|
The Difficulty of Displacement
Hallandale
Beach bought a trailer park to eliminate it, but some
residents are fighting back
By Angie Hargot
 |
|
Joe DeFalco, president of the Tower Mobile Home &
RV Park homeowners association, is leading
about 20 other residents in a lawsuit against the
city of Hallandale Beach for unjustly seizing
their homes to make way for a park. Photo by
Richard M. Brooks |
Diane Dupuis sat in a bikini, sunning on the porch of her
86-year-old mother’s double-wide, her brother George by
her side.
“When we told my mother, she had a heart attack,” Dupuis said in a
thick French-Canadian accent. “We had to move her back
to a hospital in
Canada.”
Dupuis’ family is just one of many that the city of
Hallandale Beach has not only pushed out of the
municipality, but out of the country. For more
than three decades, the family has spent the bitter
Canadian winters enjoying the warmth and sun of
Hallandale Beach at the Tower Mobile Home and RV Park.
Then, in August, they all received a letter telling them
the trailer park would be shut down in a matter of
months to pave the way for the expansion of nearby
Peter
Bluesten Park.
The 10-acre parcel at
600 Old Federal Highway in
Hallandale Beach is still home to dozens of people —
some full-time residents and some snowbirds like the
Dupuis family, who now plans to spend winters in Mexico
instead.
County records show that trailer park owners Dixon Perry-Smith Jr.
and his company
Tower
Land, LLC sold the land to the city of
Hallandale
Beach on Sept. 6 for just under $10 million.
In March, the city’s Planning and Scheduling Committee, a
subcommittee of the City Commission, authorized City
Manager Mike Good to negotiate for “the 10-acre mobile
home park” for an amount not to exceed $13 million,
though few trailer park residents knew that at the time.
“It was a surprise for everyone — a lot [of residents] have already
moved,” Diane Dupuis said, as she motioned to a line of
boarded-up trailers. As a result of the exodus, the
trailer park is becoming a haven for prostitutes and
drug users, according to other residents.
“First, they offered us $5,000 to leave,” she said. “They cut the
price by $500 a month since then.”
In the meantime, the city cut the residents’ $300 per month rent in
half. The Dupuis’ plan to pay rent until the end of
February, then leave forever. But some residents don’t
plan on going so quietly.
Walking through the park, it’s not hard to see why. Their homes are
not actually mobile. Some are too old to move. Others
seem worth more than the $3,500 payoff amount they would
currently receive. One World War II veteran suffers from
lung cancer and requires an oxygen tank to survive.
Several residents are disabled or live on Social
Security.
That’s why Joe DeFalco, president of the
Tower Mobile Home & RV Park homeowner’s association, and
20 other residents filed a lawsuit against the city.
Attorney Mitchell Chester, who filed the injunction, said the legal
measure seeks no financial damages. His clients, Chester
said, just want to stop the city from seizing their
homes, based on the assertion that adequate affordable
housing does not exist in Hallandale Beach and,
therefore, the city’s efforts to push out the trailer
park dwellers does not comply with state law.
“The money that the city has offered is more than the statute
requires, but it is not enough to avoid homelessness,”
Chester said. “They just want people to go away.”
Chester
is considering another lawsuit because the city is
dragging its feet in complying with a Freedom of
Information Act request that is weeks overdue.
The city has since filed a motion to dismiss the injunction.
“My home is worth more than $5,000,” said Maureen Guitar, another
snowbird from
Montreal,
who winters at the park for five months a year. “Where
am I going to go? My trailer is worth $50,000. The city
made a mistake. They’re pushing us away. We bring money
to the city, and they’re robbing us of our homes.”
Guitar, who refuses to accept the payoff money, said she knows
three park residents who have recently fallen ill over
the stress of losing their homes.
“All I’m saying is pay us what our homes are worth,” Guitar said.
“Don’t steal our homes. If they sold the park for so
many millions, why couldn’t they sell it for a couple
more millions and pay us what our homes are worth?
Instead, they said ‘take this and go away.’” Most
trailer parks, which have age requirements for new
trailers, would not even accept Guitar’s mobile home
even if she could move it, she said.
Guitar said she is not worried that, as each day passes, she could
receive even less money for her home. “We’re not getting
anything anyway,” she said, noting that she also may
have to winter in
Mexico.
At the City Commission’s Jan. 22 meeting, another nail was driven
into the coffin of
Hallandale
Beach mobile home park residents.
