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Fight Back against Home Depot & Roger Bush
attacks on Puyallup Retirees and Workers
Home Depot has teamed up with Pierce County Councilmember Roger Bush to
raid retirees' affordable housing in Bush's district. By using the
Wal-Mart model of union-busting mixed with saturating and then
shuttering suburbia, Home Depot extracts wealth from Pierce County
working people.
Now, Home Depot has
set its sights on evicting Puyallup mobile home
residents at Meridian and 171 St, just 4 miles from another store.
Eighty percent of the residents are retirees on fixed incomes. The
average rent for home space is $410 per month which is standard for the
area. Along side street intersection neighbors such as Wal-Mart, Roger
Bush and Home Depot are creating obscene profit, poverty-wage jobs, and
traffic jams. They have designed an unbalanced playing field that
rewards deceit and retaliation against exercising democratic rights.
Roger Bush could take the lead in changing his playing field so that the
Home Depots that profit mightily from the misery of others bare
responsibility for restoring fairness. The Pierce County Council could
simply require Home Depot's agents to subsidize a local land purchase by
the soon-to-be homeless Country Aire residents so that they can
affordably relocate their homes. Other West Coast local governments set
these standards as "mitigation" when issuing permits to evicting
property developers. But Roger Bush refuses to embrace his
responsibility while hiding behind false "heartbreaking" remorse.
Home Depot's agents based in Arizona bought the home-park for about $4M
last year. The previous owner claims that the agents assured that
residents could remain. Through their own association (CAMMHOA), the
residents approached Home Depot's agents to buy the park land back for
the same selling price. The agents demanded to sell it back for $15M.
While residents sought financing, 2 weeks later Home Depot agents raised
the price to $20M. After residents held a rally to save the park, Home
Depot's agents refused to negotiate. These agents purchased the adjacent
land that abuts Wal-Mart and reaches to the street.
Home Depot employed the same formula in Spanaway just a few years ago,
laying waste to mobile home affordable housing. Rumors abound at the
Spanaway store that it will soon close and Home Depot managers are
encouraging poverty-wage workers to transfer to the store that will soon
occupy the Country Aire Manor mobile home park.
Roger Bush has helped make this mess by designing a system that benefits
his property developer campaign financiers at the expense of workers and
low-income residents. It is a broken system that resembles the
corruption of Rick Talbert's Tacoma politics. A few new affordable
units cannot mask the growing epidemic of our local housing crisis for
thousands of residents. Pierce County is the leading edge of this
state-wide crisis thanks to politicians like Bush and Talbert,
developers like Home Depot and Mike Cohen, and a policy of government
welfare to corporations without requiring responsibility. More details
are in a mobile home resident's letter to Roger Bush, below.
Pierce County mobile home residents are building a movement for
affordable housing. Far from being isolated and helpless as Home Depot
and Bush expected, CAMMHOA has linked with country-wide groups that have
won a moratorium on selling mobile home parks in Snohomish County and
forced government to intervene to purchase and convert a mobile home
park to subsidized housing in King County. While out-of-state
commercial developers were lurking in the wings, where was Roger Bush?
He was dismissing the issue saying he's "not going to interfere with the
rights of the property owner" but telling residents he was
"heartbroken."
After residents refused to be invisible, the firm manager working for
Home Depot threatened that they were keeping a list and would retaliate
against residents who speak out about this injustice. Home Depot's
agent refuses to recognize the residents' association and will only work
with individual residents in a divide and conquer method. While Home
Depot's agent publicly claims to coordinate distributing equitably
meager tax-funded relocation costs good only through December, he has
privately threatened to withhold help to those exercising free speech.
In this context, a recent public letter from this agent said: "we
advise you to act now to take advantage of the help that is being
offered. Those who wait in hopes of either blocking the closure of this
park or because they believe they can leverage us for a better deal are
going to be disappointed if they have not made other arrangements."
"It was helpful for you to clarify that neither the Pierce County
Council nor Verus is working to find land to move our homes to.
Regarding your questions surrounding the sale of the park, after the
sale closed, I talked with Mrs. Larson, the original owner who, by the
way, is in her eighties. Here are some excerpts.
"Ms. Larson sold to Columbia Properties because they committed to
keeping Country Aire Manor as a mobile home park, and that they owned a
mobile home park elsewhere. She went over the landlord tenant laws with
them. They kept the promise [to keep it as a mobile home park] for a
week and a half until they sold to Verus.
Mrs. Larson signed papers on January 31. Verus signed papers on or about
February 8th.
In the eight days that they held the property, Columbia Properties, made
6 million dollars.
M. Larson said that she always knew that she could have made a lot of
money on the park if she would have sold it for commercial purposes. She
sold for $4,000,000 plus $20,000 for personal property, such as the
riding mower and other items. She sold in good faith that Country Aire
Manor would continue to be used as a mobile home park. Her sale price
was based on the income the park produced."
I was an appraiser for WSDOT when property was being acquired to widen
Meridian near 176th. Mrs. Larson sold for about $4.60 per square
foot--commercial property had sold for more.
By the time Verus bought the landscape business and the mobile home
dealerships, they paid a total of $14 million. Home owners here tried to
buy back the park for $4.5 million. Verus agreed to sell for $15 million
only if we'd buy the property clear up to Walmart. Within about 2 weeks,
they increased their price to $20 million. We could not finance the
purchase of all the excess land.
It was interesting that as a representative's assistant, you heard land
owners talking 10 years ago about what would happen when mobile home
parks were sold and mobile homes owners would be left as they are today.
With a 30 year history in real estate experience, I never heard that
discussion.
When land owners and manufactured home owners joined together 30 years
ago, it was a good partnership. Home owners got places for affordable
homes and land owners got the income. Home owners believed it would
remain a mutually beneficial arrangement. Instead, it's become more like
a pyramid scheme with the last buyers going broke. No one would ever
have bought a manufactured home in a park if he had known he would lose
his home. We certainly never would have.
As of May in Pierce County, out of 256 mobile home parks, 14 had closed,
28 parks were gone, and 7 had converted to owned land. The remaining 207
parks have a total of 9,086 spaces with only 38 open spaces. 5 require
cash outlays of up to $47,000-which is not affordable. 8 were left in a
park where river flooding destroyed half the park in 2006. Many have
age, roofing or siding requirements many homes do not meet.
I mentioned the woman I spoke to who works for the Pierce County Housing
Authority... She said that the Section 8 program was opened and closed
quickly in 2006 so no additional names could be added. There are over
3000 people on the waiting list. Might some of the 1600 people who are
homeless in Tacoma/Pierce County be so because of earlier mobile home
park closures? And where does the county's money go? Aren't the Housing
Authority and Pierce County Council connected?
That owners are entitled to benefit financially from the land they own
is expected. The problem is that in the change of land use, manufactured
home owners-those who need affordable housing-are losing their homes, or
their equities in them, which is often their retirement. They are being
harmed. Our park, our neighborhood, our homes, our lives are being
destroyed. Do you know anyone who believes this is right or just?"
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