CATCHING UP WITH ... De Anza Bayside Village
Amy R. Spurgeon
NEWPORT BEACH -- People travel along East Coast Highway every day to get
from Mariners’ Mile to Corona del Mar or Laguna Beach. While stopped at a
traffic light at Bayside Drive, they may chat on a cellular phone, change
the radio station or even admire the beautiful surroundings.
But many are unaware of the ongoing rent battle many seniors at the De
Anza Bayside Village mobile home park face on a daily basis. Many of the
fixed-income residents run to their filing cabinets to assess their net
worth when the possibility of any rent increase draws near.
In 1994, residents of the seniors-only mobile home park drew local
attention when they refused to pay rent increases ranging from 6% to 47%.
“You have to make yourself heard today and that’s what we are trying to
do,” 80-year-old resident Ruth Walley said then.
Residents in 1994 received a letter from the park’s landlord, De Anza
Assets Inc., which threatened to evict if payments were not made.
“If full payment is not received no later than the seventh day of this
month, you will be served with a three-day notice to pay rent or quit and
a 60-day notice of termination of tenancy,” the letter said.The issue
ultimately ended up in the hands of a judge in the form of a lawsuit
against De Anza. The judge ruled in favor of the mobile home park owners
and allowed rent to be raised a certain amount.
There continued to be legal wranglings between De Anza and a number of
tenants until 1997.
Bayside Village seemed content until a letter signaling rent increases
landed on the doorsteps of about 50 tenants in September. De Anza has
five lease versions among its 277 residents. Following the 1994 lawsuit
settlement, some tenants chose to keep their original leases that
protected them from certain rent increases. Tenants subject to the new
rent hikes are those who did not sign the new leases.
Rent for these 50 tenants will be $1,200 per month -- a difference of
$200. However, De Anza has a program at the park which allows financially
strapped seniors to be excused from rent increases. De Anza has already
allowed several residents off the hook for the Jan. 1 changes.
“All they can see are bucks, bucks, bucks,” said 28-year resident Helen
Ostrom. “A lot of people here just live on their Social Security.”Another
resident, Philip Niesen, said the rent increases are retaliation against
those residents who did not sign a new lease.
Other residents fear the rent hikes are a way to push the seniors out.
They claim if there are less than 180 residents living in the park, the
property owners have the right to bulldoze the place.
De Anza president Michael Gelfand said those accusations are completely
false.
“We are not trying to change the use of the property,” Gelfand said.
However, he said the company will be approaching the city in the next
year to redevelop about five acres of the park’s storage space for some
type of community use. Tenants currently using that space may have to
make other arrangements, he said.
Gelfand said one major change that will take place next year will be the
“seniors-only” status of the park.
“In about a year, that restriction will disappear,” Gelfand said. The
change will allow for a variety of tenants to move in.
Gelfand said he does not intend to sell the hot piece of property that
abuts Upper Newport Bay and doesn’t expect to change the land’s use from
mobile homes to a more visitor-serving use, such as a hotel.
“Our business is mobile home parks,” Gelfand said. “Mobile home parks are
stable.”
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