voices /cedar/ en Luz Galicia: "We didn't have any option, but to fight" /cedar/2021/05/21/luz-galicia-we-didnt-have-any-option-fight <span>Luz Galicia: "We didn't have any option, but to fight"</span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2021-05-21T12:29:01-06:00" title="Friday, May 21, 2021 - 12:29">Fri, 05/21/2021 - 12:29</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/luz_galicia.png?h=88f4cd8c&amp;itok=SDo-M0PZ" width="1200" height="600" alt="Luz Galicia stands by a statue holding a sign that says &quot;Stop evictions.&quot; Luz is holding a sign that says this neighborhood stands for..."> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-categories" itemprop="about"> <span class="visually-hidden">Categories:</span> <div class="ucb-article-category-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-folder-open"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/54"> news </a> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/10" hreflang="en">News</a> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Luz Galicia as told to Susan Glairon</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/luz_galicia.png?itok=pnV76sVU" width="1500" height="1769" alt="Luz Galicia stands by a statue holding a sign that says &quot;Stop evictions.&quot; Luz is holding a sign that says this neighborhood stands for..."> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p lang="EN-US">I used to be&nbsp;wealthy.&nbsp;I&nbsp;had&nbsp;a big house. But&nbsp;I got divorced&nbsp;and&nbsp;became a single mom.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">My&nbsp;daughters are very&nbsp;smart,&nbsp;and they finished high school&nbsp;early.&nbsp;I was excited&nbsp;because I&nbsp;saved&nbsp;$300&nbsp;for college books.&nbsp;But I&nbsp;didn’t&nbsp;realize&nbsp;how&nbsp;expensive books&nbsp;were.&nbsp;Two cost $681,&nbsp;and I didn't have&nbsp;the&nbsp;money.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I will never forget my daughter crying,&nbsp;“But Mommy,&nbsp;you never say&nbsp;‘no.’”&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I&nbsp;just&nbsp;couldn't support&nbsp;a&nbsp;big&nbsp;house&nbsp;as&nbsp;a single mom, so&nbsp;I moved&nbsp;to&nbsp;a&nbsp;little&nbsp;apartment. There were so many&nbsp;charges–parking,&nbsp;trash, sewer–that I decided&nbsp;the apartment wasn’t going to&nbsp;work&nbsp;either.&nbsp; A woman&nbsp;wanted to&nbsp;get rid of&nbsp;her&nbsp;mobile home (in&nbsp;Denver Meadows&nbsp;Mobile and&nbsp;RV Park in Aurora, Colorado) and&nbsp;sold&nbsp;it to me (in 2013)&nbsp;for $10,000 in payments of $500 a month. The land&nbsp;rent&nbsp;was $600;&nbsp;$1,100 for both,&nbsp;including the water and the sewer.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I&nbsp;was&nbsp;like,&nbsp;“I&nbsp;can do&nbsp;it;&nbsp;I can pay&nbsp;for&nbsp;college.”&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">But I didn't know that the&nbsp;house was in&nbsp;really bad&nbsp;condition.&nbsp;There was an&nbsp;infestation of roaches&nbsp;and nothing worked. If&nbsp;I&nbsp;used&nbsp;the blender, I had&nbsp;to disconnect the refrigerator.&nbsp;Same if I blow dried&nbsp;my hair.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">Slowly&nbsp;I&nbsp;fixed&nbsp;everything.&nbsp; I felt peaceful knowing&nbsp;I could&nbsp;cover&nbsp;college for my two girls.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">A&nbsp;year and a half after I&nbsp;moved&nbsp;into&nbsp;the mobile home,&nbsp;I found out our&nbsp;landlord was submitting a request for rezoning to commercial.&nbsp;At&nbsp;that&nbsp;time, the residents&nbsp;didn't know what that meant, so we began&nbsp;educating&nbsp;ourselves.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I remember very clearly&nbsp;when we realized we were going to lose our homes.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I became increasingly&nbsp;involved because most residents&nbsp;were&nbsp;Hispanic–some undocumented–and most didn't speak English. I was able to communicate with them.&nbsp;We had&nbsp;many issues with the landlord&nbsp;taking advantage of&nbsp;people in the&nbsp;community, so&nbsp;we notified <a href="https://9to5.org/about-9to5/" rel="nofollow">9to5</a>&nbsp;(a&nbsp;nonprofit that helped&nbsp;organize residents to fight the eviction).&nbsp;9to5 let us know&nbsp;what we needed to do. We&nbsp;wrote more than 60 letters&nbsp;to city councilors, and in that first hearing for rezoning,&nbsp;more than 200 people showed up.&nbsp;At the hearing,&nbsp;the city councilors&nbsp;asked the&nbsp;landlord to bring a relocation plan for us.&nbsp; After many attempts the landlord&nbsp;said,&nbsp;“The only thing you&nbsp;can get from me&nbsp;is a&nbsp;recommendation&nbsp;to move your&nbsp;homes."</p> <p lang="EN-US">That’s when&nbsp;I became the&nbsp;community&nbsp;leader.&nbsp;After&nbsp;we formed the HOA,&nbsp;we&nbsp;had&nbsp;more people power.&nbsp;I was nominated&nbsp;president.&nbsp;Over&nbsp;time,&nbsp;we were making so much noise that we had&nbsp;the media behind us:&nbsp;Telemundo,&nbsp;Denver&nbsp;Post, Univision, Fox31,&nbsp;Denver7 News.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">It wasn't&nbsp;difficult to get others&nbsp;involved&nbsp;for one&nbsp;reason: Everybody–130 families–were&nbsp;losing&nbsp;their&nbsp;homes.&nbsp;&nbsp;We didn't have any other option but to fight.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">There was&nbsp;history in that&nbsp;park. People&nbsp;who&nbsp;had lived&nbsp;there&nbsp;for&nbsp;25&nbsp;years. Some residents&nbsp;got married while living there, and now they’re&nbsp;grandparents.&nbsp;A lot of single moms, elder people, adults&nbsp;and&nbsp;kids with disabilities.&nbsp;People&nbsp;with&nbsp;medical needs and&nbsp;low-income&nbsp;families.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">But it&nbsp;was&nbsp;difficult to coordinate&nbsp;meetings because most people had&nbsp;two jobs,&nbsp;maybe more.&nbsp;So,&nbsp;we had&nbsp;to use our creativity.&nbsp;We formed a&nbsp;committee to&nbsp;knock on doors and inform the residents&nbsp;what happened during&nbsp;the meetings.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">We made&nbsp;an offer to the landlord (<a href="https://thistle.us/roc/" rel="nofollow">through Thistle Communities</a>*)&nbsp;for $20.5&nbsp;million, but he&nbsp;said, “No.”&nbsp; (The landlord's asking price was $35 million.) Then there weren’t&nbsp;any&nbsp;laws&nbsp;to protect mobile&nbsp;home&nbsp;owners. We knew that time was our worst enemy and that sooner or later we'd&nbsp;have to leave.&nbsp;Some&nbsp;residents had already left.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">Then the landlord&nbsp;expressed to&nbsp;us that in&nbsp;his&nbsp;“generosity,”&nbsp;he would&nbsp;leave the&nbsp;park&nbsp;open another two years.&nbsp;We found out&nbsp;later that&nbsp;he owned&nbsp;a lot of&nbsp;the&nbsp;homes.&nbsp;He left the park open&nbsp;because he wanted to collect the money.&nbsp;Most&nbsp;residents&nbsp;made&nbsp;their&nbsp;last payments&nbsp;in&nbsp;May.&nbsp;In&nbsp;June&nbsp;they closed the&nbsp;park, so those families&nbsp;only&nbsp;had&nbsp;one month&nbsp;of home ownership.&nbsp;At that&nbsp;time Colorado&nbsp;didn't have any laws&nbsp;to bring&nbsp;transparency to the process.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">A lot of the&nbsp;residents left their homes behind.&nbsp;Their houses were very old, and they couldn’t move them.&nbsp; My home could be moved, and I sold it&nbsp;for $9,000–$1,000 less&nbsp;from&nbsp;when I purchased it, and&nbsp;I used the money for a downpayment for&nbsp;an apartment.&nbsp;&nbsp;I didn't have other options because&nbsp;it would&nbsp;cost around&nbsp;$23,000 to move my house.&nbsp; Like me, most people&nbsp;were&nbsp;thinking, "better to get a couple thousand&nbsp;than to get nothing" because they&nbsp;didn't have $25,000 to move their homes.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I live in a house now.&nbsp; But I continue to work in mobile home communities because&nbsp;of&nbsp;what happened to me and my&nbsp;neighbors. I am still in contact with some of&nbsp;them, and&nbsp;they still struggle to find&nbsp;affordable housing.&nbsp; Mobile&nbsp;homes are&nbsp;one of the biggest&nbsp;options&nbsp;for affordable houses and, as we know, mobile&nbsp;homes are not&nbsp;portable.</p> <p lang="EN-US">My role now&nbsp;is to help underrepresented voices be&nbsp;heard and&nbsp;to inform, educate and empower park&nbsp;residents through trainings with the organization 9to5. I also offer&nbsp;45-minute workshops&nbsp;every week with community leaders, and we discuss&nbsp;the subjects they want to address, for example, snow removal or park&nbsp;infrastructure.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">During the pandemic&nbsp;people have helped each other.&nbsp;I want to build on that&nbsp;momentum–so that&nbsp;diverse cultures continue to work together.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US"><em>*Denver Meadows residents tried to buy the park property themselves and become a resident-owned community (ROC)&nbsp;<a href="https://thistle.us/roc/" rel="nofollow">through Thistle Communities</a>. Thistle is a private, nonprofit organization that develops and manages affordable housing options in Boulder County.</em></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>Struggling to support herself and her two daughters, Luz Galicia moved from her large house to a manufactured home. A year and a half later the park's landlord decided to sell the property, displacing 100 families. Luz now works to educate and empower park residents.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Fri, 21 May 2021 18:29:01 +0000 Anonymous 1671 at /cedar Remodeled residence 'perfect' for owner of manufactured home /cedar/2021/04/16/remodeled-residence-perfect-owner-manufactured-home <span>Remodeled residence 'perfect' for owner of manufactured home </span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2021-04-16T10:46:41-06:00" title="Friday, April 16, 2021 - 10:46">Fri, 04/16/2021 - 10:46</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/tom_sundro_lewis_pointing_to_his_home.jpeg?h=729790da&amp;itok=j8rre3R7" width="1200" height="600" alt="Tom Sundro Lewis points to his home"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-categories" itemprop="about"> <span class="visually-hidden">Categories:</span> <div class="ucb-article-category-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-folder-open"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/54"> news </a> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/10" hreflang="en">News</a> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/77" hreflang="en">muller</a> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/87" hreflang="en">van Vliet</a> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Susan Glairon / Photography by Tom Sundro Lewis</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/tom_sundro_lewis_in_his_kitchen.jpeg?itok=D25CAhSW" width="1500" height="1500" alt="Tom Sundro Lewis stands in his kitchen"> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p></p> <p> In&nbsp;2005&nbsp;a trailer slated for the dump&nbsp;was transported&nbsp;to Mapleton Mobile Home Park and renovated&nbsp;there.&nbsp;After completion in 2008, the remodeled Boulder home went on sale for $40,000 in an area where the median sale price of homes now tops&nbsp;$1.5 million.</p> <p>The 570-square-foot home features&nbsp;solid oak hardwood floors, high ceilings that run from 9 to 11 feet,&nbsp;a&nbsp;clerestory (a high section of wall that&nbsp;contains&nbsp;windows above eye level&nbsp;to admit&nbsp;light, while maintaining privacy)&nbsp;and a front porch.