Bidding adios to El Nido
Deirdre Newman
On Thursday, a small flag ceremony took place on the grounds of El
Nido trailer park.
The impromptu ceremony that was designed to commemorate the
closing of the park Sunday also represented the mending of bitter
feelings between some of the park’s residents and owner Joe Brown Sr.
Brown had been maligned month after month by a group of residents
of the park because they felt the relocation package he was offering
them was not generous enough. The residents’ frustration came to a
head when the City Council decided not to pass a law tightening up
the rules for owners who want to close mobile home parks.
But Thursday, the bitterness of the past was replaced with sadness
and nostalgia that El Nido and its neighboring park, Snug Harbor,
were closing. And the vitriol directed toward Brown has mostly been
replaced by kind words for his generous actions over the past few
months.
“Him and I are like old buddies,” said Dick Matherly, who like
many other residents just met Brown in person for the first time
recently. This stands in stark contrast to comments Matherly made at
City Council meetings throughout the past year, complaining of
deplorable conditions at the park and faulting Brown for a low-ball
relocation offer.
Other residents have also noticed a change in Brown. Irene
Shannon, a feisty El Nido resident, who led the charge for the mobile
home ordinance, said she thinks Brown started acting nicer toward the
residents who complained after the council made some changes to
Brown’s location report.
“In the last few weeks, he is taking personal charge and dealing
with residents and being extra nice and going beyond what he has to
do for the elderly and disabled,” Shannon said.
Brown says he always intended to be generous and compassionate
toward the residents, but he encountered such extreme emotion against
him when he first announced he was closing the park that he wanted to
wait until things cooled off.
“The truth is we were always ready to do this,” Brown said. “We
just never had an opportunity with everyone screaming at [us]. The
emotions were really high. We got to be the ones who proved what we
were going to do instead of just talking about it.”
Brown said he felt emotions had calmed down after an independent
review of his relocation report found it was adequate. Once the
fairness of the report had been validated, he was ready to negotiate
with the residents, he said. Brown’s basic relocation offer was
$3,000 for single-wide trailers and $6,300 for double-wide mobile
homes. But Brown went above and beyond that, including paying for
storage and moving costs for some residents.
For Matherly, who lived at El Nido for 27 years, Brown made many
generous gestures, including giving him a few months free rent,
putting in a new floor and adding a room onto his relocated mobile
home at Anchor Trailer Park to help store Matherly’s prolific
collection of lighthouses.
“I think everyone’s pretty happy -- I am,” Matherly said Friday
afternoon, surveying his new environment at Anchor. “I’m having fun
fixing this place up.”
Shannon, who will be one of the last El Nido residents to move out
on Sunday, remains frustrated that the city still doesn’t have more
authority over the conversion and closure of mobile home parks. All
mobile home park owners have to abide by is state law, which requires
cities to review relocation reports and decide if they provide the
reasonable costs of relocation.
What’s missing, Shannon said, is any requirement that park owners
compensate mobile home owners for the value of their homes, which
many have invested time and money in for decades. Shannon lived at El
Nido for 15 years and said her home is worth about $30,000. Friday
morning, wearing a Libertarian T-shirt -- a party she helped get on
the ballot for the very first time -- she had some fighting words for
others who might find themselves in the same situation.
“I encourage other mobile home park residents to keep at City Hall
to change [the existing rules] before it happens to them,” said
Shannon, who is moving into an assisted-living facility. “Because it
will happen the next time someone wants to close a park.”
Brown is closing the parks to build a medical office building on
his property. The environmental report for the project is finished
and will be available for public review this week, he said.
At the flag ceremony Thursday, Brown videotaped Matherly and
former El Nido resident Dorothy Harmer, who also moved to Anchor,
lowering the flag for the last time.
“This is very emotional for my entire family,” Brown said. “Nobody
wanted to do this [close the parks].”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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