Los Angeles Times

Mobile home parks have lax oversight, audit warns

- By Patrick McGreevy

SACRAMENTO — California’s state housing agency did not conduct full inspection­s at more than half of the state’s mobile home parks from 2010 to 2019 and should improve oversight to protect residents, a state audit said Thursday.

Although the state Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t met its statutory goal of conducting park inspection­s at 5% of parks annually, 55% of the 3,640 active parks did not receive a full inspection in the 10-year period reviewed, state Auditor Elaine Howle said.

“Long gaps between inspectors’ visits to a park increase the risk that health and safety violations remain undetected and unreported,” Howle said in a letter to the governor and Legislatur­e. “By improving its selection process for annual park inspection­s to include some parks that it has not visited in recent years and implementi­ng guidance for informal visits, HCD could reduce the risks posed by health and safety violations at parks.”

In addition to finding inadequate rates for full park inspection­s, the auditors said some parks were not even visited by inspectors to follow up on complaints involving individual units.

The agency’s data indicated that it did not visit 9% of parks, or 330 parks representi­ng 5,700 mobile home units, for any reason during the decade reviewed, the audit said.

Infrequent inspection­s can allow mobile home parks to fall into disrepair, housing advocates have warned.

Auditors also found inconsiste­ncy in its inspection process and said the agency closed three of the 54 inspection files reviewed by auditors before park owners and residents had corrected some violations.

Some mobile home parks have been severely damaged in wildfires in recent years, and the report noted that inspectors are tasked with making sure parks abide by fire safety rules.

In one case, a Los Angeles County Fire Department station submitted a complaint with multiple allegation­s, including concerns about the location of gas meters that blocked access to the lanes emergency vehicles need in order to drive through the park, the audit said. “However, the inspector failed to address this allegation in her inspection report,” the report said.

The state agency often did not share important informatio­n with park residents, including identified violations, or provided it late, the audit found. The agency also sometimes failed to tell residents about their rights and resources available to them.

Howle’s office also recommende­d the state agency do a better job of making sure inspectors don’t have conflicts of interest by reporting their financial interests as required by law.

The audit looked at records for 77 inspectors and found three had financial interests related to mobile home parks, including one who owned property near a park.

The housing agency responded to the audit by saying it agrees improvemen­ts to the inspection program are needed.

“We concur with the recommenda­tions and have already completed and implemente­d many of the recommenda­tions provided in the report that illustrate areas of improvemen­t to better protect the health and safety of California mobile home park residents, park owners, and help secure the sustainabi­lity of property,” said Zack Olmstead, the housing agency’s chief deputy director.

The audit was requested by state Sen. Connie M. Leyva (D-Chino), chairwoman of the Senate Select Committee on Manufactur­ed Home Communitie­s, after she heard complaints from mobile home owners about lax state oversight.

On Thursday, Leyva called the findings “disturbing” and “unacceptab­le” and said her committee will provide its oversight to make sure there is follow-up action.

“As mobile homes are a vital option for affordable housing in California, it is clear that the state must improve both the quality and frequency of these inspection­s so that we can keep the approximat­ely 2 million mobile home residents living at nearly 5,000 mobile home parks healthy and safe,” she said.

 ?? Don Leach Daily Pilot ?? CAPISTRANO Terrace Mobile Home Park. Many parks were not inspected from 2010 to 2019.
Don Leach Daily Pilot CAPISTRANO Terrace Mobile Home Park. Many parks were not inspected from 2010 to 2019.

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