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The battle to keep Colorado’s mobile home parks in local hands

Recent law changes have allowed more residents to purchase their parks

Sam Tabachnik - Staff portraits at ...
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Longtime resident of the Whitehaven mobile home park Peter Frombgen stands in front of his mobile home May 17, 2023, in Steamboat Springs. Frombgen, 70, a Steamboat resident for 40 years, has lived at the park for 20 years. His mobile home includes a split 1953 Airstream trailer, half is his bedroom, the other half is part of his kitchen. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Longtime resident of the Whitehaven mobile home park Peter Frombgen stands in front of his mobile home May 17, 2023, in Steamboat Springs. Frombgen, 70, a Steamboat resident for 40 years, has lived at the park for 20 years. His mobile home includes a split 1953 Airstream trailer, half is his bedroom, the other half is part of his kitchen. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
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As private equity giants and national real estate investors gobble up these communities across the country, the state's new laws have birthed a swath of creative solutions designed to keep mobile homes out of corporate hands.
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