Trailer park people: Your turn to be priced out now.

woodchuck

A crowd pleasing man.
OG Investor
Damn, nobody's safe. I'm guessing this is an area of poor white Republicans.


Rents spike as big-pocketed investors buy mobile home parks

Investors are buying up mobile home parks across the country, leading to significant rent increases and complaints of neglect from residents
ByMICHAEL CASEY and CAROLYN THOMPSON Associated Press

LOCKPORT, N.Y. -- For as long as anyone can remember, rent increases rarely happened at Ridgeview Homes, a family-owned mobile home park in upstate New York.

That changed in 2018 when corporate owners took over the 65-year-old park located amid farmland and down the road from a fast food joint and grocery store about 30 miles northeast of Buffalo.

Residents, about half of whom are seniors or disabled people on fixed incomes, put up with the first two increases. They hoped the latest owner, Cook Properties, would address the bourbon-colored drinking water, sewage bubbling into their bathtubs and the pothole-filled roads.

When that didn't happen and a new lease with a 6% increase was imposed this year, they formed an association. About half the residents launched a rent strike in May, prompting Cook Properties to send out about 30 eviction notices.

“All they care about is raising the rent because they only care about the money,” said Jeremy Ward, 49, who gets by on just over $1,000 a month in disability payments after his legs suffered nerve damage in a car accident.

He was recently fined $10 for using a leaf blower. “I’m disabled," he said. "You guys aren’t doing your job and I get a violation?”

The plight of residents at Ridgeview is playing out nationwide as institutional investors, led by private equity firms and real estate investment trusts and sometimes funded by pension funds, swoop in to buy mobile home parks. Critics contend mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are fueling the problem by backing a growing number of investor loans.

The purchases are putting residents in a bind, since most mobile homes — despite the name — cannot be moved easily or cheaply. Owners are forced to either accept unaffordable rent increases, spend thousands of dollars to move their home, or abandon it and lose tens of thousands of dollars they invested.

“These industries, including mobile home park manufacturing industry, keep touting these parks, these mobile homes, as affordable housing. But it’s not affordable,” said Benjamin Bellus, an assistant attorney general in Iowa, who said complaints have gone up “100-fold” since out-of-state investors started buying up parks a few years ago.


“You’re putting people in a snare and a trap, where they have no ability to defend themselves," he added.

Driven by some of the strongest returns in real estate, investors have shaken up a once-sleepy sector that's home to more than 22 million mostly low-income Americans in 43,000 communities. Many aggressively promote the parks as ensuring a steady return — by repeatedly raising rent.

There's also a growing industry, featuring how-to books, webinars and even a mobile home university, that offers tips to attract small investors.

“You went from an environment where you had a local owner or manager who took care of things as they needed fixing, to where you had people who were looking at a cost-benefit analysis for how to get the penny squeezed lowest,” Bellus said. “You combine it with an idea that we can just keep raising the rent, and these people can’t leave.”

George McCarthy, president and CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based think tank, said parks containing about a fifth of mobile home lots nationwide have been purchased by institutional investors over the past eight years.

McCarthy singled out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for guaranteeing the loans as part of a what the lending giants bill as expanding affordable housing. Since 2014, the Lincoln Institute estimates Freddie Mac alone provided $9.6 billion in financing for the purchase of more than 950 communities across 44 states.

A spokesman for Freddie Mac countered that it had purchased loans for less than 3% of the mobile home communities nationwide, and about 60% of those were refinances.

Soon after investors started buying up parks in 2015, the complaints of double-digit rent increases followed.

In Iowa, Matt Chapman, a mobile home resident at a park purchased by Utah-based Havenpark Communities, said his rent and fees had almost doubled since 2019. Iowa Legal Aid’s Alex Kornya said another park purchased by Impact Communities saw rent and fees increase 87% between 2017 and 2020.

“Many of the folks living in the park were on fixed incomes, disability, Social Security, and simply were not going to be able to keep pace,” said Kornya, who met with about 300 angry mobile home owners at a mega-church. “It led almost to a political awakening.” ("Almost"? :smh: )

In Minnesota, park purchases by out-of-state buyers grew from 46% in 2015 to 81% in 2021, with rent increases as much as 30%, according to All Parks Alliance For Change, a state association.
 
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Like I said before, stupid ass people are raging a race war, while losing the class war. :smh:
Of all people Trump should have taught them a lesson about rich and poor white people but no they was just looking at and loving the racism…..now some of them are seeing the light but it’s too late. Just like a few of those people in Kentucky flooding event is seeing the light about climate change but again it’s too late.
 
Black people have trailers also

nothing wrong with it

and whoa @ sewage coming into the bathtub


Most of the black people I have ever known who had trailers owned their land. Got the land cheap and put a trailer on it and then made it a permanent edifice. Did add-ons and shit like that.

