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 lot within a manufactured/mobile home community (MHC) where the tenant has no ownership interest in the property.
Notice of Opportunity to Compete to Purchase. A landlord must provide a written notice of opportunity to compete to purchase indicating the owner's interest in selling the MHC before the owner markets the MHC for sale or includes the sale of the MHC in a multiple listing and when the owner receives an offer to purchase that the owner intends to consider.
A notice of opportunity to compete to purchase must be provided to each tenant from a qualified tenant organization if in existence within the MHC, the Department of Commerce (Commerce), and the Housing Finance Commission. A notice of opportunity to purchase must include statements that:
If the tenants choose to compete to purchase the MHC, within 70 days after delivery of the notice of opportunity to compete to purchase, the tenants must notify the landlord in writing of:
Within 15 days of the tenants notifying the landlord of their interest in purchasing the MHC, the qualified tenant organization and the landlord may make written requests for information. The qualified tenant organization may ask the landlord to provide information about the asking price, if any, and financial information related to the operating expenses of the MHC. The landlord may ask the qualified tenant organization representative for proof of intent to fund a sale. Written requests must be fulfilled within 21 days, unless otherwise agreed upon, and all provided information must be kept confidential, unless waived by the provider.
An eligible organization is subject to the same requirements and application conditions. An eligible organization includes community land trusts, resident nonprofit cooperatives, local governments, local housing authorities, nonprofit community or neighborhood-based organizations, federally recognized Indian tribes in the state of Washington, and regional or statewide nonprofit housing assistance organizations.
The parties have an overall duty to act in good faith. This overall duty of good faith requires the landlord to allow the tenants to develop an offer, give their offer reasonable consideration, and inform the tenants if a higher offer is submitted. The landlord may not deny residents the same access to the MHC and to information that the landlord would give to a commercial buyer.
Notice of Closure. In the case of closure or conversion of an MHC, the landlord must provide tenants with two years notice. The two-year closure notice requirement is reduced to 18 or 12 months depending on the amount of relocation assistance provided.
Homeowners who receive payments or financial assistance from landlords remain eligible to receive other state assistance such as relocation assistance funds under the Relocation Coordination Program (Program).
Relocation Coordination Program. The Program, administered by Commerce, provides assistance to tenants of a mobile home park scheduled for closure or conversion to another use with the process of relocation. Relocation assistance is available on a first-come, first-serve basis to eligible tenants. Eligibility is limited to low-income households. Eligible tenants are entitled to financial assistance from the fund, up to a maximum of $17,000 for a multi-section home and up to a maximum of $11,000 for a single-section home. A tenant is not entitled to relocation assistance if:
Notice of Opportunity to Compete to Purchase. A notice of opportunity to purchase must include the date the notice was mailed by certified mail or personally delivered to all recipients. If the tenants choose to compete to purchase the MHC, they must notify the landlord in writing within 70 days after the certified mailing or personal delivery date. Within 20 days of the tenants notifying the landlord of their interest in purchasing the MHC, the qualified tenant organization and the landlord may make written requests for information. An eligible organization that does not intend to make an offer must notify the owner, any qualified tenant organization from the park, and Commerce.
Landlords must share with all eligible organizations and competing potential buyers participating in negotiations any offer, terms, or revised offer or terms shared with other competing potential buyers. An eligible organization is clarified to be an organization whose mission aligns with the long-term preservation of the MHC.
Relocation Coordination Program. Allows the director at Commerce to assign a designee to receive notice of park closures or conversions. The restriction for tenants who receive assistance from an outside source that exceeds the maximum amounts of assistance to which a person is entitled under the Program is removed.