</p> <p>"I saw the potential right away," said Tom Sundro Lewis, a professional photographer and former&nbsp;licensed contractor who purchased the home in 2008. "I really felt like the place was made for me.&nbsp;I still feel that way."</p> <p>鶹ѰBoulder and its partners pursued the "<a href="/cedar/community-artsdesign-build/trailerwrap-i" rel="nofollow">TrailerWrap</a>" (TW) remodeling project&nbsp;as an experiment in rehabilitating a deteriorating manufactured home&nbsp;(MH), with the idea that such renovations&nbsp;could be replicated by others.&nbsp;Since the 1950s, manufactured homes&nbsp;(previously called mobile homes) have been mass produced to provide&nbsp;low-cost housing; however unimaginative design combined with inefficient energy strategies and poor construction techniques made these homes difficult to maintain, often leading to disrepair and abandonment.</p> <p>The TW&nbsp;remodeling project&nbsp;was a collaboration between Thistle Community Housing; tradesmen from 鶹ѰBoulder’s Department of Facilities Management; an interdisciplinary team of faculty and students from the university’s College of Architecture&nbsp;and&nbsp;Planning;&nbsp;and the Children, Youth and Environments Center (now the <a href="/cedar/" rel="nofollow">Community Engagement, Design and Research Center</a> (CEDaR), which originated the idea for the TW project.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Obstacles and challenges</strong><br> <a href="/cedar/people/willem-van-vliet-0" rel="nofollow">Willem van Vliet</a>, CEDaR fellow and professor emeritus in 鶹ѰBoulder’s Program in Environmental Design&nbsp;(ENVD),&nbsp;initiated the project with Michael Hughes, then an&nbsp;ENVD instructor. Van Vliet&nbsp;wrote grant applications and coordinated between college administrators, teaching faculty and the Mapleton&nbsp;Home Owner’s&nbsp;Association.&nbsp;</p> <p>Van Vliet noted that there were&nbsp;many challenges&nbsp; during construction. Students had difficulties getting&nbsp;academic credit for their&nbsp;work; obtaining grants to fund the&nbsp;project presented continual challenges; continuity lacked with three different instructors&nbsp;leading the project over the course of the renovations;&nbsp;and a series of unforeseen events caused&nbsp;set backs, including a&nbsp;sewer line that backed up&nbsp;in the unit, necessitating replacement of many installed components,&nbsp;and a heavy branch which fell on&nbsp;and destroyed the roof after&nbsp;the unit was nearly completed.</p> <p>But he also noted that there were many successes around&nbsp;creating the&nbsp;affordable and award-winning home. More than 50 students gained&nbsp;a valuable learning experience; ENVD gained positive publicity; and the project&nbsp;held&nbsp;lessons for future project-based learning, including&nbsp;an upcoming CEDaR-led manufactured home renovation.</p> <p>Portions of the home were&nbsp;purposely not completed to allow the buyer to personalize it.&nbsp;Lewis estimates he put more than&nbsp;$100,000 into the home, including the unit's initial cost, his own labor, the&nbsp;impact-resistant roof&nbsp;he installed, and various upgrades, including the&nbsp;furnace and other appliances.&nbsp;<br> <br> While Lewis says the unit in its current state of remodel would not be affordable&nbsp;for low-income residents, the home worked for him&nbsp;because he&nbsp;could perform&nbsp;his own renovations.</p> <p>"I&nbsp;didn’t&nbsp;want to rent&nbsp;a tiny postage stamp of an apartment," Lewis said. "I could have bought a&nbsp;condo, but it would have taken every penny I had. And I could have moved out of town."</p> <p><strong>A quality home</strong><br> Lewis says he "loves" the layout, kitchen, high ceiling, hardwood floors&nbsp;and the front porch, which in the&nbsp;summer, functions like a&nbsp;room because of its two walls.&nbsp; He also loves the living room, which also serves&nbsp;as his&nbsp;dining room and&nbsp;office as well&nbsp;as his photography, yoga and dance studio.&nbsp;</p> <p>"I get lots of compliments about the interior," Lewis said. "Four out of every five people who come here&nbsp;for the first time&nbsp;exclaim, 'Wow! This place&nbsp;doesn’t&nbsp;feel small at all.'&nbsp;And it&nbsp;doesn’t&nbsp;because of the high ceiling. If you imagine an 8-foot ceiling, like&nbsp;old trailers,&nbsp;it’s&nbsp;just a completely&nbsp;different experience, a completely different space.</p> <p>"I&nbsp;really&nbsp;mean it when I tell you this place is perfect for me. I love it that it is not any bigger. Because being as small as it is, it makes it much more economical&nbsp;to heat in the winter. It’s easier to clean. And I live right in the middle of Boulder. I can walk to Whole Foods. I can walk downtown. I can walk to&nbsp;McGuckins (hardware store). And I pay like a third&nbsp;of&nbsp;the going cost to rent or buy a place like mine."</p> <p><em>CEDaR plans to begin its second rmanufactured home remodel project this fall, also within Mapleton Mobile Home Park.&nbsp;The start date will depend on the state of the pandemic.</em></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p> </p><div class="ucb-box ucb-box-title-left ucb-box-alignment-right ucb-box-style-fill ucb-box-theme-lightgray"> <div class="ucb-box-inner"> <div class="ucb-box-title">Tom's advice for those interested in purchasing a home in a mobile home park</div> <div class="ucb-box-content"><strong>Consider purchasing in&nbsp;Colorado, and&nbsp;Boulder, in particular</strong>. The city of Boulder and the state of Colorado have&nbsp;been taking steps to protect park residents. <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Understand that land rents in&nbsp;privately-owned</strong>&nbsp;parks can increase annually as much as $40 per month&nbsp;or more.&nbsp;<br> <br> <strong>Before purchasing a home, </strong>ask residents about their relationship&nbsp;with their park's owner. Some owners can be&nbsp;difficult&nbsp;to work with. </p></div> </div> </div> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>In&nbsp;2005&nbsp;a trailer slated for the dump&nbsp;was transported&nbsp;to Mapleton Mobile Home Park in Boulder and renovated&nbsp;there.&nbsp;Built by more than 50 鶹ѰBoulder students, the Trailer Wrap project&nbsp;held&nbsp;lessons for future project-based learning, including a CEDaR-led manufactured home renovation planned for this summer or fall, depending on the state of the pandemic.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Fri, 16 Apr 2021 16:46:41 +0000 Anonymous 1653 at /cedar Matt Jensen: "Rent stabilization is one of my core missions" /cedar/2021/02/05/matt-jensen-rent-stabilization-one-my-core-missions <span>Matt Jensen: "Rent stabilization is one of my core missions"</span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2021-02-05T15:04:19-07:00" title="Friday, February 5, 2021 - 15:04">Fri, 02/05/2021 - 15:04</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/matt.jpg?h=aa15bd14&amp;itok=qwfb5y6Y" width="1200" height="600" alt="Matt Jensen"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/matt.jpg?itok=BWOrsLwM" width="1500" height="1127" alt="Matt Jensen"> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p lang="EN-US">In 2015, Matt Jensen witnessed&nbsp;two long-time Vista Village residents lose their homes. Jensen's&nbsp;two elderly neighbors&nbsp;could no longer care for&nbsp;themselves&nbsp;and had&nbsp;planned to sell their homes to cover living&nbsp;in&nbsp;an assisted-living facility, he says.</p> <p lang="EN-US">Instead, the manufactured home park's owner found a loophole&nbsp;in the US Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) housing laws, allowing the corporation&nbsp;to forbid&nbsp;sales&nbsp;of Vista Village's pre-1976 manufactured homes&nbsp;and to require residents of those older homes to pay to&nbsp;remove their units. As in&nbsp;most manufactured home parks, Vista Village residents own their homes, but rent the land beneath&nbsp;them, and employees of the park's ownership manage the land. Although the two residents' homes&nbsp;were older, Jensen says they&nbsp;had been remodeled and maintained, and had passed housing inspections.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">Refusing to let the homeowners sell their homes was a movement towards&nbsp;gentrifying the park, Jensen says.</p> <p lang="EN-US">"Those&nbsp;homes were&nbsp;the senior's biggest assets," he says. "I&nbsp;witnessed&nbsp;elderly women who became&nbsp;homeless&nbsp;because of this.&nbsp;I&nbsp;don’t&nbsp;know what became of them.&nbsp; That was beyond the pale for me."</p> <p lang="EN-US">Soon after, one of the&nbsp;park's residents formed a residents' group. A year later, the organization&nbsp;transitioned to a nonprofit association registered with the state of Colorado, now called the Vista Village Community Association.&nbsp;Jensen has been a member of the association's board of directors for five years, including&nbsp;three of those years as president. &nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">He has&nbsp;lived in Vista&nbsp;Village&nbsp;since 2003, choosing the manufactured home park because of its affordability.</p> <p lang="EN-US">"Boulder was, and still is,&nbsp;very expensive, and I wanted to stay in Boulder, " says&nbsp;Jensen.&nbsp;&nbsp;"Vista Village is a&nbsp;really nice place, surrounded by parks, which is a wonderful thing."&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US"><strong>What do you feel are the&nbsp;most pressing issues for residents?</strong><br> The residents have issues with the management around&nbsp;park upkeep, such as&nbsp;tree branches&nbsp;hanging over their homes, where high winds and heavy snow could break the branches and damage&nbsp;those homes, and&nbsp;sewers not&nbsp;being&nbsp;maintained and backing up into homes. There also has not been&nbsp;much&nbsp;transparency on how utilities, like water,&nbsp;are being billed.&nbsp;The park's streets are in OK condition, but they&nbsp;used to&nbsp;pave&nbsp;the streets every five to six&nbsp;years.&nbsp; It's now been seven years since they paved them.</p> <p lang="EN-US">The other issue&nbsp;is the skyrocketing&nbsp;rent. Sometimes the annual rent increases are&nbsp;manageable; sometimes they are much higher. When the cost of living goes up, people get displaced. With the pandemic, rising rents are&nbsp;certainly something we are keeping an eye on because even though there's&nbsp;a&nbsp;moratorium&nbsp;on evictions, people are still struggling. Rent stabilization is one of my personal&nbsp;core&nbsp;missions. I really, really&nbsp;wish we could make more headway&nbsp;on rent&nbsp;stabilization&nbsp;so rent is&nbsp;not&nbsp;continually rising. It makes&nbsp;it increasingly difficult for residents&nbsp;of modest means.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">The only&nbsp;two solutions that I can see is that something needs to&nbsp;be done to control the housing costs or people need to&nbsp;make more money so they can afford it.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">I try to keep the viewpoint&nbsp;that the owners have&nbsp;plenty of overhead expenses, but there is not much transparency. The owners are&nbsp;not willing to talk to us.</p> <p lang="EN-US"><strong>What are some of the accomplishments of the association?</strong><br> Our association's mission&nbsp;is to "unite the community through social connections, mutual support,&nbsp;education&nbsp;and advocacy for&nbsp;our&nbsp;homeowners'&nbsp;rights."&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">A big part of what we do is organize&nbsp;events to bring the community together, like barbecues and pancake breakfasts.