Greenberg Traurig attorney
Debbie Orshefsky,
on behalf of developer Hallandale Park Central LLC,
acquired two land use
amendments for its trailer park-occupied land at 426
N.W. Fifth St. One asked for an increase in residential
density to 50 units per acre for the proposed condo
development that will be built on the site currently
occupied by the Seville Mobile Home Park. Although Mayor
Joy Cooper and other commissioners were shocked that the
exception to the code was brought before them with no
development agreement, planning and zoning staff
recommended approval of the items.
“There is a lot of work that still needs to be done,” City Manager
Mike Good said. “This is just the beginning. When we
come back, it might not even be the same project.” Good
promised not to bring the item back to the commission
without a full development agreement.
“Where’s the affordable housing?” DeFalco asked commissioners that
Tuesday. “You’re going to lose your whole workforce by
pushing people out. We really gotta start facing the
facts. You’re kicking people out of the mobile home
park.”
DeFalco said some Tower residents live on Social Security checks of
$500 or $600 a month. “What’s rent going to be, $1,500
per month?” he asked. “You’re chasing these people right
out of Hallandale.”
“This project is two years in the making,” Orshefsky said of the
Hallandale Park Central land, owned by Luis Birdman and
Harris Friedman. Her PowerPoint
presentation focused on the city’s expected population
growth of 13,000 people by 2030, the need for “workforce
housing” and the desire to redevelop the area. Orshefsky
said she hopes the project construction will begin by
spring, although Good said the item could reappear on
the agenda as late as July.
Hallandale Park Central, like the city of Hallandale Beach, also
offered residents $5,000 to leave their homes. The
developer approached residents via the land acquisition
firm the Urban Group. City Manager Good explained that
the state statute for evicting mobile home residents
allows for a maximum payout amount of $1,375 unless they
have a double-wide, and they must show evidence of
ownership. Florida statutes also have a few different
provisions if residents are warned within six months of
a trailer park’s closing. Then owners don’t have to pay
out anything.
“The project increases ad valorem taxes from $115,000 to over $2
million,” Orshefsky said of the proposed residential
project. “It eliminates what, at times, is a difficult
place to maintain — the Police Department knew the area
all too well. In the past couple of months, we’ve been
working with all of the residents. Urban Group has
assisted people in finding new places to live — 109 of
the 125 residents who have chosen the relocation plan
started out being paid $5,000. It’s currently at $3,600.
Eight of the 125 have not selected a plan. They have
until May to take the option.”
Orshefsky suggested that the residential project set aside 30 units
for workforce and affordable housing.
The mayor believes Hallandale Park Central’s project is a benefit
for the city. “We’ve been very sensitive to this issue,”
Cooper said. “… We commend the applicant for going above
and beyond…. The only reason I would consider [voting
now without a development agreement] is because it is
where we want to develop in the city.”
Although Cooper attempted to make clear that the Jan. 22 vote moved
the item forward, but gave no “entitlement” to the
project, she was also concerned that, in a volatile
market, a transfer of development rights to a second
party could open the door to provisions the city didn’t
anticipate. The “workforce housing” could dry up if the
real estate market comes back and the rentals are
converted to condos.
“Fully amenitized rentals are actually doing very, very well,”
Orshefsky insisted, adding that “more and more families
are moving into condos.”
Commissioner Keith London was weary of allowing the increased
density. “Once we give the land use, it’s there for
perpetuity,” he said.
Although both items passed unanimously, Good said the public has
three more chances to hear the item: the planning and
zoning meeting, the City Commission and the second
reading.
The commission did not discuss the item on Feb. 6.
“We have 800 more mobile homes in our city, and we’re gonna have to
deal with it,” Vice Mayor Bill Julian said of the future
of mobile home parks in the city.
“There needs to be an investigation; somebody [in the city] has got
their hand in the cookie jar,” said DeFalco, standing in
the pink flower-lined walkway in front of his six-room
trailer. When the trailer park was sold, the residents
were not properly noticed, DeFalco said. When he came
upon surveyors for the previous owner, they told him the
work was being done to install a sprinkler system.
“This place has never been listed for sale. [Mike Good] was
negotiating the sale of the land for $13 million long
before March. There needs to be a federal investigation
into the city manager and into the way they bought this
place.”
Hallandale Beach’s next Planning and Zoning Board
meeting is scheduled for Feb. 28.
“We are not going away and we are not going to stop our
legal remedies,” Chester said. “There’s an affordable
housing crisis. The state statute is extremely old, over
20 years old.”
Chester said he is currently laboring to alert local and
state lawmakers to the ineffectiveness of the state code
that applies to the displacement of trailer park
residents. “It has to stop at Tower,” he said.
Comments? E-mail
angie@miamisunpost.com |