Mobile home owners OK with report
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Deirdre Newman
The relocation saga of the El Nido and Snug Harbor mobile home owners
ended much more peacefully than it began.
The City Council approved the relocation impact report for the
Snug Harbor Village and El Nido Trailer Parks on Monday.
Joe Brown, the owner who’s closing the parks to build a four-story
medical office building, prepared the report.
The bitterness and frustration that marked previous discussions
about the relocation offer were largely absent Monday as the mobile
home owners instead peppered the council with specific questions.
Irene Shannon, an El Nido resident, said she felt the city has come a
long way since she and her fellow mobile home owners complained that
the relocation offers last year were unfair.
“I think all the work and community involvement over the last year
has ended with the council being much more aware that mobile home
parks are a different business and a different place to live,”
Shannon said. “This has been a learning experience for the city and
will help other parks with closing.”
Barry McDaniel, chief executive of the company that provided the
relocation report, said he was pleased with the council’s decision.
“We’re delighted,” McDaniel said. “I thought it was a fair
assessment from the city staff and the third-party peer review.”
In May, Brown gave the mobile home owners and renters a one-year
written notice of his intent to close both parks by June 1, 2004. The
city does not have any regulations that require park owners to obtain
city approval before closing parks. Brown is only required to follow
state laws covering mobile home park closures.
State law requires the owner of a park to prepare a relocation
impact report before closing or converting a park to another use. The
goal of the report is to determine the reasonable costs of relocating
the mobile home parks’ residents to another suitable location.
According to state law, cities must review these relocation
reports and decide if they do provide the reasonable costs of
relocation. In July, the City Council commissioned a third-party
independent review of the adequacy and accuracy of the report. The
review found that the report was complete and accurate, City Planner
Kim Brandt said.
Brown is offering to sell one-bedroom 2001 models -- set up in
another park located within 30 miles -- to mobile home owners whose
trailers can’t be moved. These trailers would cost $12,000 if paid
for with cash and $15,000 for a long-term payment plan. Brown is
offering a relocation benefit of $3,000 for single-wide trailers and
$6,300 for double-wide mobile homes.
There are 24 remaining mobile home owners who haven’t relocated.
Of those, only three have not yet reached an agreement, Brandt said.
The council added two conditions to its approval -- all relocation
offers need to be made in writing and all relocations have to be done
by licensed moving companies with appropriate permits.
“It’s been a difficult learning process for us,” Mayor Gary
Monahan said.
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