FINAL BILL REPORT

ESSB 5183

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

C 390 L 19

Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Concerning manufactured/mobile homes.

Sponsors: Senate Committee on Housing Stability & Affordability (originally sponsored by Senators Kuderer, Pedersen, Wellman, Saldaña, Liias and Wilson, C.).

Senate Committee on Housing Stability & Affordability

Senate Committee on Ways & Means

House Committee on Appropriations

Background: Relocation Assistance. The Office of Mobile/Manufactured Home Relocation Assistance (Office), in the Department of Commerce (Commerce), provides general assistance to mobile and manufactured home resident organizations, tenant organizations, and mobile and manufactured home community owners.

The Office provides financial assistance for displaced manufactured/mobile homeowners under the Relocation Assistance Program when mobile home parks close. The financial assistance is provided on a first-come, first-served basis to low-income persons owning mobile homes in mobile home parks scheduled for closure or conversion to another use. Tenants residing in parks closed because of park-owner fraud or health and safety concerns are given priority.

To be eligible for relocation assistance:

Eligible mobile homeowners or tenants may receive reimbursement of relocation expenses up to $12,000 for a multi-section home and $7,500 for a single-section home. The Relocation Assistance Program is funded by a $100 fee on the issuance of a certificate of title for manufactured/mobile homes, which is deposited into the Mobile Home Park Relocation Fund. Each manufactured/mobile home community landlord must pay the Department of Revenue a $10 annual registration assessment for each manufactured/mobile home within a manufactured/mobile home community. Landlords may charge a maximum of $5 of the assessment to tenants.

If a person receives any payments for relocation, outside of funds provided by the Relocation Assistance Program, the funds from the Relocation Assistance Program are reduced by the amount of outside funding received. If the amount of assistance received from an outside source exceeds the maximum amount of assistance a person is eligible for under the Relocation Assistance Program, the person is not eligible for Relocation Assistance Program funds.

Real Estate Excise Tax and Property Tax Exemptions. Property that is owned or used by a nonprofit to provide rental housing for very low-income households or to provide space for the placement of a mobile home in a mobile home park is exempt from property taxation if:

If less than 75 percent of dwelling units are occupied by very low-income households, the property is eligible for a partial tax exemption. A very low-income household is defined as a single person, family, or unrelated persons living together whose income is at or below 50 percent of the median county income, adjusted for family size, as determined by the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development.

A mobile home park or a manufactured housing cooperative consists of property with common areas and two or more lots held out for placement of mobile homes, manufactured homes, or park models. Both the individual lots and the common areas are owned by an association of shareholders that leases or otherwise extends the right to occupy individual lots to its own members.

The real estate excise tax (REET) is assessed on the selling price of real estate, including the amount of any liens, mortgages, or other debts. REET is typically paid by the seller of the property, although the buyer is liable if REET is not paid. REET also applies to transfers of controlling interest in entities that own property in the state.

Certain types of real estate transactions are statutorily exempt from REET. For example, from June 12, 2008 to December 31, 2018, a qualified sale of a manufactured/mobile home community was exempt from REET. A qualified sale was the sale of a manufactured/mobile home community that was transferred in a single purchase to a qualified tenant organization or to an eligible organization, local government, housing authority, nonprofit organization, or federally recognized Indian tribe in Washington, for the purpose of preserving the property as a manufactured/mobile home community.

Legislation that establishes or expands a tax preference must include a tax preference performance statement identifying the public policy objective of the preference, as well as specific metrics and data that the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC) can use to evaluate the effectiveness of the preference. All new tax preferences automatically expire after 10 years unless an alternative expiration date is provided.

Manufactured Housing Siting. A city or town, code city, or county may not adopt an ordinance that has the effect, directly or indirectly, of discriminating against consumers' choices in the place or use of a home in such a manner that is equally applicable to all homes. Manufactured homes built to federal standards must be regulated for the purposes of siting in the same manner as site built homes, factory built homes, or homes built to any other state construction or local design standard. However, a city or town, code city, or county, may require:

A city or town, code city, or county may not adopt an ordinance that has the effect, directly or indirectly, of restricting the location of manufactured/mobile homes in manufactured/mobile home communities that were legally in existence before June 12, 2008, based exclusively on the age or dimensions of the manufactured/mobile home. However, a city or town, code city, or county may restrict the location of a manufactured/mobile home in manufactured/mobile home communities for any other reason including, but not limited to, failure to comply with fire, safety, or other local ordinances or state laws related to manufactured/mobile homes.

Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act. The Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act (MHLTA) governs the legal rights, remedies, and obligations arising from any rental agreement between a landlord and a tenant regarding a mobile home lot within a mobile home park where the tenant has no ownership interest in the property or in the association that owns the property. Under MHLTA, the rental agreement must also include a list of the utilities, services, and facilities available to the tenant during the tenancy and the nature of fees, if any, to be charged. Unlike the Residential Landlord-Tenant Act (RLTA), the MHLTA does not contain provisions that allow courts to order an unlawful detainer action to be of limited dissemination under certain circumstances.

Summary: Relocation Assistance. The definition of relocate is expanded to provide tenants the ability to use Relocation Assistance Program funds to secure other housing when their manufactured/mobile home has been demolished and disposed of. The definition of relocation assistance is expanded to include both reimbursement for the costs of relocation and cash assistance to allow the tenant to secure new housing.

Commerce must distribute financial assistance for each eligible tenant as follows:

A tenant or the tenant's assignee, in order to receive cash assistance, must provide documentation to Commerce that the tenant has:

Assignee is defined as an individual or entity who has agreed to advance allowable relocation assistance expenses in exchange for the assignment and transfer of a right to reimbursement from the Manufactured/Mobile Home Park Relocation Fund.

The following documentation must be provided if the tenant has entered into an assignment or a contract for relocating the home:

Relocation assistance is no longer reduced by the amount of outside funding received, and recipients are not disqualified if they receive outside funding that exceeds the amount of relocation assistance for which they are eligible. However, a tenant's combined relocation assistance funds may not exceed the tenant's actual relocation expenses. 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.

The Mobile Home Park Relocation Fund is renamed the Manufactured/Mobile Home Park Relocation Fund.

Relocation assistance application requirements are modified, including eliminating different application processes for different types of applicants. For example, tenants must provide a statement of relocation expenses expected to be incurred at the time of application as opposed to providing proof of actual expenses incurred.

The $100 manufactured home transaction fee that is deposited into the Manufactured/Mobile Home Park Relocation Fund is modified to 0.25 percent of the sale price of the manufactured home, but must be between $100 and $500. The $10 manufactured/mobile home registration fee is increased to $15, with $5 of the fee to be deposited into the Manufactured/Mobile Home Park Relocation Fund for the purposes of the Relocation Coordination Program only.

The Relocation Coordination Program is created within Commerce for the purpose of assisting tenants of a mobile home park scheduled for closure or conversion to another use with the process of relocation. The program may include, but is not limited to:

Real Estate Excise Tax and Property Tax Exemptions. The REET exemption for certain sellers transferring a manufactured/mobile home community in a qualified sale is reinstated. The REET exemption expires after 10 years and is subject to tax preference review by JLARC.

The property tax exemption for non-profits providing rental housing to very low-income households is expanded to include mobile home park cooperatives and manufactured housing cooperatives. Qualifying rental housing for such cooperatives is expanded to include rental housing insured, financed, or assisted by the Housing Finance Commission. The property tax exemption is exempt from tax preference performance requirements, a JLARC review, and the ten-year expiration of tax preferences. The property tax exemption is null and void if funding is not provided in the operating budget.

Manufactured Housing Siting. A city or town, code city, or county may not prohibit siting a manufactured/mobile home on an existing lot based solely on lack of compliance with existing separation and setback requirements that regulate the distance between homes.

Manufactured/Mobile Home Landlord-Tenant Act. Amendments are made to concurrent 2019 legislation that amended and added provisions to the MHLTA, including clarifying the requirement that landlords must include, within the rental agreement, a statement that the rent will be decreased proportionately if a utility is changed to be charged independent of the rent and removing a reference to court rule GR 15 when a court determines other good cause for limiting dissemination of an unlawful detainer action under the MHLTA in order to align with similar provisions in the RLTA.

Votes on Final Passage:

Senate

36

13

House

93

4

(House amended)

Senate

36

11

(Senate concurred)

Effective:

July 28, 2019

contingent (Section 17 and 18)