On July 14, a group of local mobile home residents bearing white balloons descended on the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors meeting. The balloons, bobbing above the heads of the crowd, bore a stark message written in red pen: Save Our Seniors. The residents, primarily local seniors and low-income renters, flooded the public comment period in a carefully orchestrated sequence, each asking the board to put fee stabilization for mobile home parks on its agenda. The county’s General Plan includes provisions to preserve mobile home parks “as an important source of affordable housing.”
Hilary Mosher, who opened the comments, has been helping organize local residents affected by the recent purchase of two mobile home parks: Lazy J Ranch in Arcata and Ocean West in McKinleyville. A corporation called Inspire Communities, which own 45 parks nationwide, bought out the parks, which were originally owned by a local family. When the company originally bid on Ocean West, Mosher says she “went into overtime immediately.”
While mobile home parks have been recognized as important in terms of affordable housing, there’s been a national trend of investors buying mobile home parks and raising the rents beyond affordability for residents.
Mosher, who went on to found the Humboldt Mobilehome Owner’s Coalition, worked with a local nonprofit to match the purchase price of Ocean West and create a resident co-op, but the original owners decided to sell to Inspire anyway. So her group filed a series of complaints with the county for use violations.
“I was determined to derail the sale,” she said. The sale was halted as the owners addressed each of the complaints, but ultimately it went through. As one of the conditions, 90 days before Inspire took ownership, rent went up by $28 a month. Residents at the Lazy J Ranch have already seen their rent raised twice since Inspire Communities bought the park in 2013.
Twenty-eight dollars may seem like a small sum, but mobile home owners are in a unique position. Many mobile homes are not actually mobile. Some are too decrepit to survive the trip to a cheaper plot of land, and the cost to move can exceed $10,000. Residents are responsible for the mortgages, upkeep and utilities for their homes in addition to the lot fees levied by management companies. When Mosher moved in, her lot fee was $425 a month. The original owners told her that it would increase annually according to the Consumer Price Index, at about 1 to 3 percent. Many residents in these parks are seniors living on fixed incomes. With an average social security payment of around $1,200, escalating lot rent prices can drain the income of a senior. Mosher reports that one of her neighbors stopped her cable subscription, then sold her car and finally gave away her dog because she could no longer afford to feed it.
Tim Strack, Director of Property Management for Inspire Communities, says that the rent increases in the Lazy J community were tied to property taxes, which rose by $73,000 in the last three years. The rent increase would only cover 77 percent of those costs, according to Strack. Capital improvements such as street and utility infrastructure also require investment. The new owners of the Lazy J spent a quarter of a million dollars on street repair and other improvements.
“It’s not feasible without some kind of rent increase,” said Strack. “It’s like the city when they have to expand their infrastructure. Utilities go up or taxes go up. If we didn’t do increases, then there would be infrastructure issues we couldn’t pay for.”
Infrastructure improvement helps residents by improving the resale value of their home. Strack says there have been 22 such sales at the Lazy J since 2013.
The Arcata City Council has expressed interest in a fee stabilization measure which may help Lazy J residents. But Ocean West tenants are struggling to gain traction. Residents had previously brought their concerns to the McKinleyville Municipal Advisory Community, which recommended conflict resolution but ultimately took no action. Both the Humboldt County Human Rights Commission and the Area 1 Agency on Aging have put forward letters endorsing action by the Board of Supervisors. In emails, Supervisor Ryan Sundberg has told the residents that he will not move forward with putting rent stabilization on the agenda. Calls to Sundberg and Supervisor Mark Lovelace were not immediately returned. Save Our Seniors will host another meeting to discuss the issue this Friday, Aug. 7 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Ocean West Clubhouse. One potential tactic, according to Mosher: collaborating with California Cannabis Voice Humboldt to distribute petitions.
Editor’s Note: The original version of this blog was written before speaking with a representative from Inspire Communities. Information from that interview is now included in the text.
This article appears in Race Day.

The selling and buying of manufactured home parks is an ongoing disaster for residents.
By nature, corporations are soulless entities driven by only one thing….profit…at any cost to residents.