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">But sometimes people have&nbsp;issues with the owners&nbsp;and management, and&nbsp;we’ll&nbsp;advocate to the best of our abilities&nbsp;for the homeowners' rights.&nbsp;I view the association as trying to work with ownership and management. As well as working on conflict,&nbsp;we also work on trying to work together.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">A lot of our&nbsp;accomplishments can be found in the&nbsp;ordinances of the city of Boulder's Manufactured Housing Strategy, which is something we helped put in place.&nbsp;I feel really good about the progress we made with&nbsp;the city and state. Boulder's city&nbsp;council&nbsp;has been&nbsp;very supportive&nbsp;of us and&nbsp;acts as a mediator between the residents&nbsp;and park management. The council passed at least three ordinances in the last three to four years that are helpful to residents. We're&nbsp;working on the latest ordinance, which involves&nbsp;city laws&nbsp;in regards to&nbsp;home sales.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">During the 1980's the "Mobile Home Parks Act," was the sole state&nbsp;law for manufactured&nbsp;home parks. Before we&nbsp;started&nbsp;organizing, manufactured&nbsp;housing&nbsp;rights were very weak, and there were&nbsp;little&nbsp;protections for manufactured home&nbsp;owners.&nbsp; A lot of the residents&nbsp;are low&nbsp;income. They&nbsp;can’t&nbsp;afford&nbsp;lawyers.&nbsp;They&nbsp;don’t&nbsp;have a way to&nbsp;represent&nbsp;themselves. A lot of these people are not English speakers.&nbsp;The new state law was a big accomplishment for us because there is now a&nbsp;way to file complaints with the state to help resolve&nbsp;disputes between park owners and residents. There is also&nbsp;a new&nbsp;department&nbsp;that specifically deals with manufactured housing on&nbsp;the&nbsp;state level.</p> <p lang="EN-US"><strong>What are some tips for residents who want to form a manufactured home association?</strong><br> It starts with neighbors talking to neighbors and having those "over-the-fence" types of conversations, then finding a&nbsp;common purpose and cause.</p> <p lang="EN-US">Also work with your city council and let&nbsp;them know what your&nbsp;association is&nbsp;working on and the&nbsp;issues it's&nbsp;dealing with. Then see&nbsp;what your&nbsp;elected&nbsp;representatives can&nbsp;do to&nbsp;represent your residents.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US"><strong>Do you have any&nbsp;insights for people who want to step into a more formal leadership&nbsp;role?&nbsp;</strong><br> You&nbsp;can't&nbsp;always help, but when you can help,&nbsp;it’s&nbsp;a wonderful thing. When residents&nbsp;feel like we have helped them, that really gets them involved. They end up&nbsp;participating&nbsp;in meetings and contacting us more often. It goes from there.&nbsp;</p> <p lang="EN-US">&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>After witnessing two neighbors become&nbsp;homeless&nbsp;when Vista Village's landlord refused to let the elderly women sell their manufactured homes, Matt Jensen became active in his community. Jensen has been a member of the Vista Village Community Association's board of directors for five&nbsp;years, including three of those years as president.&nbsp; </div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Fri, 05 Feb 2021 22:04:19 +0000 Anonymous 1647 at /cedar Isabel Sanchez: Even in small spaces, the possibilities are endless /cedar/2020/12/16/isabel-sanchez-even-small-spaces-possibilities-are-endless <span>Isabel Sanchez: Even in small spaces, the possibilities are endless</span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2020-12-16T10:43:19-07:00" title="Wednesday, December 16, 2020 - 10:43">Wed, 12/16/2020 - 10:43</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/isabel_sanchez_3.jpeg?h=941b9a5c&amp;itok=dVJIlsED" width="1200" height="600" alt="Isabel Sanchez in her garden at Mapleton Mobile Home Park"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Susan Glairon</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/isabel_sanchezs_garden.jpeg?itok=arVvaY3v" width="1500" height="2000" alt="Isabel Sanchez's garden at the Mapleton Mobile Home Park"> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><h2>Meet Isabel Sanchez, housing activist</h2> <p>Grassroots community organizer and urban farmer&nbsp;Isabel Sanchez transformed Mapleton Mobile Home Park in Boulder to a community that follows sustainable principles and practices. Under her guidance as a board member of the park's&nbsp;Home Owners Association (HOA) for 11 years, including president of the board for four of them, Mapleton's regulations now allow families to raise chickens, rabbits and bees. Today there are more than 45 organic gardens in the park, as well as five households raising chickens, three raising rabbits and five beekeepers.&nbsp; And all of the&nbsp;projects have helped build a more connected and stronger community, she says.</p> <p>Sanchez is a&nbsp;permaculturist, locally known as the "Guru of Permaculture." For seven years she was the program director for&nbsp;the Denver nonprofit, The GrowHaus, where she taught&nbsp;permaculture and created&nbsp;curriculums for children to learn&nbsp;how to grow food, raise chickens and&nbsp;choose healthy lifestyles.&nbsp; She recently&nbsp;started&nbsp;a new business,&nbsp;<a href="https://www.rootstosol.com/" rel="nofollow">Roots to Sol</a>, which offers classes and workshops for backyard garden design and permaculture.<br> <br> <em>(Note:&nbsp;Unlike most mobile home communities in Boulder which are owned by private corporations, Thistle Communities, a nonprofit, owns the land beneath Mapleton Mobile Home Park.)</em></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h2>Describe your path to becoming a housing activist.&nbsp;</h2> <p>I was born in 1962 in communist Cuba.&nbsp;My family witnessed first hand what happened after the revolution in Cuba&nbsp;and worked tirelessly to get my sister and me&nbsp;out of the country.</p> <p>I immigrated&nbsp;to the US when&nbsp;I was 5, and I was raised in&nbsp;Greenpoint, Brooklyn. I&nbsp;grew up listening to&nbsp;my parents and other&nbsp;Cuban&nbsp;families&nbsp;talk&nbsp;about communism and the losses they&nbsp;suffered.&nbsp; I learned that because my parents had refused to be a part of the communist party,&nbsp;their food rations were taken away, and they were forced&nbsp;to accept&nbsp;food from relatives and neighbors&nbsp;until we were able to flee the country.</p> <p>Food scarcity is something that was a huge part of my developmental years, and I believe it's&nbsp;why I’ve dedicated so much of my life to preventing this kind of injustice in all the communities I’ve lived and worked in. And I learned very early&nbsp;on that&nbsp;we, as a people, need a&nbsp;voice.&nbsp;</p> <p>I started gardening with The Green Thumb Organization when I was 18 and pregnant with my first son. My love for having the power to grow my own food and the connection with the soil grew from there. It was one of the most empowering experiences in my life up until that point. It made a lasting impression.</p> <p>In the late 1980s&nbsp;with a&nbsp;6-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter, I moved to the East Village where we squatted in an&nbsp;abandoned building&nbsp;in Alphabet city.&nbsp;I would approach&nbsp;the city, saying, "There are 10 families fixing abandoned buildings using&nbsp;their&nbsp;own&nbsp;resources, so&nbsp;sell the buildings&nbsp;to us."&nbsp; We were able to buy some, and we later added greenhouses and chickens&nbsp;on&nbsp;the roof tops.&nbsp;It was here where my advocacy in housing issues was born. Many meetings were held in the building where I lived with my family, and the community made important decisions on how we could support the homeless and unjust policy changes that were occurring in New York City. In 1988, NYC&nbsp;passed a law that homeless people could no longer reside in the parks. This brought on riots and protests from the community to recognize that the civil rights of the homeless, the poor, the mentally ill&nbsp;and the addicts were being violated. As a result of the protests, some buildings that were squatted in became&nbsp;legal residences for those people in need. That experience showed me that when that when people are empowered to use their voice, real change can happen.</p> <p>A&nbsp;huge&nbsp;thing&nbsp;I learned from my NYC&nbsp;experience was about&nbsp;food&nbsp;deserts. If you&nbsp;don’t&nbsp;have&nbsp;housing,&nbsp;you probably&nbsp;can’t&nbsp;afford healthy&nbsp;food.&nbsp;You buy fast food–cheap food that will only get you sick.</p> <p>I was involved with that for 10&nbsp;years, and then I got really&nbsp;burnt out. Some people had mental illness, and some people had&nbsp;addictions,&nbsp;so I&nbsp;needed&nbsp;a break.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>By that time I was the mother of four children, and I wanted to teach them to live off the land. We moved to Northeast Pennsylvania where we purchased a house built in the 1800’s on seven acres. I would spend the next 10&nbsp;years learning about animal husbandry and&nbsp;farming, and my passion for living off the land was solidified. I would go on to have two more children while living here. I have many fond memories of seeing my little ones run around naked in the yard with the chickens, bunnies, goats, and pigs while my older city kids adjusted awkwardly to farm life, learning how to milk goats and to deliver&nbsp;animal babies.</p> <h2>Why did you decide to live in a mobile home community?&nbsp;</h2> <p>One&nbsp;of my children had graduated&nbsp;from&nbsp;Naropa,&nbsp;and&nbsp;the&nbsp;other&nbsp;was&nbsp;graduating that year. I moved&nbsp;to Boulder because they were here, and I&nbsp;wanted them to be role models for the younger kids.&nbsp;I have eight kids ages 13, 14, 17, 21, 24,&nbsp;30, 35 and&nbsp;40. All my children live in the park. My&nbsp;18-year-old and her 24-year-old&nbsp;brother live&nbsp;next door. My 30-year-old daughter and my son who is 40&nbsp;live&nbsp;on the other side of the park. And my five grandchildren live here too.</p> <p>At Mapleton I started with an an open-market rate for my&nbsp;lot rental, which is still much more&nbsp;affordable than purchasing a condo or home in Boulder,&nbsp;and I am now on a low-tier rate (affordable housing).&nbsp;I had brought my greenhouse on top of my van and knew that I would&nbsp;need space to raise&nbsp;chickens&nbsp;and grow food. If I had rented an&nbsp;apartment, I would not have been able to do that.&nbsp;</p> <p>Now, I really love living here.&nbsp;I am&nbsp;involved in the community and with policy making. It’s not just for me, it’s for my&nbsp;kids, and my&nbsp;grandkids who live here too.&nbsp;I want Mapleton&nbsp;to be a&nbsp;really wonderful&nbsp;place for my family to live.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <h2>What inspired you to transform Mapleton to a park with sustainable practices?</h2> <p>When I first arrived&nbsp;I realized&nbsp;an equity needed to be established at Mapleton&nbsp;with food&nbsp;because even though we are&nbsp;not in a food desert–we are located near&nbsp;Sprouts,&nbsp;Vitamin Cottage and Whole Foods–many residents can't afford&nbsp;to shop at&nbsp;those&nbsp;stores. I realized&nbsp;that I could&nbsp;instead teach the residents&nbsp;to&nbsp;grow organic food. &nbsp;So&nbsp;the minute I moved to Mapleton, I converted my lot to a&nbsp;full-functioning&nbsp;garden. People were amazed at how&nbsp;fast I did it. I&nbsp;started sheet mulching, collecting leaves and finding people who raised organically-fed goats and rabbits.