The residents of a Lake Elmo mobile home park say their lot rents have risen so quickly that members fear they’ll be priced out and lose their homes after years, and in some cases decades, of making payments.
The rising rents, along with what they say is a hostile management overseeing the park, were the basis for a new call for relief from the Cimarron Residents Association, a group representing the homeowners at the park on Lake Elmo Avenue N.
“This is my home. I want to stay,” said Marge Schmig, who moved into the park two years ago after her husband died.
Cimarron Park and Golf Course has seen rents for the lots — the land that each mobile home sits on — rise by some 30% since 2020, according to Brey Mafi, a park resident and a member of the Residents Association. For residents living on a fixed income, each rent increase has left them with less money for groceries and other essentials. The next price hike of 6% takes effect on Jan. 1, she said.
Resident John Murphy said the increases seem to be excessive when compared with inflation; the residents say services at the park haven’t improved significantly to match the price increases, either, citing problems ranging from inadequate lighting to restrictive hours at the park’s swimming pool and poor upkeep of the park’s golf course.
A spokeswoman for park owner Equity Lifestyle Properties, based in Chicago, said rents have risen 5.6% each year over the past five years. The raises have been commensurate with what’s happening with apartment rents across Washington County, said spokesperson Jennifer Ludovice.
The average price for a new home at Cimarron was $76,500, while the median price of a home in Lake Elmo was around $650,000 this year, based on numbers provided by Realtor.com, she added. Equity Lifestyle Properties owns more than 200 manufactured home communities, more than 200 RV resorts and campgrounds, and 23 marinas in 35 states and British Columbia, according to its website.
“We consider the management of the community to be a partnership with residents and look for opportunities to work together on solutions to fit everyone’s needs,” she said in a statement.