We residents have already seen that our local McKinleyville Communities Service District board has abandoned regular citizens.
At the first meeting where such resident concerns were brought up, the board seemed to be genuinely concerned about our plight.
By the second meeting 30 days later they had completely gone to the dark side and showed local citizens exactly who they will take their marching orders from….business owners.
The packed house of speakers at the second meeting were arrogantly dismissed by the unanimous vote to not recommend the county staff to at least look into rent stabilization possibilities.
Passing along our concerns to the Board of Supervisors would have not cost the MCSD board anything.
Obviously after those 30 days of lobbying by landlords and other business leaders they were quite willing to ignore the exact citizens they are supposed to serve.
Regardless of that ignorant Supreme Court decision, corporations are NOT PEOPLE!!!!
We have been sacrificed to the business/landlord community.
Isn’t that always the way.
Gouge the voiceless in order to feed the for profit overlords.
Now it seems that our arrogant supervisor Sundberg has brazenly acknowledged that he doesn’t give a damn about regular folks.
He is quite willing to sacrifice his constituents to corporate greed.
Business/politics as usual.
No wonder why citizens hate any form of government.
It’s all a puppet show.
Such attitudes by our Supervisor Sundberg clearly show who pulls the strings.
I’m pretty sure you’re referring to the McKinleyville Municipal Advisory Committee (MCMAC), not the Services District, and you are absolutely right!
We are not REALLY talking about rent control– we aren’t renting homes, we are talking about lots; tiny plots of dirt that our homes sit on, and we are only asking that the fee increases are affordable, not that they cease all together. We are chained to these lots, sitting ducks just waiting to get shot down– we can’t leave our homes here, we can’t move them anywhere else, and the corporations KNOW it so they just keep jacking up the fees higher and higher, up to four times a year under existing law!
I REALLY REALLY want at least one of the supervisors to stand up and say why they will not even put the item on their agenda? Forget MCMAC: they have gotten letters from their own appointed Human Rights Commission asking them to put it on the agenda, and one from the Area One Agency On Aging as well! WHY WON’T THEY PUT IT ON THE AGENDA?? Bass has said that she thinks it’s “…a wonderful idea…” to take it to the voters through the initiative process. But it is HER JOB to handle this without making seniors have to spend the last years of their lives living with housing insecurity and having to hustle all over raising funds and campaigning. There are THREE different regulations in the General Plan Housing Element mandating the county to PRESERVE mobile home parks as an important source of affordable housing. WHAT ARE THEY WAITING FOR??
Same problems downhere in Fortuna at Royal Crest. Rent has gone up or services cut every year that I have lived here ($20-$25 / yr. for 8 straight years) It’s outragious!!!
There’s still time to qualify a voter initiative on rent control on the 2016 ballot for Humboldt County.
Many cities have them specifically for trailer parks, just pick one!
Better yet, with Humboldt County’s obscene 20% housing affordability rate, there should be rent control for everyone in the county to level the playing field.
Do so, and watch voter turnout finally increase.
Why don’t we boot PGE as the retail electric provider in these mobile home parks and create a citizen owned utility company. That’ll save more money than a rent control ordinance ever would in the long term.
Check out http://www.thetruthaboutmobilehomerentcontrol.com before going any farther down this road…
Seems to me that the ‘theconfiscators’ watches waaaay too much Faux Snooze. Seems to have lost grip on reality.
I do wonder if that poster lives in a Park of this nature. Doubtful or he/she would have a more clear perspective on what the heck is happening.
On 11/8 theconfiscators posted a link to the truth about MH rent control. I am sure that most folks in Humboldt are wise enough to know that anyone that wants to put something on the web can do it. Freedom of speech is a cornerstone of our democracy. But that means that fools and idiots can create a web page to express whatever interests them. The person that created that web page doesn’t want anyone to know who he is because it was purchased through a proxy yesterday (11/7). AND that proxy is in Scottsdale, AZ. Even Mobilehome University advises their students to avoid southern states when considering a purchase. The captioned picture is the reason why.
Although that page can generate very emotional responses, beware that it is designed to do just that. Emotional responses interfere with ones ability to make a considered choice. Don’t fall for the hype!
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