Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Residents pay price as mobile home parks sell

- By Sophie Kasakove

GOLDEN, Colo. —

When Sarah Clement moved to the Golden

Hills mobile home park two years ago, she felt like she had won the lottery. After years of squeezing into one-bedroom apartments, her 7-year-old son finally settled into his own bedroom, his toys splayed out in the yard and his school just at the edge of the park.

Clement loved the friendline­ss of her neighbors and getting to watch the sun rise over the scrubby mesa to her east and set behind the foothills of the Rocky Mountains to the west. And living there was affordable on her salary as an athletic trainer: After purchasing the manufactur­ed home, the rent for the plot it sits on was just $625 a month.

But just six months after she moved in, the plot of land and all of the stability and comfort that came with it seemed suddenly ripped out from under her.

The Colorado couple that had owned the park for years put it up for sale. Clement and her neighbors knew that if the park was taken over by one of the big manufactur­ed-housing operators who were buying up parks all over the state, the rents would dramatical­ly increase.

“It was like this deflated feeling of, oh my god, I thought we had it — I thought this was where our roots were going to be,” Clement said.

Across the country, manufactur­ed-housing park residents like Clement are finding their homes at the center of a bull’s-eye, as a deluge of investment companies expand their mobile-home park portfolios at a breakneck pace, threatenin­g the stability of one of the nation’s few remaining sources of affordable housing.

Residents of Golden

Hills got organized. They formed a cooperativ­e to offer to buy the park themselves and were on track to obtain financing from ROC USA Capital, which supports resident-owned communitie­s across the country.

For months, they were full of hope. The threeblock stretch of beige single- and double-wide homes bustled with community meetings; residents distribute­d flyers. Local politician­s rallied around them, and the city voted to zone the park for manufactur­ed-home use only.

But to no avail: In July, the owners rejected their initial offer and a higher one a few months later, and sold the park instead to Harmony Communitie­s, a manufactur­ed-home operator with 5,000 residents in 33 parks across the western United States. The company quickly proved the Golden Hills residents’ fears correct, applying 50% rent increases and issuing a 12-page, single-spaced list of new park rules.

A spokespers­on for Harmony Communitie­s, George Antypas, defended the rent increase, noting that the new rents were still below those at similar parks nearby. “We believe in charging a fair market rent,” Antypas said, adding that the additional revenue would go toward repair costs and that there were need-based subsidies available from the city.

Then, just a month after purchasing the park, the company offered to sell it to the residents. Once again, though, the deal fell through, when the company declined the residents’ offer in January.

Facing both the rent increases and the cost of altering their homes to comply with the park’s new rules, residents are rushing to search for other

housing but finding few if any options in Golden, a booming town just west of Denver. At an apartment complex up the road, one-bedroom units start at $2,400 a month, almost $1,000 more than Clement said she paid for the same size apartment there in 2018.

Industry leaders are blunt about the business model: According to materials for a “boot camp” for aspiring mobile home park investors prepared by Mobile Home University, which is run by two of the largest mobile home park owners in the country, “the fact that tenants can’t

afford the $5,000 it costs to move a mobile home keeps revenues stable and makes it easy to raise rents without losing any occupancy.”

Real Capital Analytics, a market research firm, said in a June 2021 report that investors had accounted for 23% of manufactur­ed housing purchases over the previous two years, up from 13% in the two years before that. That has made the investors among the country’s largest landlords. About 22 million people live in manufactur­ed homes in the United States, according to the Manufactur­ed Housing Institute, a national trade organizati­on.

Fannie Mae said manufactur­ed housing represents more than 6% of the nation’s housing units.

When the Sans Souci mobile home park near Boulder’s scenic Flatirons was purchased by a corporate landlord in 2018, residents weren’t given a chance to make an offer. It wasn’t until residents received a notificati­on of new rules attached to their door that they learned the park had even been put up for sale, according to a resident.

Under the ownership of the company, Strive Communitie­s, the park raised rents by 12% and issued new rules for park maintenanc­e instructin­g residents to remove years of collected art and decoration­s from their yards.

According to Strive Communitie­s, the rent increases were intended to bring rates closer to market rate, and the company invested nearly $1 million in park improvemen­ts.

The residents went to their elected representa­tives, calling for legislatio­n that would require park owners to give residents notice when they intended to sell, a provision called an “opportunit­y to purchase” requiremen­t. Gov. Jared Polis signed the requiremen­t into Colorado law in 2020, and similar laws are on the books in other states.

But in the two years since Colorado’s opportunit­y-to-purchase law went into effect, only Sans Souci and two other parks have been sold to residents. In 20 cases, park owners failed to notify residents in compliance with the law before selling, according to data from the state Department of Local Affairs. In others, residents were notified but struggled to coalesce quickly enough to make a purchase offer.

State Rep. Andrew Boesenecke­r’s home city of Fort Collins has seen a flurry of park sales in the past few years.

He says the opportunit­yto-purchase law doesn’t go far enough.

In legislatio­n introduced recently, Boesenecke­r proposes requiring park owners to allow residents or a local government to make the first offer. The bill would also limit rent increases to

3% a year. Another bill is being drafted that would give residents access to a loan fund that would help them compete with private equity firms, many of which receive government-sponsored financing to purchase parks.

 ?? RACHEL WOOLF/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sarah Clement and her son are pictured March 8 at their home in the Golden Hills mobile home park in Golden, Colorado.
RACHEL WOOLF/THE NEW YORK TIMES Sarah Clement and her son are pictured March 8 at their home in the Golden Hills mobile home park in Golden, Colorado.

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