&nbsp;I went to the farmers market and networked. The second year&nbsp;I put up my&nbsp;&nbsp;greenhouse,&nbsp;and that was my donation&nbsp;to the community.&nbsp;&nbsp;I&nbsp;grew&nbsp;about&nbsp;5,000 plants&nbsp;and gave&nbsp;them&nbsp;to&nbsp;the families.</p> <p>Many residents now have&nbsp;gardens, and having gardens helped to build community.&nbsp; The gardens gave residents&nbsp;a&nbsp;feeling of purpose. People who were struggling alone, including seniors who&nbsp;didn’t&nbsp;have&nbsp;family&nbsp;nearby, would&nbsp;gather together.&nbsp;&nbsp;The seniors&nbsp;who&nbsp;can't&nbsp;partake&nbsp;in&nbsp;growing&nbsp;do&nbsp;projects with the kids while their parents garden.&nbsp;We fair share what we grow. All&nbsp;these&nbsp;things&nbsp;build&nbsp;community.</p> <p>At first many&nbsp;were&nbsp;against bringing chickens into Mapleton because they thought the chickens&nbsp;would attract wild&nbsp;animals&nbsp;and decrease property values. We&nbsp;brought in cooperative&nbsp;extention staff to talk to residents, so by the time it&nbsp;went to a vote, the residents&nbsp;were ready to take&nbsp;on&nbsp;a two-year&nbsp;project which allowed eight&nbsp;chickens per&nbsp;property. The program was strict. The chickens&nbsp;needed to have&nbsp;shelter,&nbsp;and the chicken area&nbsp;had to be&nbsp;placed in&nbsp;a particular spot on the property.&nbsp; Homes are only about 10 to 12 feet apart, so neighbors were required&nbsp;to sign that they would accept&nbsp;chickens in adjacent yards.&nbsp;In the beginning&nbsp;only 10 residents&nbsp;were allowed into the program, and there were&nbsp;a lot of&nbsp;meetings. Now if anyone wants to have chickens, they can, but they still sign an agreement with their neighbors and also sign that someone&nbsp;can inspect the animals. The program has&nbsp;been going on nine years,&nbsp;and&nbsp;it’s been wonderful.&nbsp;I always joke and say goats are next, but I don’t have the energy.&nbsp;</p> <p>I think we are the only mobile home park in the city of&nbsp;Boulder that has&nbsp;these kind of&nbsp;projects. We&nbsp;showed&nbsp;that even in small&nbsp;spaces, there are endless&nbsp;possibilities to&nbsp;grow&nbsp;your own food.&nbsp;</p> <h2><strong>What are some of the other community projects at Mapleton?</strong></h2> <p>We started working with&nbsp;鶹ѰBoulder's sustainability department, which&nbsp;works with&nbsp;FLOWS (Foundation for Leaders Organizing for Water and Sustainability)&nbsp;about water&nbsp;conservation. We work&nbsp;with them&nbsp;to capture water from the gutters for xeriscape gardening. FLOWS checked&nbsp;the water pressure within homes and tested whether&nbsp;there were&nbsp;leaks in the lines. We also work with&nbsp;Growing&nbsp;Gardens, which reconnects people&nbsp;with their local food systems and teaching gardening, cooking&nbsp;and nutrition education.&nbsp;We pick seedlings so families can plant. We&nbsp;have parties with music to swap seeds. We received another grant&nbsp;from the city&nbsp;to buy art supplies so people can gather and do different projects.</p> <p>Students from 鶹ѰBoulder and&nbsp;elementary schools as well as permaculture groups visit Mapleton. We do&nbsp;workshops, and&nbsp;the&nbsp;students also help senior community members with projects. One project was building a bench with a&nbsp;roof. The bench&nbsp;sits there so&nbsp;beautifully; there was no shade there before.</p> <h2>Many manufactured housing parks have old infrastructures. How are you addressing that?</h2> <p>We have an amazing board. We changed our rules, regulations&nbsp;and&nbsp;bylaws,&nbsp;which is a huge undertaking. We&nbsp;changed&nbsp;property&nbsp;managers.&nbsp;</p> <p>We&nbsp;are now updating&nbsp;water pipes, which will cost&nbsp;$2 million. Our infrastructure was very old&nbsp;and the water tasted&nbsp;bad.&nbsp; After&nbsp;surveying residents living on the north side of the park,&nbsp;we showed the city why the residents weren’t drinking the water.&nbsp;&nbsp;We then received a grant from the city of Boulder's sugar tax&nbsp;for&nbsp;$675,000&nbsp;to&nbsp;work on the north side (the south side had been completed). Because&nbsp;we are very stable financially as a&nbsp;nonprofit,&nbsp;we were able to get a very&nbsp;low interest rate from the bank&nbsp;and a few grants, so we’re in very good shape.</p> <h2>Was Mapleton&nbsp;affected by the 2013 flood?</h2> <p>I first bought a tiny&nbsp;home, 10 x 55,&nbsp;and five of my kids lived there. The&nbsp;greenhouse was our&nbsp;living room. The door never closed; the outside and inside were one.&nbsp;</p> <p>And then the&nbsp;flood came.&nbsp;Mapleton Mobile&nbsp;Home&nbsp;Park was&nbsp;hit hard because many homes&nbsp;were older. My little home was 65 years old. When&nbsp;Boulder&nbsp;Creek&nbsp;started&nbsp;clogging&nbsp;with trees, water ditches started overflowing&nbsp;and water came&nbsp;through my backyard. It looked like&nbsp;Niagara Falls. The&nbsp;water entered my home through&nbsp;the ground&nbsp;because the&nbsp;soil couldn't absorb&nbsp;the amount of water. My&nbsp;husband works for&nbsp;鶹ѰBoulder, so&nbsp;he was gone&nbsp;with the emergency at&nbsp;CU. I was&nbsp;here&nbsp;with the kids and dogs. It was so bad,&nbsp;that by the next morning when I came back, the&nbsp;mattresses&nbsp;were soaked, and a tree had&nbsp;fallen on the&nbsp;greenhouse. I wasn’t&nbsp;the only one–32 homes got hit hard. After the flood, the city did a program to help mobile homeowners affected by the&nbsp;flood,&nbsp;because a lot of people continued&nbsp;living in their homes that had&nbsp;flooded. We fixed ours, but we were living in it while we were fixing it, which&nbsp;was challenging with the kids and&nbsp;animals.</p> <p>Mapleton received 32 new homes through&nbsp;FEMA. It&nbsp;was&nbsp;a&nbsp;challenge&nbsp;because the original homes were&nbsp;small, and the replacements were big. I ended up staying&nbsp;with my kids in a hotel for&nbsp;eight&nbsp;months until our new home was&nbsp;put in.</p> <p>I&nbsp;documented&nbsp;the entire&nbsp;process, and I show this as a case study when I teach&nbsp;permaculture. When the flood hit my home, I&nbsp;was flourishing. I&nbsp;had&nbsp;fruit&nbsp;trees,&nbsp;the kids had a tree&nbsp;house above a shed. It was all on the principles&nbsp;of&nbsp;permaculture&nbsp;in a small space, creating as many yields as possible. After the flood, I took everything&nbsp;out. I&nbsp;moved trees. My soil is&nbsp;gold, so I&nbsp;took the soil from the raised beds. Different people would come and help. Our new&nbsp;home arrived&nbsp;in February, and&nbsp;by&nbsp;August I had a full harvest. I put the raised beds in, built&nbsp;a chicken coop&nbsp;and redesigned the whole lot. Not that I enjoyed everything. I thought I was going to lose my mind because I was working full time commuting&nbsp;to&nbsp;Denver, and I had the kids and&nbsp;my dogs in a hotel, and I&nbsp;had to come back to Mapleton to feed&nbsp;the chickens. It&nbsp;was&nbsp;not&nbsp;a ride&nbsp;in&nbsp;the park. Some people were struggling with their applications, and they felt like they couldn’t do it, and&nbsp;I was encouraging them. Everyone would help&nbsp;each other when it was time for someone to move. People had been&nbsp;living here 30 years and had stuff under their trailers. It&nbsp;was not&nbsp;easy. But&nbsp;now we are so grateful that FEMA funding was available. Some of these families would not have&nbsp;ever&nbsp;been able to afford a home.&nbsp; We all pulled together, and we were&nbsp;able to&nbsp;do this for each other.&nbsp;</p> <h2><strong>What are some of the benefits of living in a mobile home community?</strong></h2> <p>When 9-11&nbsp;hit, we&nbsp;were in Pennsylvania about two hours from NYC,&nbsp;I&nbsp;had seven&nbsp;acres, and&nbsp;my&nbsp;taxes&nbsp;were around $400 a year.&nbsp;After&nbsp;Sept. 11, my property taxes went up to&nbsp;$2,700 in one year because so many people were trying to move to our area after the terrorist event. It made me realize that when I became&nbsp;older, I would probably not be able to afford to live there.</p> <p>Today I have a&nbsp;three-year-old home. My property&nbsp;taxes are approximately&nbsp;$400, but compared to&nbsp;Boulder homes–and my kids are in the same school district as those who own homes–I don’t pay hardly anything. People are realizing mobile home parks are&nbsp;an affordable&nbsp;way to live.&nbsp;&nbsp;It’s much more&nbsp;sustainable&nbsp;because you are&nbsp;not heating big homes. Maintenance is a lot less than a big home.&nbsp;So&nbsp;more&nbsp;people are being sold&nbsp;to the idea of&nbsp;living in mobile home parks. A lot of the mobile home parks that are near water now&nbsp;cost around&nbsp;$200,000 for a property. Even&nbsp;$200,000&nbsp;is nothing compared to the&nbsp;real-estate&nbsp;market&nbsp;of a home in&nbsp;Boulder or Florida.&nbsp;</p> <h2><strong>How many hours a week do you work as an HOA leader?&nbsp;&nbsp;</strong></h2> <p>I work approximately 12&nbsp;hours each&nbsp;week, and that’s when&nbsp;everything&nbsp;is&nbsp;pretty smooth.&nbsp; The&nbsp;management committee chair always calls me if something needs&nbsp;resolution because I have been on the board so long. We do board meetings once a month, but when I was the chair, it was two meetings a month.&nbsp;And then the quarterly resident meetings,&nbsp;the emails,&nbsp;the&nbsp;newsletters, the&nbsp;tree projects and now we’re doing the&nbsp;infrastructure for the water,&nbsp;which is enormous. The construction crew is tearing&nbsp;up&nbsp;the&nbsp;streets,&nbsp;so we arranged the parking for families. At some point during construction there’s going to be&nbsp;no electric or water,&nbsp;and we’re&nbsp;organizing that.&nbsp;</p> <h2><strong>Why are HOAs important for mobile home parks?&nbsp;</strong></h2> <p>HOAs are important because they give&nbsp;residents a voice, and knowledge gets shared. Our board puts out&nbsp;a monthly&nbsp;newspaper and organizes quarterly meetings&nbsp;where the community comes together.&nbsp;And if there's anything big to vote on, we start preparing residents before the meetings so their voices are&nbsp;heard. This model works because we are working with&nbsp;a nonprofit (Thistle Communities). Private park owners&nbsp;can raise your rent&nbsp;$100 to $150 a month&nbsp;if they don’t like you. They can add&nbsp;a million rules. People who have&nbsp;been living&nbsp;in mobile home parks have become&nbsp;a portfolio of income for private owners. These private owners want all the old folks to leave and to bring&nbsp;in new people. Then&nbsp;the&nbsp;rents&nbsp;are raised to $800 and&nbsp;$900, they charge you for the&nbsp;water bill, and before&nbsp;know&nbsp;it,&nbsp;you are paying&nbsp;in&nbsp;a mobile&nbsp;home park&nbsp;what you would&nbsp;pay&nbsp;for a Boulder apartment. People&nbsp;are still attracted to mobile home parks because they can have&nbsp;a backyard&nbsp;to garden, whereas most Boulder apartments don’t have that. At a mobile home park, you&nbsp;have two parking spaces in&nbsp;front&nbsp;of your home.&nbsp;&nbsp;Not everyone has parking in Boulder.</p> <p>Locally groups have formed&nbsp;to introduce legislation so that private owners&nbsp;can't just come in and do whatever they want to mobile home residents</p> <h2>What has the Mapleton HOA been able to achieve?&nbsp;What are you most proud of?&nbsp;Has this been a rewarding experience?&nbsp;</h2> <p>I am most proud of the&nbsp;community building–to see everyone care for&nbsp;each other.