In small print on a white no-trespassing street sign, the text reads, “Mountain View Mobile Home Park.” It’s one of the last remnants of the former ownership of the now-resident-owned community in Lafayette.
Denise Schafer smiled as she glanced at the sign during a mid-September stroll through the neighborhood — renamed La Luna Community Cooperative — with LaVern Schafer, her husband and the co-op board president. The couple recounted stories of raising their two children and caring for their grandchildren in their neighborhood of nearly 40 years, which they now partly own.
“I’m very proud that we purchased it. … It’s a phenomenal thing...
Read More
Apparently, the media that raves over the tenant-owned mobile home park model doesn’t bother to read their own articles. Let’s start off with the myth that the resident-owned model means that rents won’t go up. Here’s the reality, right here from the source that puts these deals together:
That doesn’t mean rents won’t ever increase, but they will become more stable over time…
What does that even mean?
Well, here’s the bad news for these folks. When a private owner raises rents, it’s typically only to catch up to market levels and then increases go into a “stable” period which pretty much tracks inflation. Since the mortgage payment and all other costs are the same under private or non-profit ownership, you’re going to end up at the same monthly rent regardless. But, unlike the professional owner, the residents are typically lousy operators and have no clue on how to collect rents or manage maintenance. And that leads to the following bombshell stat that appears later in the article:
Nine manufactured home communities with 451 homes in Colorado have become ROC USA resident-owned communities, according to ROC USA. The process is complicated and wouldn’t have been possible without Thistle’s guidance, LaVern Schafer said. Two ROCs have since defaulted on their loans, which the nonprofits are working to help resolve by providing them with more resources and support, but none have dissolved or reverted to private ownership.
That’s pretty much an INCREDIBLY BAD performance. So we’re saying that out of nine tenant-owned properties with mortgages, TWO HAVE ALREADY DEFAULTED. That’s more than 20%. If that was the track-record of a professional owner, they would be shunned by lenders and could never get a loan again.
And then there’s the other elephant in the room that nobody ever wants to talk about: THE RESIDENTS DON’T ACTUALLY OWN THE THING, NON-PROFITS DO. So the actual name of these deals should NOT be “resident owned” but actually “non-profit owned”. That’s who is putting up the down payment and guaranteeing the mortgage. And that means the residents – regardless of what B.S. is strewn about – have no control over their destiny at all. When the loan comes due on the park (typically five years in term) the non-profit can sell the park off (it already has happened).
Check out this article about the resident-owned business model: https://coloradosun.com/2024/04/22/sans-souci-boulder-county-mobile-home-park-challenges/. Wow, sounds like paradise, right?
Santa’s take on this: Non-Profit Naughty