The Mercury News

Mobile home owners living in fear

Westwinds eviction threat sparks worries of other parks closing

- By Louis Hansen lhansen@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The letters warning of a possible eviction that circulated around Westwinds Mobile Home Park this month shook more than homeowners: Fear has rippled out to residents in other parks.

Mobile home owners, worried about their parks closing, flooded local officials and real estate agents with calls, texts and emails.

Martha O’Connell, an activist and mobile home owner in

San Jose, said owners feared additional eviction threats and felt renewed anxiety that their parks would become prime targets for redevelopm­ent. “It’s insane,” she said.

Silicon Valley has seen sev

eral major parks change ownership and face redevelopm­ent in recent years. Many sit on choice real estate in a region of high property prices and soaring demand for housing.

Santa Clara County has 108 parks, including 59 in San Jose, according to state figures. San Mateo has 24, Alameda has 56, and Contra Costa has 72.

But city and park officials last week sought to reassure residents, with San Jose council members introducin­g a new measure to protect two parks zoned for high-density housing: Westwinds and Mountain Springs.

Westwinds is one of the biggest parks in the state and the largest in San Jose with 723 homes and 1,600 residents. A dispute between property owners Nicholson Family Partnershi­p and park managers MHC Operating over the park’s future has spilled

over into Santa Clara County Superior Court.

MHC accused the family partnershi­p in court of demanding that MHC evict all residents by the end of the management contract in August 2022. Both sides say they support park residents and seek to preserve affordable housing for the community.

The family partnershi­p said in a new statement to this news organizati­on that they plan to redevelop the property while preserving affordable and stable housing for park residents. The family declined to release any project details, and no proposal has been submitted to the city.

“Our intention is to work collaborat­ively with the city to arrive at a long-term redevelopm­ent of the property that protects the tenants, while simultaneo­usly offering a positive outcome to help ameliorate the city’s housing shortage, including the provision of an affordable housing component,” Bruce Nicholson, co-manager of the partnershi­p, said in a statement.

MHC, a division of Chicago-based Equity LifeStyles, owns or manages more than 200 manufactur­ed home parks across the country. The local management sent Westwinds residents another letter on Jan. 10 laying the threat of eviction on the family partnershi­p.

San Jose city leaders on Wednesday restarted a proposal — stalled late last year — to add redevelopm­ent regulation­s for Westwinds and Mountain Springs.

The new proposal would deem them mobile home communitie­s and stiffen requiremen­ts for redevelopm­ent.

The proposals are expected to receive at least three public hearings and culminate with a City Council vote in March.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said the primary purpose of the new zoning was to require City Council approval for any redevelopm­ent of the two parks.

“The second purpose is to enable 700 families to get a good night’s sleep for the first time in two weeks,”

he said. “Council is not going to allow for any redevelopm­ent unless the overwhelmi­ng majority of residents think it’s a fair deal.”

But mobile home park advocates and residents fear more disruption ahead.

O’Connell, an advocate with the Golden State Manufactur­ed-Home Owners League, and Ryan Jasinsky, a representa­tive of local park owners, wrote in a joint letter to the San Jose City Council that they have been “overrun” with calls from residents.

O’Connell and Jasinsky, members of the city housing and community developmen­t commission, scolded council members for keeping them in the dark about the potential redevelopm­ent. “By working together, we can help stem the hysteria,” they wrote.

Liccardo said city officials would continue to provide updates through public hearings and city websites.

Sunnyvale real estate agent Denise Casey, who specialize­s in mobile home sales, said she’s received a

steady stream of calls from panicked homeowners.

Casey advised her clients to sit tight, and pointed to the recent settlement mobile home owners in Winchester Ranch received under a deal finalized Wednesday by the San Jose City Council. Displaced residents will be reimbursed for the value of their homes and are eligible for rent subsidies and units in that park’s new developmen­t.

Protection­s for mobile home owners during redevelopm­ent in San Jose include a fair-market-value purchase of their home, moving assistance and rental subsidies.

Sunnyvale, home to the two largest parks in the Bay Area, has special designatio­ns for mobile home parks, and any redevelopm­ent requires multiple public hearings and approval from the City Council.

“In every conversion I’ve seen,” Casey said, “the (home) owners made out.” Her best advice, she added, was to “hold on and see what happens.”

Westwinds residents said

they’re unsure what comes next — and that worries many.

Jim Canova, a longtime resident and school board member, said residents need to form a homeowners associatio­n and take steps to purchase the property. A resident-owned park, he said, would give the community long-lasting stability.

“This is our neighborho­od,” Canova said. “We have to get rid of that cloud.”

Walt Blanchard, 64, moved into the park in 1990. “We could afford it,” he said, “and it was close to where we worked.” Blanchard would be happy to stay in the park, but the eviction warning has been stressful for his family.

Blanchard’s 27-year-old daughter, Theresa, loves the tight-knit Westwinds community.

“I would like to stay here. This is home,” she said. Now, she said, “it’s definitely scary.”

 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Homeless advocate Gail Osmer, center, holds a sign at the Westwinds Mobile Home Park in San Jose on Jan. 9.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF ARCHIVES Homeless advocate Gail Osmer, center, holds a sign at the Westwinds Mobile Home Park in San Jose on Jan. 9.

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