&nbsp; If someone&nbsp;we&nbsp;know&nbsp;is&nbsp;sick,&nbsp;we bring meals. We have funding from the&nbsp;city and private people have donated into&nbsp;a fund so&nbsp;if&nbsp;someone&nbsp;is&nbsp;struggling, or if during COVID someone can't afford the rent, we&nbsp;help them. We also have a city liason&nbsp;who&nbsp;brings information about resources&nbsp;to the community.</p> <p>The woman on the other side of my property's home&nbsp;burned down. We were able to ask an owner who hadn't moved in yet if she could&nbsp;live there when&nbsp;he wasn't there,&nbsp;and she lived there for four months. He&nbsp;didn’t&nbsp;even&nbsp;charge her&nbsp;rent because&nbsp;he&nbsp;was&nbsp;paying anyway, and she needed a place.</p> <p>The&nbsp;other four members on the board are dedicated. It doesn’t matter how many hours, if something comes up, we get together. There was&nbsp;a resident with the coronavirus who&nbsp;needed financial support. Everyone chipped in, and he’s getting food and financial resources now. He probably would have died&nbsp;because&nbsp;he&nbsp;had no energy,&nbsp;and there was&nbsp;no food in the house.</p> <p>Living in a manufactured home community is not perfect because we live&nbsp;in such close quarters. There are seniors who are bothered by&nbsp;noise. In a few situations people have mental illnesses, and&nbsp;if they don’t take their&nbsp;meds, it gets&nbsp;pretty bad. There&nbsp;are residents&nbsp;who have very low incomes. Sometimes they&nbsp;can’t pay&nbsp;the&nbsp;electric bill or this or that, and because of the&nbsp;mental illness&nbsp;they don’t have&nbsp;capacity to seek help. There's&nbsp;a&nbsp;lot of trust&nbsp;with&nbsp;the&nbsp;board&nbsp;and&nbsp;the management committee, and&nbsp;if&nbsp;we&nbsp;know there’s a&nbsp;need,&nbsp;they can count on us. That feels&nbsp;really&nbsp;good.</p> <p>On the part of&nbsp;sustainability, it just makes me happy that I show groups&nbsp;so many gardens.&nbsp;We have&nbsp;a&nbsp;senior, he’s in an old senior home now, but when&nbsp;I&nbsp;would bring groups, he would come out with the teens&nbsp;and&nbsp;he would&nbsp;show them how to make kale&nbsp;chips, and&nbsp;he&nbsp;would&nbsp;sun dry them. There was enormous amount of&nbsp;connection and respect, and the kids would come back and say, "Could we go back to Gene’s house?"&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>We also work with the Boulder&nbsp;courts, and people who get&nbsp;credit for&nbsp;community service do work in&nbsp;our seniors' yards.&nbsp;&nbsp;Maybe the workers are having a hard time, but they come&nbsp;here and see&nbsp;that&nbsp;we have this&nbsp;little&nbsp;village. We get pizza for them when they work here, and somebody makes cupcakes.&nbsp;</p> <p>We&nbsp;rent dumpsters for cleanout days because some people don’t have the wheels or money to bring&nbsp;their&nbsp;larger items&nbsp;to the&nbsp;dump.&nbsp; We have&nbsp;money that comes&nbsp;from&nbsp;the residents'&nbsp;rent, and we&nbsp;decided that we are doing this service because it beautifies the park.</p> <h2>What advice would you give to mobile&nbsp;homeowners&nbsp;who are thinking about starting an HOA?&nbsp;</h2> <p>I would say they should look&nbsp;at&nbsp;other mobile home communities&nbsp;that&nbsp;have started HOAs.&nbsp; Do the&nbsp;research,&nbsp;get&nbsp;involved, attend board meetings of other&nbsp;communities,&nbsp;look&nbsp;at their newspapers and the&nbsp;kind of information they want their residents to have.&nbsp;The main thing is to decide on&nbsp;the new HOA's goals. Do they&nbsp;want a community&nbsp;that is&nbsp;just&nbsp;affordable? Or do they want a community that’s more engaged?</p> <h2>How has the pandemic affected Mapleton residents?&nbsp;</h2> <p>Many residents&nbsp;have lost jobs.&nbsp;&nbsp;If someone is struggling, we recommend them to the our city liaison, and she&nbsp;will connect them to resources.&nbsp;We&nbsp;work&nbsp;with&nbsp;Boulder&nbsp;Food&nbsp;Rescue. So twice to three times each&nbsp;week food is delivered&nbsp;here, and&nbsp;volunteers&nbsp;from our&nbsp;community set&nbsp;the food out, and families get the food. Some&nbsp;families&nbsp;don’t want to go there because&nbsp;they are&nbsp;embarrassed, so someone will take a few bags of food to&nbsp;them.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <h2><strong>Do Mapleton residents want to purchase&nbsp;the park?</strong></h2> <p>At Mapleton, residents&nbsp;own their homes, but they don’t own the land beneath them. A nonprofit, Thistle Communities, owns the&nbsp;land, and we have a&nbsp;100-year&nbsp;lease.&nbsp; Mapleton's&nbsp;board&nbsp;runs the&nbsp;finances,&nbsp;insurance, rules and regulations and the leases.&nbsp; Prospective resident applications are handled by Thistle,&nbsp;which determines, based on income,&nbsp;which&nbsp;tier (affordable housing or market rate) applicants&nbsp;qualify for.</p> <p>Our goal is&nbsp;to&nbsp;become&nbsp;land owners&nbsp;and form some sort of a cooperative.&nbsp; We have attended&nbsp;meetings with the nonprofit ROC (Resident Owned Communitites), which helps&nbsp;create&nbsp;cooperatives with mobile home parks&nbsp;so residents can own the land.&nbsp; Other&nbsp;organizations are working on affordable housing with mobile homes. In the&nbsp;last few years,&nbsp;acquiring mobile&nbsp;home parks&nbsp;have become&nbsp;huge money makers,&nbsp;so a lot of people are buying these mobile home parks, increasing the rent, and also&nbsp;making them very&nbsp;strict&nbsp;cookie-cutter patterns. The homes have to be younger than a certain year, and if the year of the mobile home is much older, then it&nbsp;has to be removed. Mobile home parks used to be the&nbsp;most affordable&nbsp;way for&nbsp;low-income&nbsp;families to&nbsp;be able to afford a home, but it’s&nbsp;changed.</p> <h2>How much longer do you plan to&nbsp;live&nbsp;at Mapleton?</h2> <p>My eight children live at Mapleton, and my&nbsp;three youngest still live with me.&nbsp;I have five grandchildren here too. I probably will continue to live here after my retirement.&nbsp;I am very happy here.</p> <p><a href="/cedar/colorado-voices" rel="nofollow">Read more stories from the "Voices" collection.</a></p> <p>&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>Isabel Sanchez&nbsp;is a grassroots community organizer and&nbsp;an urban farmer who has transformed Mapleton Mobile Home Park in Boulder to a community that follows&nbsp;sustainable principles and practices. Mapleton's&nbsp;rules and regulations now allow families to raise&nbsp;chickens,&nbsp;rabbits and&nbsp;bees, and today there are more than 45 organic gardens in the park. </div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Wed, 16 Dec 2020 17:43:19 +0000 Anonymous 1633 at /cedar Voices: How eviction threats led Peggy Kuhn on the path to activism /cedar/2020/10/30/voices-how-eviction-threats-led-peggy-kuhn-path-activism <span>Voices: How eviction threats led Peggy Kuhn on the path to activism </span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2020-10-30T12:55:17-06:00" title="Friday, October 30, 2020 - 12:55">Fri, 10/30/2020 - 12:55</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/peggy_kuhn.jpg?h=ae66c3ea&amp;itok=awGFCkhN" width="1200" height="600" alt="Peggy Kuhn stands in her back yard with her manufactured home behind her."> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Susan Glairon</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/peggy_kuhn_1.jpg?itok=Git_otF0" width="1500" height="1227" alt="Peggy Kuhn stands in her back yard with her manufactured home behind her."> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><div class="image-caption image-caption-none"> <p></p> <p>Peggy Kuhn stands in her backyard at Sans Souci Mobile Home Park, located in unincorporated Boulder County, Colorado.</p> </div> <p>Peggy Kuhn became an&nbsp;activist the day&nbsp;two of her neighbors were threatened with eviction.&nbsp; After an August 2018 purchase of the Sans Souci Mobile Home Park by a large corporation, Kuhn's&nbsp;two neighbors&nbsp;were given four days to clean&nbsp;their decks, paint the exterior of their homes, remove weeds, prepare soil and&nbsp;install grass in their yards.&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the residents utilized&nbsp;oxygen for heart issues and had lived in the park 42&nbsp;years; the other, who had lived at Sans Souci more than 50 years, had retired early due to health problems.</p> <p>"You could see the stress in the residents' faces,"&nbsp;said Kuhn, 67, a former program analyst who was laid off during the pandemic.&nbsp; "It hurt to&nbsp;see seniors verbally threatened and be stressed out that they were going to lose their homes–when their homes were probably the only thing of value in&nbsp;their lives."</p> <p>Kuhn&nbsp;formed a neighborhood group of volunteers to help the neighbor&nbsp;who would accept&nbsp;help. The group&nbsp;painted his home, pulled weeds and installed sod in his yard, but the&nbsp;homeowner, who is on a fixed income, was not reimbursed for materials.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Another pathway to eviction</strong><br> Immediately prior to the sale of Sans Souci, lot rents were&nbsp;raised 6 percent, whereas for decades the increase had been&nbsp;2 to 3 percent per year. Since then the&nbsp;new owners have implemented&nbsp;a 12 percent annual lot rental increase. Residents&nbsp;on fixed incomes are struggling&nbsp;to&nbsp;pay their lot rents, Kuhn said.</p> <p>Kuhn said the new owners' "welcome pack"&nbsp;included 12 pages of rules, including requiring residents to plant lush lawns&nbsp;and only&nbsp;painting homes&nbsp;with approved colors. The rules&nbsp;included&nbsp;a 9 p.m. park curfew. Workers could enter private&nbsp;yards at any time and charge residents for the work. The rules also stated that anyone breaking more than two rules would be evicted.</p> <p>Although the residents&nbsp;were outraged, those wanting&nbsp;to leave&nbsp;could not afford the roughly $20,000 it would cost to move their homes.</p> <p>"Immediately eviction became a huge fear in the park," said Kuhn, who began a path of advocacy that included helping to start an HOA.</p> <p>Kuhn and other HOA resident members and board members&nbsp;met&nbsp;with city and county officials and legal advocates. The residents learned it was common for corporate-owned park management companies to treat residents poorly, Kuhn said.&nbsp;Individual residents were encouraged to work with Boulder County Legal Aid&nbsp;and attend&nbsp;a "Know your Rights" workshop organized&nbsp;by a group of attorneys&nbsp;and county officials. Because of the HOA members' advocacy, Boulder County Commissioners sent a warning to the mobile home park's management company, which resulted in a few rules lifted, including&nbsp;the curfew. The other senior threatened with eviction had become&nbsp;active in the HOA group; she&nbsp;was not evicted.&nbsp;</p> <div class="ucb-box ucb-box-title-left ucb-box-alignment-right ucb-box-style-fill ucb-box-theme-lightgray"> <div class="ucb-box-inner"> <div class="ucb-box-title">Tips to Avoid Eviction</div> <div class="ucb-box-content"><br> Evictions from MH parks are traumatic for residents and can result in&nbsp;lifelong repercussions, including permanent homelessness. Peggy Kuhn offers residents the following tips to help neighbors avoid eviction: <p>&nbsp;</p> <ul> <li>Take the time to get to know your neighbors.</li> <li>Realize that some neighbors&nbsp;who need help,&nbsp;especially seniors or those with disabilities&nbsp;or mental illnesses,&nbsp;might&nbsp;not reach&nbsp;out. They may be feeling overwhelmed or in denial.</li> <li>Ask your neighbors specific questions about where they are in the eviction process.