HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESHB 1640
As Passed House:
March 15, 2005
Title: An act relating to resolving manufactured/mobile home landlord and tenant disputes.
Brief Description: Providing a dispute mechanism for manufactured/mobile home landlord and tenant disputes.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Housing (originally sponsored by Representatives Morrell, Chase, Dunn, McCoy, O'Brien, Appleton and Lantz).
Brief History:
Housing: 2/15/05, 3/1/05 [DPS];
Appropriations: 3/5/05 [DPS(HOUS)].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 3/15/05, 96-0.
Brief Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON HOUSING
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 5 members: Representatives Miloscia, Chair; Springer, Vice Chair; Ormsby, Pettigrew and Sells.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 4 members: Representatives Holmquist, Ranking Minority Member; Dunn, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; McCune and Schindler.
Staff: Robyn Dupuis (786-7166).
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS
Majority Report: The substitute bill by Committee on Housing be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 20 members: Representatives Sommers, Chair; Fromhold, Vice Chair; McDonald, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Bailey, Cody, Conway, Darneille, Dunshee, Grant, Hinkle, Hunter, Kagi, Kenney, Kessler, Linville, McDermott, Miloscia, Priest, Schual-Berke and Walsh.
Minority Report: Do not pass. Signed by 8 members: Representatives Alexander, Ranking Minority Member; Anderson, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Armstrong, Buri, Clements, Haigh, Pearson and Talcott.
Staff: Nona Snell (786-7153).
Background:
The Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act (Act) governs the legal rights,
remedies and obligations arising from any rental agreement between a landlord and a tenant
regarding a mobile home lot or pad where the tenant has no ownership interest in the real
property or in the association which owns the real property. The Act sets forth grounds for
termination of the tenancy, duties of the landlord, duties of the tenant, rules with respect to
transfer of the rental agreement, and the effect of failure to carry out duties. The Act
includes provisions with respect to bringing suit as well as arbitration and mediation
proceedings.
The Office of Mobile Home Affairs (OMHA) was created in the Department of Community,
Trade and Economic Development (DCTED) to serve as the coordinating office within state
government for matters relating to manufactured/mobile homes. The OMHA provides
ombudsman service to manufactured/mobile home park owners and tenants with respect to
disputes and problems. It also provides technical assistance to resident organizations or
persons in the process of forming a resident organization; handles the consumer complaints
and related functions necessary to comply with the regulations established by the federal
Department of Housing and Urban Development for manufactured/mobile homes; and
administers the Mobile Home Relocation Assistance Program.
Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill:
The substitute bill establishes, within the DCTED, an expanded ombudsman service funded
by a mobile home park registration fee and providing for additional numbers of investigative
fact-finding staff and contractors to investigate complaints, provide additional outreach and
service to tenants through the implementation of a toll free information and complaint hot
line, compile and track data regarding complaints and produce a registry by December 31,
2005 of all mobile home parks, including the number of tenants/units within each park. The
DCTED must report on the number and types of complaints as well as the success rate of
complaint resolution to the appropriate committees of the House of Representatives and
Senate by December 31, 2005.
Investigations
Complainants must provide written notice to the respondent prior to notifying the DCTED of
an alleged violation. Whether to investigate a complaint is left to the discretion of the
DCTED. Investigations will be conducted by the DCTED ombudsman staff or consultants.
Representatives of the ombudsman program will negotiate an agreement between the two
parties. The current remedies available under the Mobile Home Landlord Tenant Act are not
affected by this act.
Outreach to Tenants and Landlords Regarding Ombudsman Program
The DCTED will ensure that notice of this program is widely distributed. Landlords will be
required to post a notice about the program prominently in common areas. A toll-free
number will be set up that park owners and tenants can use to seek additional information and
communicate complaints.
