The Denver Post

Residents face 50% increase in lot rent

- By Dylan Anderson

Residents at West Acres Mobile Home Park on the west side of Steamboat Springs are facing a nearly 50% increase in lot rent that is set to take effect April 1.

A letter posted on the doors of homes in the park was two sentences. The first said rent was increasing and the second announced the base new rate of $1,032 a month for most of the park’s units.

For most residents currently paying closer to $690 a month, the increase translates to nearly $350 more each month for the ground they rent beneath the mobile homes they own.

“People that live in West Acres are the workforce of our community,” said Irene Avitia, who lives in the park and is part of a group of residents working to share informatio­n across the community of about 90 units. “They’re teachers, early childhood educators, nonprofit workers, subcontrac­tors, hospitalit­y workers.”

“We are part of the backbone of our community, of our economy,” Avitia continued.

Charley Williams, who is a minority owner and represents other owners of the park, said he has fought steep rent increases for years, and fought to keep this one lower as well.

“In the past I’ve been pretty tough on no, we are not increasing that much. This year I had to go along with it,” Williams said. “What I can’t do is not charge enough rent to cover our bills, or we are really going to be in trouble out there.”

Owners of the park had been contemplat­ing a 100% increase, Williams said, which would have doubled lot rents. Even with the 50% increase, Williams said he believes the park is still near what other parks in Steamboat charge in lot rent. He speculated other parks in town could see similar lot rent increases as well.

Williams pointed to a number of higher costs for him that led to the rent increase, saying many of his bills have increased 20% to 30%. But the most significan­t changes, he said, comes from provisions of the Colorado Mobile Home Park Act that have been amended several times in recent years.

The updates to the law have been celebrated for giving residents in mobile home parks increased protection­s and were key to allowing residents at

Whitehaven Mobile Home Park work with the Yampa Valley Housing Authority to buy that park last year, preventing a sale of the park to an unknown buyer and the uncertaint­y that goes with that.

But Williams said the law changes have added a regulatory burden on him and other mobile home park operators that has increased the costs to run the park.

“Basical ly, it has changed the rules and how I can enforce them, which has significan­tly increased the cost of operating the park,” Williams said.

Due to additional regulation­s, Williams said he needs to involve lawyers in park management more frequently. To write the cost increase letter itself, Williams said he spent about two hours with a lawyer at $265 an hour to ensure he was following the law.

The law requires 60 days notice before a rent increase — which has been provided in this case — but does not put a cap on rent increases. When introduced last year, the latest amendment would have added a rent increase cap, but that provision was removed when Gov. Jared Polis threatened to veto the bill.

“I’m not happy about this at all,” Williams said. “The tenants are getting screwed out there.”

The Mobi le Home Park Act was largely unchanged since the 1970s until legislator­s made changes to the law in 2019, according to Aimee Bove, a Denver- based lawyer who owns Bove Law, which specialize­s in laws around mobile home parks and represents about 120 park owners across the state. Bove emphasized that she was speaking generally about the law and her comments were not representi­ng any of her clients.

Bove said the Mobile Home Park Act has been amended in each of the last four legislativ­e sessions.

“The Mobile Home Park Act now stands at approximat­ely 56 pages,” Bove said. “The more regulation­s and the more rules there are, the more cumbersome it becomes to operate.”

What Bove is advocating for is to stop amending the law and let her clients catch up.

“Tenants should be protected, and they are,” Bove said. “But we also need to make sure that the people who are providing physical space for people to live don’t get strangled out and crushed. So there’s got to be a balance.”

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