&nbsp;</li> <li>Offer to become&nbsp;a third-party&nbsp;witness to assist in explaining lengthy legal documents and their ramifications. Helping neighbors&nbsp;before the eviction has progressed to the courts&nbsp;may result in an agreement being reached between the resident and landlord instead of eviction.&nbsp;</li></ul></div> </div> </div> <p>"All the other park&nbsp;residents&nbsp;talked&nbsp;about the same things happening," Kuhn said.&nbsp;"Vulnerable people were being taken advantage of and threatened with eviction. The owners&nbsp;would evict the older residents, get rid of their homes and then&nbsp;would put in a new mobile home and rent it.&nbsp;My&nbsp;heart just went out to these people who lost their homes."&nbsp; </p><ul></ul> <p>Interested in expanding her efforts for better protections for park residents,&nbsp;Kuhn joined the Colorado Coalition of Manufactured Home Owners (CoCoMHO) as it was forming.&nbsp; CoCoMHO's&nbsp;statewide organization helps mobile home residents understand their rights and helped pass several bills that focus on the rights of Colorado's mobile home park residents.&nbsp;She has since stepped down from the organization for health and personal issues. </p><p>Kuhn worries about her own future in Sans Souci. She purchased her 1996 manufactured home 14 years ago with the idea that&nbsp;living at the mobile home park would be affordable throughout her future retirement. </p> <p>"But at 12 percent a year rent raises compounded, I won't be able to afford that as a senior with a fixed income," Kuhn said.&nbsp;&nbsp;"I don't know what I will do. I will probably move somewhere cheaper." </p> <p>Kuhn is one of the "lucky" ones. Those owning&nbsp;homes manufactured before 1976 cannot sell them due to regulations by the State of Colorado's&nbsp;Division of Housing’s Building Codes &amp; Standards. Still, she would rather stay in her home than move.</p> <p>"I would lose the community and the friendships," Kuhn said.</p> <ul></ul> <p><a href="/cedar/colorado-voices" rel="nofollow">Read more stories from the "Voices" collection.</a></p> <p>&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>Peggy Kuhn became an&nbsp;activist after two of her neighbors were threatened with eviction.&nbsp; The two Sans Souci Mobile Home Park residents were given four days to clean&nbsp;their decks, paint the exterior of their homes and to install grass in their yards.&nbsp;&nbsp;"This behavior seemed like senior abuse," said Kuhn, who organized neighborhood volunteers to help get the work done. Later Kuhn started an HOA and then became active in CoCOMHO, a statewide organization that helps mobile home residents understand their rights.<br> <br> </div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Fri, 30 Oct 2020 18:55:17 +0000 Anonymous 1623 at /cedar Voices: Michael Peirce and the power of citizen activism /cedar/2020/09/24/voices-michael-peirce-and-power-citizen-activism <span>Voices: Michael Peirce and the power of citizen activism</span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2020-09-24T08:31:43-06:00" title="Thursday, September 24, 2020 - 08:31">Thu, 09/24/2020 - 08:31</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/michael_pierce.jpg?h=1aca841d&amp;itok=zQmlbx-Y" width="1200" height="600" alt="Michael Peirce stands in tall grass in front of blurred out trees."> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Susan Glairon</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/michael_pierce.jpg?itok=-x3TuCfB" width="1500" height="1001" alt="Michael Peirce stands in tall grass in front of blurred out trees."> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p><em>Photo by Susan Glairon</em></p> <p>For nearly two decades&nbsp;Michael Peirce worked as an adjunct philosophy professor for 鶹ѰBoulder. Drawing a modest salary and unable to afford a home&nbsp;within&nbsp;Boulder County,&nbsp;Peirce and his partner purchased a 1957 mobile&nbsp;home in the Sans Souci Mobile Home Park in the late 1990s, then paying roughly $800 in mortgage payments and roughly $250 for the&nbsp;lot rental&nbsp;each month. At the time most of Sans Souci's residents fell in the&nbsp;20&nbsp;to 50-year-old age range, and many&nbsp;graduate students, teachers and adjunct faculty lived there.&nbsp;</p> <p>"Quite a few of the residents thought Sans Souci&nbsp;was an ideal situation, especially the&nbsp;musicians and&nbsp;artists, who found it difficult&nbsp;to make a living off their&nbsp;trades," Peirce says.</p> <p>In August 2018&nbsp;a large corporation&nbsp;purchased Sans Souci, and the following spring&nbsp;the new landlord implemented an annual&nbsp;12 percent lot rent increase&nbsp;and&nbsp;imposed&nbsp;new&nbsp;rules. Lot rents for Sans Souci residents currently are&nbsp;$540; they&nbsp;will rise to $600 in January and will continue&nbsp;rising annually till the rents reach&nbsp;"market rates."</p> <p>Although his aging mobile home is paid off, Peirce says&nbsp;the increasing lot rental has been&nbsp;difficult for many residents&nbsp;to afford.&nbsp; Many of his neighbors&nbsp;have lived&nbsp;in Sans Souci for 20 to 40 years, and&nbsp;at least&nbsp;half of the park's residents are now&nbsp;senior citizens on fixed incomes.</p> <p>In 2013&nbsp;Peirce's mobile home had sustained significant water damage during the&nbsp;floods that ravaged Boulder County, and he could not&nbsp;afford to renovate his unit. Then after teaching at 鶹ѰBoulder for 17 years,&nbsp;the philosophy department reorganized its teaching line, and Peirce&nbsp;lost his&nbsp;academia position.</p> <p>"I&nbsp;ended up struggling&nbsp;to make ends meet," says Peirce, who was living&nbsp;off his retirement funds. "As a result, I became an activist&nbsp;to help others&nbsp;in similar positions."</p> <p><strong>A transfer of park ownership</strong><br> Changes at Sans Souci began soon after residents found blue bags from the&nbsp;new landlord&nbsp;dangling&nbsp;from their front doors. The printed bags read:&nbsp; “Welcome to your new community."&nbsp;</p> <p>"We were already a community," says Peirce, who by then had lived at Sans Souci roughly 20 years.&nbsp;"They were the ones coming in."</p> <p>The welcome packets contained&nbsp;a list&nbsp;of new park rules, including&nbsp;a 9 p.m. curfew. Rusted or dented cars were no longer allowed, a difficult requirement&nbsp;for the low-income residents. Children could no longer play in the "streets," which were just one-lane alleys.</p> <p>Most disturbing was the landlord's "right of self-help," giving the owner&nbsp;rights to enter residents' lots unannounced at any time, Peirce says. The first time the new management came&nbsp;on the premises, a crew removed&nbsp;gardens and shrubbery from residents' lots. They also removed&nbsp;tree limbs that were shading and providing privacy.</p> <p>"They did this all without forewarning," Peirce says. "They just walked on our premises and effectively took control."&nbsp;</p> <p>Peirce describes the community before the new owner&nbsp;took over.&nbsp; "We felt at&nbsp;home," he says.&nbsp;"The resident artists painted a mural on a&nbsp;big water tank and&nbsp;a 'please do not speed sign,'&nbsp;with a painting of kids playing and riding in the street. Some artists displayed their artwork on their lots. Residents would landscape their lots in interesting ways, and everyone&nbsp;would walk around the park, look at each other’s&nbsp;properties&nbsp;and talk."</p> <p>"The&nbsp;corporate owners don't care about preserving our community," Peirce continues. "They are driving out the artists who can’t afford to live here anymore, and&nbsp;their heavy-handedness on how our lots look put a damper on&nbsp;people’s control&nbsp;of&nbsp;their surroundings. With the increased rents, many&nbsp;long-term homeowners–people who have lived here at least 20 years and some&nbsp;30 to 40 years–will not&nbsp;be able to afford the rents. If they are driven out, the park's history will&nbsp;be gone, and that’s a really scary prospect for us."</p> <p>Although the new landlord's attitude had a "chilling effect," at the same time "activism solidified the community spirit," Peirce says. The new rules "brought residents&nbsp;out of the woodwork."</p> <p>"People were saying, 'What’s going on? This is America. They can’t just do this, can they?'"</p> <p>Soon after residents began holding impromptu park meetings&nbsp;and formed an HOA, and Peirce was appointed the group's organizer. As he became familiar with&nbsp;more of his neighbors, he&nbsp;discovered strong community connections–networks of people who helped each other, musicians who played&nbsp;at each other’s gigs&nbsp;and small tool-sharing outfits.</p> <p>The group focused on&nbsp;increasing resident activism at Sans Souci and other mobile home parks. One of their many goals was to pass legislation that&nbsp;addressed the rights of Colorado's mobile home park&nbsp;residents.</p> <p>"One of the most successful things we did was get a lot of press attention," Peirce said.&nbsp;"After that the county commissioners recognized what was happening and sent a letter to our new landlords asking them to behave. The landlords stepped back from the aggressive rules. They became much nicer, which was appreciated. But one thing they would not do was change the escalation of rent."</p> <p><strong>Activism and the formation of CoCoMHO</strong><br> After Ishbel Dickens retired as the executive director of the national Mobile Home Owner's Association, the city of Boulder hired Dickens&nbsp;to assist mobile park residents with&nbsp;landlord issues. Dickens first helped organize CMOB, the Coalition of Manufactured Homeowners for Boulder. Eventually the members&nbsp;decided to expand CMOB to a state-wide organization, and Dickens&nbsp;helped with the founding of the Colorado Coalition of Manufactured Home Owners (CoCoMHO), also&nbsp;looping in the&nbsp;Leadville, Colorado group, Lake County Build a Generation, and 9to5, which advocates for&nbsp;low-income women’s rights and disadvantaged minorities.</p> <p>In 2017&nbsp;CoCoMHO and 鶹ѰBoulder's <a href="/cedar/" rel="nofollow">Community Engagement, Design and Research Center</a> (CEDaR) began working together to organize a <a href="/cedar/conferences/2019-manufactured-housing-summit" rel="nofollow">manufactured housing fall forum</a>, connecting&nbsp;mobile home park residents with state and county officials and with groups such as Colorado Legal Services, 9to5 and ROC&nbsp;USA, which finances park purchases. During the forum, literature was distributed about residents' rights. Forum sessions&nbsp;included teaching residents how&nbsp;to effectively organize&nbsp;and offering solutions that could lead to&nbsp;park residents living&nbsp;more autonomous lives.&nbsp;</p> <p>In the fall of 2018 and under the leadership of Dorie Glover, coalition members began&nbsp;to transition&nbsp;CoCoMHO into&nbsp;a nonprofit&nbsp;organization with a budget and paid staff. CEDaR&nbsp;became the organization's fiscal sponsor, helped&nbsp;launch an <a href="http://www.cocomho.org" rel="nofollow">organization home site</a>, a&nbsp;<a href="https://www.mobilehomecommunities.org/" rel="nofollow">clearinghouse website for park residents</a> and&nbsp;assisted&nbsp;the organization during&nbsp;the transition to nonprofit status.</p> <p>In October 2018, Peirce began&nbsp;volunteering for CoCoMHO, "to help build a more vital, known and respected organization."&nbsp;He and other volunteers worked for months&nbsp;to map the organization's goals&nbsp;and submitted applications for grants that could help execute them. In 2019 the group received a rapid response grant from The Colorado Health Foundation, which&nbsp;funded&nbsp;a program manager and resident leaders.