2009 11 26

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Sopris Sun THE

VOLUME 1, NUMBER 42 • NOVEMBER 26, 2009

The blue trim and welcoming gate belong to Hector Bailon, who has lived in Carbondale’s Garfield Court trailer park for 15 years. Just a block away from the Victorian homes and mining cabins of old town Carbondale, the trailer park feels like a different world. Photo by Jane Bachrach

Home Sweet Home Trailer parks are key to local affordable housing, but are vulnerable to the whims of the real estate market By David Frey Special to The Sopris Sun

few months ago, Jacob and Becky Coski, like all their neighbors, were afraid they’d be kicked out of their home. Actually, they’d be able to keep their homes. It was the land underneath they’d be losing. The owners of their Mountain View Mobile Home Park, behind the Red Rock Diner on Highway 133, received an offer to sell the 62-trailer park they had owned for decades. The deal seemed too good to pass up, and the residents got the message: get ready to move. “We were going to pull our trailer off and put it somewhere else,” Jacob said.“I was looking at trailer parks in Boulder.” The owners ended up rejecting the offer – because they wanted to protect the tenants – but it served as a reminder. The mobile-home parks that have served

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as some of the Roaring Fork Valley’s most affordable free-market housing for decades are disappearing. Just three trailer parks remain in and around Carbondale, and of them, Mountain View nearly sold and Garfield Court, off Snowmass Drive, has been on the market for two years. Two others have been razed for redevelopment, one of which was for the Town Center project, which replaced the trailer park with million-dollar lofts. Some see trailer parks as an eyesore the town would be better off without. Others see them as home, and one of the most affordable ways to get into the valley’s housing market. “The people down there work here,” said John Cooley, of Aspen, who manages and co-owns Mountain View and

convinced his partners to keep from selling the property. “Honest to God, where would they go? I think there are people who never think about it. They just think about the money. They just say, ‘let them fare for themselves.’ But there’s no place they can fare for themselves. They’d have to leave the state.” Cooley said concerns about his tenants prompted him to convince his partners to reject the sale. When the offer came in, he countered with a higher number. When the buyers were willing to match it, he insisted they give tenants some two years to find another place to live. When the buyers balked, the deal expired. Then they agreed and came back to the table. But Cooley hedged again. PRESSURE page 13


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