The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors has approved a motion instructing the county to draft a rent control ordinance for mobile home parks in unincorporated LA County.
“Mobile home residents are in a difficult and unique situation,” said Supervisor Janice Hahn, who co-authored the motion with Supervisor Sheila Kuehl.
“While they own their homes, they do not own the land underneath them,” Hahn said. “Because so-called ‘mobile’ homes are often not mobile at all, residents are particularly vulnerable to rent hikes. It is time the county step in and ensure mobile home residents do not join the ranks of the homeless families living here in LA County.”
The term “mobile home” is misleading. Mobile homes are often placed permanently in a park and moving them is difficult and expensive. This gives mobile home park owners a virtual monopoly and gives residents few options if they cannot afford rent hikes or fees. Mobile home owners are often forced to sell their homes to their landlords for substantially less than their value because moving the home would be cost-prohibitive.
“We have a critical shortage of affordable rental housing in Los Angeles,” Kuehl said. “This proposed rent stabilization program would help protect residents of mobile home parks from unreasonable rent increases while providing park owners with a fair and reasonable return on their investment. Today’s action is one of many steps the County is taking to preserve existing affordable housing and reduce the number of people driven into homelessness by rising rents.”
In unincorporated Los Angeles County, there are 86 mobile home parks and a total of 8,503 mobile home units.
The motion instructs the Community Development Commission to report back to the Board in six months with a proposed mobile home rent regulation ordinance which would place an annual cap on space rent increases; provide protections for residents against impacts to services and maintenance with reduced space rents; provide a rent increase process for park owners who believe they are not receiving a fair rate of return on their property; and require park owners to complete an annual report on occupancy, rental rates and services and amenities provided by the park.
In drafting the ordinance, the Community Development Commission has been instructed to conduct thorough stakeholder outreach with both mobile home tenants and park owners.
The motion passed by a 4-1 vote, with Fifth District Supervisor Kathryn Barger voting no.
After several mobile home residents testified at the meeting that they experience intimidation and feared retaliation from mobile home park owners, Hahn said she believes these residents. Hahn also asked County Counsel to explore the idea of placing a temporary rent freeze to prevent mobile home park owners from increasing rents ahead of the implementation of this ordinance. County Counsel will report back to the Board on the feasibility of a rent freeze in 30 days.
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14 Comments
Joey Leon
Long overdue. So glad this is in the works.
Claudia Paloma Morales
Vicente Nunez Morales
Fifth District Supervisor Kathryn Barger voting no. This is Santa Clarita’s Supervisor. I hope she changes her vote, however I don’t predict I will vote for her next time.
Scott Hobberchalk
Finally!!!!
the park I live in has raised space rent almost $300 over 7 years and for what is besides me. Although just because you live in a mobile home doesn’t mean you will be led to homelessness….
We used to live in canyon country at Sierra heights, but the rent was getting so high we could not afford it anymore, so we had to move to Texas.
There already is rent control on these parks. I lived in Mulberry for 16 years. They raised every year for no other reason than they can. It’s a fixed to the CPI 3-6%
Baruk Rodriguez
They should come regulate Ennies punk ass
It’s about time the rent space us out of control
Exactly. We saw one that was 900 per month.
Charlotte we saw some at 1150.. Terrible