&nbsp;Peirce worked as a paid resident leader and in the summer of&nbsp;2020 transitioned to a paid, part-time project manager position for CoCoMHO, a role he has held to this day.&nbsp;</p> <p>Before Peirce joined CoCoMHO, the organization requested that the&nbsp;Department&nbsp;of Regulatory Affairs (DORA) perform&nbsp;a sunrise review of the Mobile Home Park Act, and the&nbsp;request was granted. The ensuing report&nbsp;recommended more legislation and enforcement of existing legislation,&nbsp;and after the report was released, Peirce and others&nbsp;took&nbsp;advantage of the opportunity it provided.&nbsp;</p> <p>"We immediately started pounding the pavement," Peirce says. CoCoMHO volunteers&nbsp;called&nbsp;other state groups. Residents wrote&nbsp;their legislators explaining how their rights were being violated, pointing out&nbsp;that&nbsp;the 1985&nbsp;Mobile Home Act was not being enforced because mobile home&nbsp;residents generally cannot afford attorneys&nbsp;and often don’t qualify for legal aid.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Activism and Legislation Passed</strong><br> In 2019 and 2020, CoCoMHO played a central role in passing three bills that&nbsp;support the rights of Colorado's mobile park residents:&nbsp;Mobile Home Park Act Oversight (HB19–1309);&nbsp;Mobile Home Park Act&nbsp;Update (HB20–1196) and the Mobile Home Park Residents Opportunity to Purchase (HB20-1201).</p> <p>After&nbsp;the DORA Sunrise Review report was released,&nbsp;Colorado State Rep. Edie Hooten (Boulder HD-10)&nbsp;introduced the&nbsp;Mobile Home Park Act Oversight (HB19–1309), which passed, in part due to&nbsp;the activism of CoCoMHO members.&nbsp; The bill was designed to provide&nbsp;enforcement for the&nbsp;original regulations outlined in the 1985 Mobile Home Parks Act.</p> <p>HB19–1309 created&nbsp;the "Mobile Home Park Act Dispute Resolution and Enforcement Program," whereby residents can file complaints against park owners&nbsp;through the Department of Local Affairs’ Division of Housing. If&nbsp;a mutually agreed upon solution can’t be reached, the agency is&nbsp;authorized to issue determinations, cease and desist orders and&nbsp;fines.&nbsp; The new program went live May 1, 2020, and to date roughly 60 complaints have been filed. Peirce says the program cannot yet keep&nbsp;up with the volume of complaints because&nbsp;it&nbsp;was not fully funded in its first year.&nbsp;Currently the program,&nbsp;which has a funding mechanism of&nbsp;a $2 per&nbsp;month fee per lot, supports&nbsp;a&nbsp;two-person staff,&nbsp;and&nbsp;when fully funded will ramp up to four and a third positions.&nbsp;</p> <p>CoCoMHO's work also helped pass&nbsp;two bills&nbsp;in 2020, the Mobile Home Park Act&nbsp;Update (HB20–1196), which added&nbsp;more clarity and increased resident rights to the Mobile Home Park Act&nbsp;and the Mobile Home Park Act Dispute Resolution and Enforcement Program; and the Mobile Home Park Residents Opportunity to Purchase (HB20-1201), which&nbsp;guarantees residents the&nbsp;right to make&nbsp;a purchase offer any time park owners are thinking of selling their parks. HB20-1201&nbsp;puts the sale&nbsp;into a hold period, so that park&nbsp;residents have enough time to put together a purchase offer.</p> <p>"I feel very good about the successes that CoCoMHO had, both by stimulating legislation and by playing a central role in the content of the legislation," Peirce says.</p> <p><strong>Effects of COVID-19</strong><br> After the pandemic hit, CoCoMHO's efforts expanded to include work aimed at preventing evictions. Park residents&nbsp;who&nbsp;lost their jobs were able to receive&nbsp;financial assistance, in part because of the organization distributing information&nbsp;about protections for renters and rent relief.&nbsp;</p> <p>Peirce worries&nbsp;about seniors and people with disabilities living on Social Security as they frequently receive below $1,000 a month, forcing them to work part time, which&nbsp;increases&nbsp;their risk of contracting COVID-19.</p> <p>Peirce says the amount of time CoCoMHO spends to prevent&nbsp;evictions has slowed the process&nbsp;of finding&nbsp;resident leaders and helping residents file complaints through the new legislation. Adding to the bottleneck is that activists&nbsp;can't go door-to-door during the pandemic, and many residents do not have&nbsp;email accounts.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Residents purchasing San Souci</strong><br> Soon after the pandemic hit, Sans Souci's&nbsp;landlord announced an additional&nbsp;12 percent increase in lot rentals, and the park's&nbsp;HOA&nbsp;notified the press with an open letter sent&nbsp;to the landlord. It read,&nbsp;"Please do not raise the rent; instead sell the park to us."</p> <p>Peirce says Sans Souci's residents are spending increasing percentages&nbsp;of their incomes on lot rents, and the group&nbsp;would like to purchase&nbsp;the park to stabilize the rent. In&nbsp;2019 the&nbsp;residents submitted&nbsp;an offer, but&nbsp;Thistle Community Housing, the local technical assistance provider for&nbsp;ROC&nbsp;USA, which finances park purchases,&nbsp;did not have the capacity to help&nbsp;because it was already helping three resident groups purchase their parks.</p> <p>In 2020 Sans Souci residents made another offer to purchase the park. Peirce says&nbsp;if Sans Souci's&nbsp;owners accept the purchase price and the residents&nbsp;finance the&nbsp;loan&nbsp;without supplemental&nbsp;help, such as&nbsp;through&nbsp;tax breaks, government or foundation grants&nbsp;or donations from local businesses,&nbsp;it will cost residents approximately&nbsp;$800 per&nbsp;month per lot to repay&nbsp;the loan, but it would provide substantial benefits. The rent would&nbsp;be stable and for the first time, residents' equity in their lots&nbsp;would increase in ways similar to other local homeowners rather than the increase being captured entirely by park owners. But Peirce notes&nbsp;the $800 monthly rent will still be out of reach for many current residents.</p> <p>Peirce and CEDaR are&nbsp;currently seeking funding to offset the cost to residents so that longtime Sans Souci community members as well as&nbsp;mobile home park residents across the state can purchase their parks and remain in their homes.</p> <p><a href="/cedar/colorado-voices" rel="nofollow">Read more stories from the "Voices" collection</a></p> <p>&nbsp;</p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>After a corporate owner purchased Sans Souci Mobile Home Park in unincorporated Boulder County and initiated a 12 percent annual lot rental per year, Michael Peirce became an activist. Now a project manager for the Colorado Coalition of Manufactured Home Owners (CoCoMHO), he talks about how CEDaR has helped the fledgling organization become organized, and how CoCoMHO's efforts helped to pass several bills that focus on the rights of Colorado's mobile home park residents.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Thu, 24 Sep 2020 14:31:43 +0000 Anonymous 1607 at /cedar Voices: Rehabilitation of an aging structure, Dave Weil (Part I) /cedar/2020/08/20/voices-rehabilitation-aging-structure-dave-weil-part-i <span>Voices: Rehabilitation of an aging structure, Dave Weil (Part I) </span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2020-08-20T09:57:56-06:00" title="Thursday, August 20, 2020 - 09:57">Thu, 08/20/2020 - 09:57</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/dave_weil_0.jpg?h=0eb46064&amp;itok=RTAqi7gP" width="1200" height="600" alt="Dave Weil with his hands up on the porch in front of his mobile home."> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Susan Glairon</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/mobile_home_interior_render2.jpg?itok=rupidfxl" width="1500" height="844" alt="Plan for mobile home made by Elsa Jerde with view of kitchen and back room."> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p></p> <p>When Dave Weil&nbsp;moved into Mapleton Mobile Home Park in the late 1990s, the 1963 manufactured home he purchased was in such poor condition it wasn't&nbsp;livable, he says.</p> <p>Weil, 61,&nbsp;immediately rolled up his sleeves and began upgrading the single-wide, 10 by 50 foot unit.&nbsp;Since moving into the Boulder, Colorado&nbsp;park,&nbsp;he has replaced the porch, added a storage shed&nbsp;and upgraded the appliances, including the furnace, refrigerator, range and water heater as well as&nbsp;some of the electrical wiring. He also replaced the roof and windows and added insulation to the ceiling to make the unit more energy efficient. A&nbsp;few years ago, he added hardwood floors.</p> <p>The cost and effort were well worth it, says Weil, who has lived in the same manufactured home for 22 years.<br> <br> "In Boulder the options for affordable living are very limited," Weil&nbsp;says. "And one of the few options available in the late 1990s/early 2000s was manufactured housing."</p> <p></p> <p><strong>Dream plans</strong><br> Weil is looking to update his manufactured home again and make it more energy efficient. He says the&nbsp;biggest flaw with older units&nbsp;is the tremendous&nbsp;heat loss through&nbsp;walls. Even heating small mobile homes equipped&nbsp;with a modern 95-percent efficient furnace can cost $200 or $300 per month, he says.&nbsp;</p> <p>鶹ѰBoulder's <a href="/cedar/" rel="nofollow">Community Engagement Design and Research Center </a>(CEDaR) is helping Weil make his dreams come true by&nbsp;organizing and facilitating the remodel. Called "Mobile Home Retrofit:&nbsp;Design &amp;&nbsp;Demonstration,"&nbsp;the project's goal is to design and build a mobile home retrofit that is&nbsp;energy and resource efficient, yet&nbsp;very&nbsp;livable, says Brian Muller, CEDaR director. CEDaR&nbsp;connected Weil with students from The Rural Project, a student organization&nbsp;that seeks to engage and empower communities in Colorado through design-based activism, Muller says. These students&nbsp;and other 鶹ѰBoulder&nbsp;interns helped Weil conceptualize what he wanted&nbsp;within his budget and then worked with the city and others to get approvals. The students are also working&nbsp;on the "deep design issues," including&nbsp;determining the most efficient technologies, the roof height and methods of&nbsp;building a kitchen within the confines of&nbsp;narrow lots. The remodel must&nbsp;be built on the existing chassis.</p> <p>"We&nbsp;are focused on creating affordable and highly livable spaces that are very attractive and beautiful," Muller&nbsp;says.</p> <p>Through interviews with Weil&nbsp;to discover his preferences and interests, Elsa Jerde, an architecture major who graduated from 鶹ѰBoulder in spring 2020,&nbsp;developed the&nbsp;conceptual design.&nbsp;</p> <p>"Elsa is a delight to work with," Weil says. "She seems to have a lot of expertise in her field of study and has a high degree of confidence to get this project done."</p> <p>Weil says the plan calls for adding rigid foam insulation to the walls and possibly the ceiling to reduce&nbsp;energy loss. It also&nbsp;includes removing the walls and probably the roof, stripping the structure down to its chassis&nbsp;and rebuilding it with the same footprint but a different&nbsp;floor plan. The plan&nbsp;also includes repositioning the windows to let in more light and&nbsp;obscure&nbsp;the view of parked cars as well as raising the ceiling. He's also hoping to add solar&nbsp;panels to the south roof as well as solar&nbsp;battery storage. Jerde's&nbsp;design also allows for preserving&nbsp;the existing hardwood floors&nbsp;and leaving&nbsp;the freestanding porch in place.