5 this deal is back on the market within a decade and will sell, at a loss, to a professional investor. You should leave real estate up to real professionals and non-profits should focus on what they’re good at (which is not pretending to be business people).

CSB NEWS: Proposed bill in Howard County aims to create more affordable housing

Preview:

A proposed bill in Howard County would amend a code so the county gets first dibs if a mobile home park or motel goes up for sale. 

Howard County Council Chair Liz Walsh hopes this can help increase the stock of affordable housing, as well as keep some people in their homes. 

How it works

If passed, the bill would make any sale of a motel or mobile home park first go to the Howard County Housing Commission or the county's Department of Housing and Community Development. 

These agencies would have a week to decide if the county goes for the sale or not. If the county does try to buy the property, it would have 180 days to complete the...

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Our thoughts on this story:

Well, here’s something new. Howard County, Maryland wants a blanket first-right-of-refusal on every mobile home park or motel going up for sale in the entire county. I guess it’s not a bad thing, as the more buyers the merrier, but the only saving grace is that the county – thank heavens – has to exercise that option in just one week. My bet is that they will never, ever, exercise that option. But it sure created great P.R. for them, right?