|
Visit us at
www.mhps.com
This issue of the MobileHomeParkStore.com and MHBay.com
Newsletter includes:
-
Extra Question and
Answer Session Every Week - FREE!
-
First
Ever MobileHomeParkStore.com Live Event
-
FREE Audio Download
with Dave and his MHP Managers
-
Questions and Answers with Dave
-
Updates and Other Announcements
-
Don't Hold Park
Residents to a Higher Standard than their Subdivision Neighbors, By Frank
Rolfe
-
Tell us what you think and send us your
articles!
FREE Question and Answer Sessions
I
have been receiving many questions via email every week and am
having a difficult time getting to all of these. I am going to
set aside a couple of hours every month where you can call in and
ask your questions.
I
will post the times and call in numbers on our Events page.
These sessions will be at different times so everyone can find a
time that works for them.
Here is a link to the Events Page
1-22-08
Dave,
I just wanted to Thank You for your assistance in the due diligence of the
Mobile Home Park. The spread sheet was very helpful in discovering the correct
value of the park. Your information was very much appreciated and better yet am
glad to have spoken with you. You have shown with your fast response time and
information given you are concerned about the success of others.
Thanks Again and I will Keep in touch with any future deals as I keep searching.
(The offer was not accepted)
Joe
1-21-08
Hi Dave,
Thanks so much for the information. I place a very high value on customer
service. As far as I'm concerned You, Terri and Frank are second to none in this
business for providing great information with your complete and rapid response
to orders, information requests and questions.
I've attempted to contact several other program operators by e-mail and
telephone to no avail. The level of customer service you provide is a rare thing
these days and you should all be proud of the work that you do.
Thanks again,
Carsten
PROPERTY IS SOLD ! Also thanks for your assistance on a great
site to advertise our MHP/RV parks for sale. It works!
Thanks,
Dan Lunetta, Heritage Pacific Realty, Inc. (January 23, 2008)
Hello!
I am a former member of one of your educational competitors programs and I must
say, I wish Dave and Frank would have started their program long ago...they
really have it together. I have learned so much more from Frank and Dave's
program than I could have ever learned from the other gentlemen. Dave and Frank
really do know the business and their materials have helped me buy 5 parks (4 of
them I found on your website) in the last year. I felt confident in the deal
making and due diligence and I feel I have set the parks up to run in an
efficient and profitable manner.
I am contacting you to thank you ALL for your assistance and to wish you a Happy
& Profitable New Year!
Cheers,
Rob R. (January 11, 2008)
Are you a manufactured home owner or community owner with homes or
lots for sale or rent?
If so, then you can list your new and
used mobile homes for sale or rent and lots for sale or rent for
FREE at
MHBay.com
We listed over 500 new homes on the site in
January so far!
Our traffic continues to increase so if you are looking to connect
to potential residents and sell or rent more homes, then place your FREE
listings on
MHBay.com.
DON’T HOLD PARK RESIDENTS TO A HIGHER STANDARD THAN
THEIR SUBDIVISION NEIGHBORS.
IT’S NOT GOOD FOR YOU OR THEM!
By: Frank Rolfe
Most every mobile home park owner in the U.S. has a list of
rules attached to their lease which is longer than the lease itself. While it’s
always a good idea to cover your bases and address every possible behavior
concern, it’s another to expect people to follow more rules than the local
prison.
More importantly, what’s in it for the park owner?
It’s my theory that you should not expect to hold mobile home
park residents to a higher standard than those of the folks who live in brick
houses in the nearest subdivision. It would make sense that someone who lives in
a mobile home is less likely to obey the rules than these stick built home
occupants, so why are their park rules ten times longer?
Take a drive around the subdivisions nearest your park. What
do you see? I’m betting you see the same things you do in your park. High grass,
junk in the yards, non running vehicles and the like. They are just better at
hiding it because you can’t see into their back yards as easily, and the non
running vehicle is up on blocks behind the house. Still, the general quality of
violation looks a lot like your park.
My point is that humans, regardless of demographics, violate
certain rules as a regular part of their existence. It may not be aesthetic, or
morally right, but trying to fight it is like trying to stop the Mississippi
River, basically impossible.
