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For many Idahoans, better a trailer home than no home

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  • For many Idahoans, better a trailer home than no home

    http://www.idahostatesman.com/newsup...ry/661211.html

    For many Idahoans, better a trailer home than no home
    It wasn't supposed to work out this way for Dave MacNeill.

    Three years ago, he was pulling down six figures as a magazine editor in his hometown of Sacramento, Calif. Today he's not even scraping by in Boise.

    MacNeill and his family will lose their rental home at the end of the month. The only affordable options they have found are the homeless shelter or a travel trailer.

    They're going for the trailer.

    MacNeill isn't alone. Area campgrounds are getting more inquiries from cash-strapped Idahoans desperately seeking affordable-housing options. Available spaces are filling up.

    MacNeill and his family came to Boise in 2007 after his publishing company slid toward insolvency and he was forced to leave.

    "I worked for free for a few months, hoping it would turn around," MacNeill said.

    It didn't.

    They came at the suggestion of a friend who had a home for rent in Southeast Boise. The high desert Foothills and the Boise River running through the heart of town reminded MacNeill of the Sacramento he grew up in. He found work as a freelance writer, and by recording local musicians. Those income sources have dried up.

    His wife, Leslie, has been a substitute teacher and sells marketing materials on commission, but that business has dried up, too.

    In October, the 51-year-old took a sales job on commission at a Boise music store. He has made more than minimum wage only once since October.

    As they have watched their incomes vaporize, they've sold almost everything they own, from recording equipment to jewelry.

    "When you're selling your leather jacket, and you stop to wonder if your shoes are worth anything, you know you've hit the bottom," he said.

    MacNeill hopes to pull together enough cash to buy an aging RV for him, his wife and his grade-school-age daughter.

    "We can get a space for $400 including utilities," he said. "All I have to do is find about $3,000."

    He has set aside $500 from book sales and hopes to raise most of the rest by borrowing small amounts from many people. He sent friends and family an e-mail asking for "microloans" of $50 to $100, promising to pay them back as soon as he can.

    Martin Johncox is giving MacNeill $50. The two met and became friends through connections in the Boise music scene.

    "Times are tight, and any of us can find ourselves in the same position," said Johncox, a public relations consultant.

    MacNeill is confident he can find a bargain.

    "It's a buyer's market for RVs right now," he said. "One of the first things people unload in hard times is their trailer, and there are some great deals out there. I'm more worried that the trailer parks are filling up, because I'm not the only one having to do this."

    Recreational vehicle park managers in the area say they are seeing more people moving into RVs full time, but spaces are limited. There are only 10 RV parks in the Treasure Valley and park owners and managers say their monthly spaces are nearly full.

    "We've had three families move in this week," said the manager of Mountain View RV Park at 2040 Airport Way in Boise, who declined to give his last name. "I have one tenant who got last month's rent from her church."

    Like many of the RV campgrounds, Mountain View is required to keep a percentage of its 63 spaces available for daily and weekly Good Sam and AAA campers. The remaining spaces, which are available for monthly rentals, are full.

    Calvin Cummings, manager of Boise Meridian RV Resort at 184 W. Pennwood in Meridian, said he is hearing from more people considering living in RVs beyond the usual retirees heading for a carefree life on the open road.

    "There have been working-age people who can't afford a home move in here," he said. "We have about 70 residents who pay month to month."

    Spaces rent for $400 a month, which includes a sewer hookup and water. Most people heat the homes with propane. Cummings said residents spend as much as $150 a month to heat their RVs in winter.

    Condensation is a problem. Cummings said most people use the campground's showers instead of their trailers' and are careful about cooking to avoid raising the humidity in the small living spaces.

    "It's a fairly inexpensive way to live if you can put up with cold and small spaces," he said.

    For some who are downsizing, a new RV has become an option.

    Matthew Young, general manager at Camping World RV Sales at 1580 W. Overland Road, said business is down from two years ago, but January was actually a very good month.

    He said he has been selling more RVs to people looking for less expensive housing, but they generally don't tell him directly because banks usually won't finance an RV if it is going to be a primary residence.

    "Fifth wheels are more conducive to living in than motor homes because they are roomier," he said. They're also less expensive.

    New fifth-wheel trailers - designed to be towed by pickups with a hitch installed in the truck bed - typically provide about 275 square feet of living space. They sell for between $25,000 and $60,000 and are typically 8.5 feet wide by 27 to 35 feet long. Motor homes start at about $50,000.

    MacNeill is confident he and his family can live in the confined space.

    "Leslie and I lived in a sailboat for a while, so we are handy and we're used to living small," he said.

