
Seven payments stand between Cheryl Muhovich and home ownership. Seven more months of mortgage, and her mobile home, parked for the past two decades among 61 others at San Souci Mobile Home Community south of Boulder, will really, truly belong to her.
Muhovich worries she might not make it. San Souci was purchased for $3.85 million, and Colorado-based RV Horizons swooped in with pages of new requirements that could force residents like Muhovich to make thousands of dollars in upgrades or face eviction.
An attorney for RV Horizons, Peter Reinert, said eviction wasn’t the goal.
“We’re not in the business of running residents off,” he said. “The rules and regulations are designed and written to be in the best interest of all residents.”
Residents are confused about how the rules should be interpreted and enforced. Communication with an RV Horizons “transition manager” has been scarce; their predominant source of information, for now, is a 17-page packet left on their homes following the sale.
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