&nbsp;</p> <p>For Weil,&nbsp;one of the most difficult issues with his manufactured home has been&nbsp;the "substandard plumbling and electrical." If&nbsp;large sections of the electrical and plumbing need to be replaced, the project will require more engineering, more inspections and more permiting, which will slow the process.&nbsp;He guesses the renovations will take one to two years to complete. At 鶹ѰBoulder a studio class is planned for spring 2021 with the build planned&nbsp;for summer 2021.</p> <p>Weil plans to purchase&nbsp;an old motor home, park it in one of his parking spaces, plug into the power source the contractors will be utilizing&nbsp;or run off of solar&nbsp;and live in the vehicle&nbsp;until the construction is completed. He admits he hasn't yet run his plan&nbsp;by the Mapleton Homeowner's Association (MHA), but in the past other residents were&nbsp;granted&nbsp;permission for a similar&nbsp;process, he says. To&nbsp;date&nbsp;the MHA has&nbsp;asked only for certain forms to be submitted for approval and for the applicable city building permits.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>This summer CEDaR is also conducting a post-occupancy survey of its 2005 project,&nbsp;<a href="/cedar/trailer-wrap-i" rel="nofollow">Trailer Wrap&nbsp;I</a>, a beautifully remodeled mobile home once slated for the dump,&nbsp;to determine the owner's satisfaction with the student-designed/built remodel as well as&nbsp;what the neighbors think about it.&nbsp; Similar to the current project, the goal of Trailer Wrap I&nbsp;was to improve the manufactured home's spatial quality and energy efficiency and&nbsp;to sensitize student designers to community needs through a real-world experience.<br> <br> "Preliminary findings&nbsp;show Trailer Wrap I&nbsp;was highly successful–very energy efficient and quite popular in the community,"&nbsp; Muller says. "The owner has enjoyed living there. And the neighbors and the Mapleton&nbsp;community by and large seem to like it."</p> <p><br> <a href="/cedar/2020/08/20/voices-dave-weil-part-ii-park-governance-inequity-and-legislation" rel="nofollow">Voices: Dave Weil, Part II&nbsp;Park governance, inequity and legislation</a></p> <p><a href="https://soundcloud.com/user-256946671/colorado-voices-dave-weil" rel="nofollow">Listen to Dave Weil talk about life in a mobile home park</a></p> <p><a href="/cedar/colorado-voices" rel="nofollow">Read more stories from the "Voices" collection</a></p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>When Dave Weil&nbsp;moved into Mapleton Mobile Home Park in the late 1990s, the 1963 manufactured home he purchased was in such poor condition it wasn't&nbsp;livable, he says. Weil, 61,&nbsp;immediately rolled up his sleeves and began upgrading the single-wide, 10 by 50 foot unit.&nbsp;More than 20 years later he's getting design help with his newest renovation, which will make his home more energy efficient, thanks to CEDaR.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Thu, 20 Aug 2020 15:57:56 +0000 Anonymous 1577 at /cedar Voices: An inequitable pandemic, Dave Weil (Part II) /cedar/2020/08/18/voices-inequitable-pandemic-dave-weil-part-ii <span>Voices: An inequitable pandemic, Dave Weil (Part II) </span> <span><span>Anonymous (not verified)</span></span> <span><time datetime="2020-08-18T14:04:32-06:00" title="Tuesday, August 18, 2020 - 14:04">Tue, 08/18/2020 - 14:04</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/article-thumbnail/dave_weil_outside.jpg?h=bed7a90d&amp;itok=7cQSkaSz" width="1200" height="600" alt="Outside of Dave Weil's mobile home he stores some of his belongings and has some potted plants."> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/cedar/taxonomy/term/321" hreflang="en">voices</a> </div> <span>Susan Glairon</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/cedar/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/article-image/dave_weil_0.jpg?itok=8MD75ICT" width="1500" height="1125" alt="Dave Weil with his arms spread out on the porch of his mobile home."> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p><strong>An inequitable pandemic</strong><br> In the middle of March 2020, Colorado Gov.&nbsp;Jared Polis issued a stay-at-home order to slow the pandemic, and like many small business owners, Dave Weil was caught in the middle. Weil closed&nbsp;his thriving massage therapy business; by&nbsp;July he was still only seeing a few clients each week.</p> <p>"It's not enough to get by in Boulder," says Weil who lives in Mapleton Mobile Home Park in Boulder, Colorado. He&nbsp;now attends community food drops offered in the mobile home park, and he's mostly cooking at home.</p> <p>Because he has some savings and because living at Mapleton, which is cooperately owned, is "semi-affordable," he will be OK&nbsp;for the immediate future. That said, his <a href="/cedar/2020/08/06/voices-dave-weil-part-i-rehabilitation-aging-structure" rel="nofollow">planned renovation project </a>will&nbsp;go on hold&nbsp;if his savings continue to be depleted.</p> <p>Weil says many&nbsp;park residents are struggling from lost income due to COVID-19, including&nbsp;a printer, a teacher, a&nbsp;salesperson&nbsp;and a few restaurant workers.The uniformly spaced units allow&nbsp;for isolation of individuals.&nbsp;Residents wear&nbsp;masks and keep socially distanced when&nbsp;gathering&nbsp;for meetings or&nbsp;food drops, which are held outside.&nbsp;That said, most Mapleton residents fall in&nbsp;the 50 to 70-year-old&nbsp;age range, with a few residents&nbsp;in their 80s, and&nbsp;because of their succeptibility to COVID-19, they have&nbsp;reduced contact with neighbors and the outside community.&nbsp;</p> <p>"I have a credo that it's better to not know too much about your neighbors," he says. "We are so close together here, practically sharing walls, that it's better we keep things on a polite level and not get too initimate with details."</p> <p><strong>An affordable alternative</strong><br> Weil says choosing Mapleton was a "no-brainer."&nbsp; Before moving to the trailer park, rent for his Boulder apartment&nbsp;teetered&nbsp;on&nbsp;50 percent of his income as a&nbsp;massage therapist with a busy practice.&nbsp; When he moved to Mapleton, he paid&nbsp;$9,000 for the structure&nbsp;that would become his home at a time when the average&nbsp;house price in Boulder topped&nbsp;$225,000. Today the average home sale price in Boulder is $1.1 million.</p> <p>"If I hadn't had the option of living in a manufactured home, I would have had to move out of Boulder," he says.</p> <p>He ticks off Mapleton's advantages over other area mobile home parks. Mapleton&nbsp;is a six-minute walk to&nbsp;the center of town, and he&nbsp;lives in a quiet cul-de-sac. Lot rentals are less expensive than other Boulder parks, and Mapleton&nbsp;has a more democratic governance, he says. When he moved in, the city&nbsp;of Boulder owned the park, but soon after it was&nbsp;sold to Thistle Community Housing, a nonprofit organization which develops, manages and preserves permanently affordable rental and ownership homes in Boulder County. He credits Thistle, which operates as&nbsp;his landlord,&nbsp;in authoring&nbsp;the park's democratic structure.</p> <p>"We have a micro-paradise&nbsp;here because we control land-use values within the park, which means&nbsp;outside parties can't decide what happens with our homes or with the&nbsp;land around our homes," he says.&nbsp;"That's a major advantage over the&nbsp;mobile home communities within Boulder owned by outside entitites who&nbsp;don't have an interest in quality-of-life issues or length of residency&nbsp;or land-use values. We vote on any change or improvement that happens within the park. Everyone gets a vote."</p> <p>Mapleton&nbsp;is also&nbsp;one of&nbsp;the more ethnically diverse communities in Boulder, Weil says.&nbsp;He estimates that&nbsp;50 percent of the residents are Latino or&nbsp;other minorities and about 40 percent are age 65 and older. He&nbsp;estimates only one in five households has&nbsp;an intact&nbsp;nuclear family.&nbsp;</p> <p>Within the park there is a sense of community. Before COVID-19 there were regular gatherings, as well as community yard sales and clean ups. Residents tend to purchase&nbsp;sustainable materials for their projects, and the community recycles, including electronics, and composts. There is a community garden, and Weil's&nbsp;yard is a huge network of raised beds and individual containers. The park maintains&nbsp;the trees within, which he says&nbsp;has been great for the wildlife and the city as a whole.</p> <p>"There is no good reason to leave Mapleton," Weil says.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>Legislation to make things better</strong><br> Unlike other local mobile home parks, Mapleton's lease includes a mandate that only allows a 1 to&nbsp;2 percent annual rent increase, and&nbsp;Mapleton is&nbsp;also a community land trust, meaning the community is owned by the residents.&nbsp;But similar to other Colorado parks, none of Mapleton's&nbsp;residents own the land beneath their units&nbsp;and state&nbsp;law favors out-of-state corporate ownership of trailer parks over local&nbsp;or individual ownership.&nbsp;</p> <p>Some&nbsp;states have inacted laws allowing residents to purchase&nbsp;the land beneath&nbsp;their trailers after they have lived there one or two&nbsp;years, but that hasn't been the case in Colorado, where the majority of parks are owned by out-of-state corporations and holding companies, each of which may&nbsp;own as many as 100 different parks across the country. Weil says these corporations have no&nbsp;interest in helping&nbsp;healthy communities develop in their parks.&nbsp; An example is Sans Souci Mobile Home Park in unincorporated Boulder County, where an out-of-state corporate owner&nbsp;has imposed steep rent hikes and mandated unwanted landscape changes to&nbsp;residents' property, he says.&nbsp;<br> <br> "I believe very&nbsp;strongly that laws needs to change to favor individual ownership so that people&nbsp;can build equity in their homes," Weil says.&nbsp;"You could live&nbsp;in the&nbsp;same home&nbsp;for 20 or 25&nbsp;years and spend over $100,000 on lot&nbsp;rentals during that period, and the amount of equity you gain is exactly zero. In fact, if you live in your home long enough&nbsp;you end up with a liability because you have to pay to have that home demolished and hauled away, and you are no closer to getting a replacement home."</p> <p>Weil says few see mobile homes&nbsp;as good real-estate investments because residents are not protected.<br> <br> "Banks typically want equity to loan money, and you can't use your home because it's not worth anything, and you can't use the land because it's not yours," he says.</p> <p><br> <a href="/cedar/2020/08/06/voices-dave-weil-part-i-rehabilitation-aging-structure" rel="nofollow">Voices: Dave Weil (Part I) Rehabilitation of an aging structure</a></p> <p><a href="https://soundcloud.com/user-256946671/colorado-voices-dave-weil" rel="nofollow">Listen to Dave Weil talk about life in a mobile home park</a></p> <p><a href="/cedar/colorado-voices" rel="nofollow">Read more stories from the "Voices" collection</a></p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>In the middle of March 2020, Colorado Gov.&nbsp;Jared Polis issued a stay-at-home order to slow the pandemic, and like many small business owners, Dave Weil was caught in the middle. Weil shut down his thriving massage therapy business; by the following&nbsp;July he was still only seeing a few clients each week.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Off</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> Tue, 18 Aug 2020 20:04:32 +0000 Anonymous 1593 at /cedar