    Brad Talbutt: 672-6737

  • #2
    Board to city: Reconsider tent-city plan

    http://www.theolympian.com/southsound/story/747727.html

    Board to city: Reconsider tent-city plan
    Christian Hill

    LACEY — The Lacey Planning Commission sought compromise Tuesday by directing city staff members to rework an ordinance to let churches choose whether they shelter the homeless indoors or in tents outside.

    In late 2007, the appointed commission recommended an ordinance to regulate homeless encampments and allow them on church property, but the City Council made a late change before adoption to require churches to shelter the homeless indoors.

    The issue has returned to the city, the result of a successful challenge on procedural grounds. The City Council could vote to uphold its decision or change course after the planning commission forwards its recommendation Feb. 17. The city isn't required to follow the commission's recommendation.

    During the two-hour discussion Tuesday, the commission sought a middle ground that balanced the needs of churches, the homeless and neighbors and could win support from the council.

    At one point, Commissioner Bruce Freeland proposed asking the council to rescind its ordinance and adopt the version recommended by the commission more than a year ago.

    "It doesn't make sense to keep trying to massage this camel and make it into a horse," he said.

    But Commissioner Carolyn St. Claire advised her colleagues to be more tactful.

    "If it's in your face, they're not going to do anything with it," she said.

    In the end, they directed staff members to rework the ordinance that allows churches to decide whether to shelter the homeless indoors or outdoors, remove a distance requirement and instead add a requirement to screen a homeless encampment from other neighbors.

    The ordinance currently on the books bans a homeless encampment within 300 feet of a school or day-care center unless the director or principal agrees to waive the requirement.

    Commissioner Kenneth Mitchell said the distance requirement was unwarranted because tenants in a homeless encampment are required to undergo background checks.

    "You've already checked these residents more than any other resident in Lacey," he said.

    Freeman called the requirement "demeaning and discriminating" to the homeless.

    "It is treating these homeless encampments like they are an adult bookstore," he said.

    Commissioner Barbara Lally countered that the requirement would provide comfort to some neighbors who might worry an encampment for the homeless in their neighborhood would lower property values. She voiced stronger support for a screening requirement, however.

    "There should be mutual respect in the community," she said. "You have to respect the people who have earned their homes, too."

    The council reversed the commission's recommendation for an ordinance on a 4-3 vote in April. The majority of the council determined that requiring churches to shelter the homeless indoors would provide a safer and more dignified environment for them.

    Advocates for the homeless challenged the ordinance before a state growth management hearings board. The board agreed in October that the council should have held a public hearing before adopting the ordinance with the late change. The board remanded the ordinance to the city.

    The commission held a hearing Jan. 20 about the ordinances initially recommended by the commission — with some minor tweaks — and adopted by the council.
    Let’s be pretentious, ostentatious, sanctimonious, whatever… But wait until people obtain the knowledge that the Privileged are only privileged due to the ignorance and delusion of the masses and all bets are off.

    Comment


    • #3
      Camden's Tent City homeless keep up hope

      http://www.philly.com/inquirer/local...p_up_hope.html

      Camden's Tent City homeless keep up hope

      By Matt Katz

      Inquirer Staff Writer
      The flashbacks and delusions seemed more vivid behind closed doors, so the Vietnam War veteran decided to spend the rest of his life outside.

      Lorenzo "Jamaica" Banks found a patch of woods in downtown Camden - next to the Route 676 exit ramp, behind the Police Department and around the corner from Campbell Soup's world headquarters. He cleared out the syringes and put up a tent.

      That was two years ago. Now there are 17 people, all invited by Banks, living in what's known around town as Tent City.

      Banks, 56, is "mayor" of the makeshift village, which he oversees with a second-in-command - his "CEO," he says - who is in charge when Banks leaves to buy supplies. There are rules (including weekly tent inspections) posted on a bulletin board. The city of Camden even picks up the trash, neatly stacked in bags along the train tracks.

      "I have peace of mind," said Banks, who claims he served time in prison for murder. "We're a big family. . . . We count on each other. That's what makes it so good."

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      • #4
        Tent Cities On The Rise In Nashville

        http://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=9783214

        NASHVILLE, Tenn. - You may have new neighbors and not even know about them. City officials say there has been a huge surge in the number of tent cities in and around Nashville.

        Nashville was already dealing with one large tent city below the interstate bridges south of downtown. In this tough economy, Metro is now dealing with more of these homeless encampments.

        It's a tough way to live, but a growing number of people hit by tough times now call tent cities their home
        .

        ...

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        • #5
          Re: For many Idahoans, better a trailer home than no home

          I live in Kingsport, Tennessee. It has been relatively insulated from the financial difficulties of the rest of the nation. Business is still booming (businesses are opening up all over the place), and the real estate market never experienced a boom or bust. It is the home of the Eastman Chemical Co.

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