Dot think I ever knew anybody black that lived in a trailer park
 
Capitalism is the absolute worst thing that could have happened to the world. Make money, as much money as you can. Damn the consequences or how it impacts other people. Make as much money as possible

The problem with Corporation owning properties like trailer parks or even neighborhood blocks:

If a neighborhood block is on by a local businessman and let's say the rent of a Golden Corral is $5,000 a month.

If the restaurant goes through hard times let's say covid and the owner of the restaurant isn't able to make the $5,000 rent, a deal could be worked out between gentlemen to temporarily lower the rent so the business could continue.

Getting some money is better than the business closing and getting no money.

That's consideration you would not get from a Corporation. The Golden Corral in my city has been closed and empty since 2013. It's still there. Sitting there empty

The conglomerate doesn't care about that loss or that that particular business isn't doing anything. If you've got 5,000 fingers, who cares about losing one?

When I got out of the Navy it was difficult finding a job in the real world. My landlord knew I was having trouble making the rent, but he took it easy on me.

Eventually in 2003 I was able to secure a good job and make the rent consistently. At one point in 2004 I was speaking with someone who lived in the apartment building

"That damned asshole Mike. He just raised rent again. I'm paying $525. How much is your rent?"

"About the same," I said.

That was bullshit. My rent was $425 at that time. But I wasn't going to tell him that. He raised my rent, but not at the same Pace that he did everyone else. That's something you get from a landlord versus a Corporation

Had I not been able to make my rent and I lived in a building owned by a corporation my ass would have been out on the street. So, Mike Ippolitto, wherever you are, thank you
 
What year is this quote from?


between 52 and 65......

it was true then and is true now.

"If you stick a knife in my back 9 inches and pull it out 6 inches, that's not progress. If you pull it all the way out, that's not progress. Progress is healing the wound that the blow made. They haven't pulled the knife out; they won't even admit that it's there." -Malcolm X
 
Capitalism is the absolute worst thing that could have happened to the world. Make money, as much money as you can. Damn the consequences or how it impacts other people. Make as much money as possible

The problem with Corporation owning properties like trailer parks or even neighborhood blocks:

If a neighborhood block is on by a local businessman and let's say the rent of a Golden Corral is $5,000 a month.

If the restaurant goes through hard times let's say covid and the owner of the restaurant isn't able to make the $5,000 rent, a deal could be worked out between gentlemen to temporarily lower the rent so the business could continue.

Getting some money is better than the business closing and getting no money.

That's consideration you would not get from a Corporation. The Golden Corral in my city has been closed and empty since 2013. It's still there. Sitting there empty

The conglomerate doesn't care about that loss or that that particular business isn't doing anything. If you've got 5,000 fingers, who cares about losing one?

When I got out of the Navy it was difficult finding a job in the real world. My landlord knew I was having trouble making the rent, but he took it easy on me.

Eventually in 2003 I was able to secure a good job and make the rent consistently. At one point in 2004 I was speaking with someone who lived in the apartment building

"That damned asshole Mike. He just raised rent again. I'm paying $525. How much is your rent?"

"About the same," I said.

That was bullshit. My rent was $425 at that time. But I wasn't going to tell him that. He raised my rent, but not at the same Pace that he did everyone else. That's something you get from a landlord versus a Corporation

Had I not been able to make my rent and I lived in a building owned by a corporation my ass would have been out on the street. So, Mike Ippolitto, wherever you are, thank you
This is funny because poor white trash people is starting to really get hit hard by their own actions let’s see what it goes but Republicans definitely is not going to save them…. Hell it’s republican policies that is beating their ass right now.
 
Like I said before, stupid ass people are raging a race war, while losing the class war. :smh:

This Brother has been trying to get Poor WHITE Folks to see that light for the last few decades.
I really want to believe in his Poor People's Campaign.
But (most) White Folks would rather stay comfortable in their Racism than to make any actual difference.
Barber_2018_hi-res-download_6.jpg
 
This Brother has been trying to get Poor WHITE Folks to see that light for the last few decades.
I really want to believe in his Poor People's Campaign.
But (most) White Folks would rather stay comfortable in their Racism than to make any actual difference.
Barber_2018_hi-res-download_6.jpg
Yeah some of these poor to middle-class white people should have learned a lesson back in 2008 during the housing crash but they are hardheaded and racist
 
Dont know about NY, but here in GA there are a lot of black folks that live in trailer parks. I grew up with a bunch of em.
Those days are long gone in Georgia there’s very few trailer parts right now even for CACs that’s near Atlanta. Actually they are gentrifying (CAC’s areas) in Alpharetta and South Forsyth county.
 
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