Does that mean that you should reduce the number of rules
attached to your lease? No, you want to have every contingency covered. However,
you may want to think again about what you enforce, and how hard you enforce it.
For guidance on this concept, let’s look at a typical city government and what
it asks of its residents and how they force compliance.
-
High grass: In most cities, having
grass over a certain height, normally 8” is a violation of code. As a
result, violators will generally get a warning and a deadline to comply and,
if not completed, will get a fine and/or someone from the city will mow it
and bill you for it. They don’t threaten to evict you, and they don’t set
the rule at some ridiculously low level like 4”.
-
Non running vehicles: If you don’t
get rid of them, after receiving a warning, you will get a significant fine.
If you don’t pay the fine, you will get arrested. Perhaps we can substitute
“arrested” for “evicted” in the park rules theology.
-
Junk in yards: Again, if you don’t
clean out your yard, they will fine you and force you to pay. However, you
have to have a lot of junk to trigger a code officer writing you up.
-
Aesthetic issues: Painting your
house for example. This is hardly even covered in most city ordinances,
because they only deal with the absolute worst, most community damaging
offenders. They don’t get involved in the small stuff, and maybe you
shouldn’t either.
-
Just about everything else: Loose
dogs, loud music, etc. This is a police matter. It should be for your
tenants too. You should not get involved in being the enforcer. That is what
police are for.
I think that this is really about all
you need to follow on rules enforcement. Some owners have built a career on
rules. They spend every waking hour harassing tenants and sending threatening
letters, but does it make them any money?
Some might argue that it does in the form of making the park more desirable
looking for new tenants, or park buyers or lenders. I would agree, but you can
always “doll up” the park right before putting it on the market or refinancing
it. As for new tenants coming in, let’s get serious, how many new homes are
being sold and moved into parks in your area? That’s what I thought.
As for resident retention, you are just as likely or more so to scare off
existing tenants with a lot of rules and tough enforcement. If they wanted a
beautiful, problem free environment, they shouldn’t have moved into a mobile
home park in the first place. Further, I have found such demanding tenants never
stick anyway, since they are always unhappy and end up moving out no matter what
you do.
In conclusion, try taking a more mellow, practical view to rules and their
enforcement. Your life will improve, and so will your tenants. You can devote
those “rule enforcer” hours to more productive uses, like making money.
MobileHomeParkStore.com Bookstore
Q&A with Dave
Question:
Hi Dave, Feel free to reply that you
are not the Dear Abby for mobile home
park investors. Otherwise, I would
appreciate your sage advice, since
I could not find these answers in
your books.
The appraisal came in low for the MHP I
am buying and the seller is reluctant to
carry. He is countering with a "wrap,"
which he
describes as us paying him cash and then
take over his loan payments.
The loans are not assumable, so that's
not an option. We would have one year to
build up occupancy and take out a
conventional loan then
to pay him off.
Our concern is that lender could call
the loan once they find out that there
is a new owner. They would learn that
there is a new owner
because we would receive the deed
to the property and a new insurance
policy would be taken out. The
seller claims that this is a risk that
"hardly ever happens," but it is
a risk nevertheless. Have you
encountered this situation
yourself?
Thanks and Happy New Year from beautiful
and snowy Idaho!
David
Answer:
David,
Happy New Year from Snowy Colorado as well!
This is a great question and I will elaborate on it
in a future article or book update. Here is my 2
cents.
I would absolutely positively not go with this
arrangement. Your loan can
be called and then you can have problems getting a
new loan.
The only way to work under an arrangement such as
this is to use a lease
option and only after you review the loan documents
to make sure a lease
option will not trigger the due on sale clause. Some
loans don't allow lease options either.
If the appraisal came in low, the options I would
look at are:
1. Have the price reduced to the appraisal (best
option and at least some
price reduction is in order... the seller will have
the same problem with
another buyer unless they are paying cash.)
2. Have the seller finance the difference as a
second
3. Get a new appraisal paid for by the seller
4. Possible lease option (if allowed by the loan)
I have seen many loans called under this wrap
situation and if I had to
put a number on it, it would be somewhere in the 30%
of the time range. I don't think it is a risk
worth taking unless you
can afford to pay the loan off if it is called.
Thanks again for the question and Frank and I will
elaborate more on this in
the near future.
