The Christian Science Monitor

Trailer parks face rising rents. This one's residents found a way out.

Well-maintained homes populate Meadowbrook, a mobile home park in Hudson, Mass.

Diane Buchanan was headed out her door to an evening church service when she heard the news. “The park is sold,” a worried resident told her.

The park is Meadowbrook, an over-55s community of mobile homes where Ms. Buchanan, a retired bookkeeper, has lived for 18 years. Like other homeowners, she paid a monthly rent to the family-owned company that built the park in the 1970s. Now the family had written to the residents to inform them of a pending $8.25 million sale to an outside investor.

By the time Buchanan got the letter dated May 17 there was rising panic among neighbors over the news. Trailer parks have become popular investments, and a new owner would likely seek to make a higher return. That could mean higher rents, which would squeeze out low-income residents, or even the demolition of the park to make way for more profitable properties.  

“I read it and I said, the park isn’t sold yet,” says Buchanan. “It was a proposal.”

Under Massachusetts law, the residents

Rise of cooperativesThe investor rushOne answer to the affordability puzzle

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor5 min read
College Class Of 2024: Shaped By Crisis, Seeking Community
The class of 2024 began its college years as virtual students, arriving on once-vibrant campuses muffled by COVID-19. Most had missed out on high school graduations and proms. Now they’re graduating from college during another season of turmoil, this
The Christian Science Monitor4 min readCrime & Violence
Sudan War’s Rape Survivors Flout Taboos To Help Each Other Recover
For more than a month after she was tortured and gang-raped by seven Sudanese paramilitary fighters last July, Rania said nothing to anyone. Whenever she even thought about the attack, her body flooded with guilt and shame. “[I] felt like I was a dis
The Christian Science Monitor3 min read
Audubon’s Exquisite Bird Paintings Owe A Debt To Classical European Art
When John James Audubon immigrated to the United States from France in 1803, his timing was fortuitous. That same year, the Louisiana Purchase doubled the size of U.S. territory, deepening national curiosity about what lay in the vastness. Audubon (1

Related