Council might put mobile-home owners more in driver’s seat
Dave Brooks
Mobile-home residents might get a reprieve from the City Council as
it looks to clean up Huntington Beach’s law regulating the sale of
trailer parks.
At its Monday meeting, the council will consider amending the law
to protect mobile-home owners who feel they might be moved unfairly
following the sale and conversion of their mobile-home parks.
Residents at Cabrillo Mobile Home Park along Pacific Coast Highway
are worried that the site’s owner will sell the property and give
them minimal compensation for their homes, many of which can’t be
moved to another location.
Under the city’s law, mobile-home-park owners can pay residents as
little as $5,000 for the loss of a home or trailer following the sale
of the park. It depreciates the value of the home by 4.7% a year,
regardless of any improvements the resident has made to the unit.
Mobile home owners such as Kent Lucas said the law is unfair
because it doesn’t take into account the time or money people have
invested in their homes.
“My home hasn’t decreased in value,” he said. “I’ve done a lot of
work on it to make it go up. The idea that you could say my house is
worth $5,000 is ridiculous. If I lost my home, where would I go? What
would I do?”
The council is kicking around several ideas to protect mobile-home
owners, including requiring park owners to pay residents fair-market
value for the price of their homes if the park is sold and zoned for
another use. Park owners must also pay to relocate mobile home owners
within a 20-mile radius of their original site.
“The way the ordinance is currently written treats mobile homes as
if they were automobiles and that is clearly not the case,”
Councilman Dave Sullivan said. “The new ordinance would change that.
It would also protect seniors who have developed a support network in
the area and can’t comfortably move to another place.”
Councilwoman Connie Boardman is recommending that the council add
a provision to protect mobile-home-park residents from being forced
out of their homes through escalating rents.
Before announcing plans to sell, the park owner would have to
present financial information for the last three years, and identify
all residents with children, disabilities or elderly family members.
Any residents who lost their home due to abandonment or foreclosure
as a result of rent increases would receive fair market value for
their homes or trailers.
The City Council is restricted as to what it can do to dictate the
way mobile-home parks charge for space. A successful March 2002
ballot initiative makes it illegal for the city to impose rent
control. City Atty. Jennifer McGrath is researching whether the new
ordinance is legal under the guidelines set by the initiative.
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