Long beach : park rent relief sought
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More than 300 residents of Villa Park, a mobile home community hit by a recent series of rent increases, vented their frustrations Tuesday before the City Council and vowed to begin pressing
for a rent stabilization law for mobile home parks. Residents at the North Long Beach facility have been hit by increases of more than 40% since June, with their monthly bills of about $200
ballooning to $285. Leaders of a tenants’ group, which represents about 450 of the park’s 700 residents, say they will ask the council within two weeks to approve a mobile home rent
stabilization law similar to those on the books in more than 50 other California cities. If the council balks, the group will begin a drive to put a mobile home rent stabilization initiative
on the ballot, according to Greg Stefflre, a Long Beach attorney representing the tenants. Steven Kirby, a Hermosa Beach attorney representing Villa Park operator Louis Simpson, told the
council Tuesday that the park operator is willing to sign one- to three-year leases with tenants. Those leases would tie future increases to inflation, but would allow increases for
“extraordinary expenses” incurred by the operator. If more than 80% of the residents signed leases, Simpson would cut rents by $35 a month, Kirby said. Leaders of the tenants’ group,
however, have so far indicated they are unwilling to go along with Simpson’s lease plan. Instead, the group is pressing forward with a lawsuit filed in Long Beach Superior Court against
Simpson. The suit seeks $5 million in damages as well as a court order rolling rents back to previous levels and preventing additional increases. MORE TO READ