Dave
Question:
Dave,
I live in Sacramento California and
can't make heads or tales out of the
DMV site. I need to know if I have
to have a dealers license if I buy
mobile homes, Leave them on the site
and resell them and carrying the
note myself. I plan on doing this10
to 20 times a year.
Please help me find the answer.
Bob & Karen,
Answer:
Bob & Karen,
Here is the website for the license information. If
you want to sell mobile homes you have to be
licensed in one of two ways.
As a dealer ( $1,400.00 + exams & education), or be
licensed under a dealer ( $250.00 + exams &
education).
All the information is on the site below and also
you can call them if he you have further questions.
http://www.hcd.ca.gov/codes/ol/
Thanks,
Dave
Question:
Dave,
we are set to purchase our
first Mobile Home Park this
month, and your website and
information has been
invaluable in this process.
We are putting a large chunk
of our savings down on this
park, and will not have
money left to purchase a
second park, as we would
like to do.
How does an investor manage
this, and purchase multiple
properties (as you have)?
The only way I know how to
do this is to hopefully sell
our park in a couple of
years at a profit, and then
use the profit to possible
purchase 2 more, and then
repeat. Is there something
I'm missing?
Thank you!
Stacy
Answer:
Stacy,
Thank you for your comments on the website
and I wish you the best of success with your
new mobile home park purchase.
As for your question, I started off without
any money in the bank when I bought my first
park. I basically advanced credit cards to
get started. Then I refinanced my first
park, bought a second park, sold the second
park for a nice profit and then was able to
repeat the process. I am not promoting using
credit card advances unless you find an
incredible deal. I believe that if you find
a good park to buy, you can find a way to do
it (partners, private money, owner seconds,
etc).
I think the best way to acquire multiple
properties is to get started with the first
one (as you are doing) and then be on the
lookout for other deals. When you find one
that makes sense, then look at your options.
You may be able to refi the first park after
a year of ownership, take out a second
mortgage using a hard money lender, find a
partner, or tap into credit lines.
Hopefully this provides some encouragement
and I would love to hear about your
successes!
Dave
Question:
Dave,
Thanks for responding to my email.
Hope to meet you in the future.
I did have one little issue that
came up. My park has about 2/3 low
income people and 1/3 weekenders who
just come down for a desert retreat.
They have money and some of them can
be pushy. Two weeks ago one of these
difficult guys had some electrical
problem with one of his circuits and
called an electrical without first
talking with us. I happen to be
there with my handyman who probably
could have fixed the problem, a
dirty connection behind the meter.
Next my tenant deducts the
electricians bill from the rent. He
got billed at 2.5 hours @ $100 /
hour . This same electrical works
for me @ $65/ hr.
I am temped to just pay the bill
based on the rate I get and tell him
he needs to talk with us next time.
How would you handle that?
PS. The park still does not have any
rules, regulations, contracts, or
agreements of any kind. I am working
on that but now its like the wild
west.
Thanks for some enlightenment!
Robert
Answer:
Robert,
I look forward to meeting you as well. As
far as your question, I would work
diligently on getting the new leases and
rules to everyone in the park. This issue
would be addressed in the lease. This
resident and others may have been accustomed
to calling out contractors in the past when
there were similar problems and they may not
been trying to go around you but were just
assuming that was the proper way to do
things. Of course, this may not be the
case. I would talk to this resident and put
it in writing that you will handle the
repairs and calling in the contractors in
the future. otherwise, they will be
responsible for the bill.
Also, I would call the electrician and see
if they will cut the rate down to the normal
rate of $65 per hour and explain the issue.
Hope this helps,
Dave
Tell us what you think!
We'd love to hear what you think of this issue!
We need your articles and press releases - send
your articles to
dave@mhps.com to be included in
upcoming newsletters. Where else can you put your press releases
and articles in front of thousands of people for FREE!
Please send your comments, questions, articles, and
ideas for upcoming issues to us at:
dave@mhps.com
Your feedback matters to us!
Visit us at
www.mhps.com or
www.mhbay.com
Until Next Time!
Dave Reynolds
MobileHomeParkStore.com
18923 Highway 65
Cedaredge, CO 81413
PH: 800-950-1364
FX: 970-856-4883
|