Office of Mobile and Manufactured Home Relocation Assistance.
The Office of Mobile and Manufactured Home Relocation Assistance (Office), in the Department of Commerce (Department), provides general assistance to mobile and manufactured home resident organizations, tenant organizations, and mobile and manufactured home community owners. Among its duties, the Office provides technical assistance to tenants who are participating in the conversion of a mobile home park to resident ownership, and provides financial assistance to homeowners under the Mobile Home Relocation Assistance Program (Relocation Assistance Program) when mobile home parks close.
Mobile Home Relocation Assistance Program.
The Relocation Assistance Program, administered by the Office, provides monetary assistance on a first-come, first-served basis to low-income persons owning mobile homes located in mobile home parks that are scheduled for closure or conversion to another use. Tenants residing in parks that are closed because of park-owner fraud or health and safety concerns are given priority to available funds. Payments are made by the Office upon verification of eligibility and subject to the availability of funds. To be eligible for relocation assistance:
For relocation assistance, the tenant, or an organization acting on the tenant's account, must submit an application that includes:
Eligible mobile home owners may receive reimbursement of relocation expenses up to $12,000 for a double-wide home and $7,500 for a single-wide home. Relocation assistance may be a combination of cash assistance and reimbursement for relocation-related costs up to the relocation assistance limits. An eligible tenant may receive up to 40 percent of their assistance limit in cash to find other housing, and may receive the remainder of assistance as reimbursement for costs associated with relocation.
To receive the cash assistance, the tenant must demonstrate that the tenant has: (1) relocated the home; (2) established a process to relocate the home by the assigning the removal or demolition and disposal to another entity; or (3) contracted to incur expenses associated with relocating the home. To receive assistance after demonstrating that there is an assignment or contract to remove or dispose of the home, the tenant must demonstrate proof of the assignment and evidence that the assignee is capable of removal or demolition and disposal, or a contract for relocation of the home.
If a mobile home owner receives assistance for relocation from a source other than the Relocation Assistance Program, the assistance provided under the Relocation Assistance Program must be reduced to ensure that no person receives from all sources combined more than the actual costs of relocation.
Any cash assistance provided under the Relocation Assistance Program is considered a one-time direct grant payment and must be excluded from household income calculations to determine eligibility of the recipient to receive benefits from any other state-funded assistance programs.
"Tenant" means a person that owns a manufactured/mobile home located on a rented lot in a manufactured/mobile home park.
The Relocation Assistance Program is modified so that the 40 percent limit on cash assistance for securing alternative housing is removed.
The maximum amount eligible tenants are able to receive in relocation assistance for a multisection home is modified from $12,000 to $16,000 and for a single-section home from $7,500 to $10,000.
Tenants are required, within 60 days of receiving relocation assistance, to:
Tenants who transfer title of their home to the park-owner and whose household adjusted income is at or below 50 percent of the median family income, adjusted for household size for the county where the manufactured/mobile home is located, will receive the full relocation assistance. The Department will provide additional assistance from the fund to a park-owner who demonstrates costs incurred or contracted to incur for demolition and disposal of the home up to the following amounts:
Tenants who transfer title of the home to the park-owner and whose household adjusted income is above 50 percent of the median family income, adjusted for household size for the county where the manufactured/mobile home is located, will receive 85 percent of relocation funds. The Department will provide the remaining 15 percent of the assistance to the park-owner for demolition and disposal of the home once the park-owner has demonstrated costs incurred or contracted to incur for demolition and disposal of the home.
Tenants who secure relocation of the home and do not transfer title to the park-owner will receive the maximum relocation assistance.
The application requirements for relocation assistance are amended so that tenants are no longer required to provide a statement of relocation expenses expected to be incurred. Tenants must now provide a statement of whether they will transfer title of the home to the park-owner or relocate the home within 60 days of receiving relocation assistance.
The section reducing assistance provided under the Relocation Assistance Program to a mobile home owner who receives assistance from another source is repealed.
The substitute bill retains the underlying bill with the following changes, additions, and deletions:
(In support) The current statute does not give tenants the money that they are entitled to receive. There are approximately 75,000 households living in mobile homes and 11,000 households are currently facing displacement. They need support.
This bill allows more flexibility for families forced to give up their homes when the land is sold. Homeowners themselves pay into the fund and should receive these funds upfront when they need assistance. From the mobile home owner perspective, if homeowners are told that they have to move their home, they need compensation for that. This bill helps address the disparity between who has rights between park-owners and homeowners.
(Opposed) There are civil liabilities associated with leaving the tenant's home behind. The current statute exists for tenants to take care of their property. This bill makes dangerous changes because, if passed, the assistance funds will not be used to handle the potential liabilities that could arise if the homes are left behind by the tenants. The 2019 bill was a joint effort and that is why there is currently a 40/60 split for the relocation assistance. The problem with this bill is that if the tenants retain title to the homes, they retain liability.
As a park-owner, the changes in this bill create an issue of abandoned homes. The bill transforms a longstanding program and saddles homeowners with increasing debt for litigation related to their homes. The bill forces homeowners to devalue their asset due to costs of relocation.
(Other) Homeowners currently pay into the fund with fees. The 2019 bill added the 40 percent upfront assistance to the homeowner. Right now, tenants are not receiving upfront assistance because the tenants have to show that they're relocating. There is a concern that removing the requirement of demonstrating relocation will negatively affect negotiations. Overall, it is a good idea to provide cash assistance upfront, but some assistance should be retained for relocation.