Data Collection and Reporting
By December 31, 2005, the DCTED will submit a summary report of its activities during the
period after the effective date of this act, and December 31, 2005, to the House of
Representatives Housing Committee and the Senate Committee of Financial Institutions,
Housing and Consumer Protection. This report will include:
Registration of Mobile Home Parks & Manufactured Housing Communities
All mobile home parks and manufactured housing communities must register with the
DCTED. The DCTED must compile the most accurate list possible of all mobile home parks
and manufactured housing communities in the state, the number of lots subject to the Act in
each park or community, and the names and addresses of these parks. The DCTED must
submit this registry to the House of Representatives Housing Committee and the Senate
Committee of Financial Institutions, Housing and Consumer Protection by December 31,
2005.
An annual park registration fee, which is used by the DCTED to administer this chapter, is
assessed. The annual park registration fee is $5 per lot. No more than $2.50 of the fee may
be passed on to the tenants by the park or community owner.
Notification regarding the fee must go out to all known mobile home/manufactured housing
community owners. If the owner fails to pay the fee, a penalty shall be assessed at the
prevailing interest rate for Superior Court civil judgments.
Investigation Account
A manufactured/mobile home investigations account is created in the custody of the State
Treasurer. All receipts from park registration fees and late fees must be deposited in the
account. Expenditures may only be used for costs associated with this chapter. An
appropriation is not required for expenditures, but the account is subject to the allotment
procedures. In January 2006, any remaining funds in the account will be transferred to the
mobile home affairs account for the DCTED ombudsman program.
This act expires December 31, 2005.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available on substitute bill.
Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.
Testimony For: (Housing) Most tenants are low income senior citizens who have no real
recourse because litigation is too expensive and the ombudsman program has no teeth.
Mobile and manufactured homes are difficult to pick up and move if a tenant is dissatisfied
with conditions in a park. This makes them unique from apartments or other rental units. It
is expensive and time consuming to sue under the Act. This program would weed out
frivolous complaints, provide people with somewhere to go with complaints, and get people
to work to resolve disputes. It provides a level playing field for landlords and tenants.
Currently, landlords ignore problems and neglect or refuse to maintain the park and the
tenants are fearful and intimidated because moving their home is beyond their means. It can
cost a lot to move a home and it can be difficult to find a new spot to move to. Tenants are
willing to support this program by paying a fee.
(Neutral) The DCTED ombudsman program has 500-700 requests for help each year. About
41 percent of these complaints would fall under this bill. The DCTED does about eight on-site investigations per month. The DCTED estimates that there are about 2,200 parks in the
state with an average of 50 lots per park. The DCTED tracks complaints by park and they
come from all over the state and are not limited to just a few parks.
Testimony For: (Appropriations) Mobile home tenants are happy to pay the fee included in the bill because the fees will pay for more data collection and more staff to mediate landlord/tenant disputes.
Testimony Against: (Housing) This process will be time consuming, cumbersome, and expensive. Tenants do have rights under the Act and these rights are enforced. Tenants with real problems are able to find attorneys and work the legal process provided under the Act. This program would discourage new mobile and manufactured home communities and make it less affordable to operate those already in existence. A workable alternative would be to establish formal problem solving groups, track the number of complaints and the number of these which are resolved, and report back to the DCTED.
Testimony Against: (Appropriations) None.
Persons Testifying: (Housing) (In support) Representative Morrell, prime sponsor; Nick
Federici, Washington Low-Income Housing Alliance; Ishbel Dickens, Columbia Legal
Services; Ken Newton, Manufactured Home Owners of America; Wolfgang Priebe, Sea
Shore Villa Mobile Home Park; James Dean, Crystal Pointe Mobile Home Park; and
Kathleen Stanley, Charles Kuney and Judith White, Mobile Home Owners Association of
America.
(Neutral) Marie Sullivan and Teri Ramsauer, Department of Community, Trade and
Economic Development.
(Opposed) John Woodring and Ken Spencer, Manufactured Housing Communities of
Washington; Walt Olsen, Olsen Law Firm; and Darlene Pennock, Washington Apartment
Association.
Persons Testifying: (Appropriations) Nick Federici, Washington Low-income Housing Alliance.