โJun-04-2014 08:42 AM
โJun-05-2014 03:36 AM
bdpreece wrote:
This is even happening in the membership parks. Thousand Trails which is now owned by Equity Lifestyle Properties is now leasing sites by the year. Many of the parks are populated by younger unemployed people with families who are living in run down trailers since it is about the cheapest place there is to live.
โJun-04-2014 09:08 PM
โJun-04-2014 07:50 PM
โJun-04-2014 07:21 PM
โJun-04-2014 06:04 PM
โJun-04-2014 06:02 PM
โJun-04-2014 06:02 PM
parkmanaa wrote:
Allowing long-term residents doesn't have to mean "TAPED-UP WINDOWS, DIRTY RVS, VISITORS CARS PARKED EVERYWHERE", and all the other insinuations that anyone staying more than a night are BUMS.
The long-term guests RVs can look as good as the overnighters; it just depends on the park establishing and then enforcing their rules. Before you get too critical, attempt to look at the reason for the 'long-term' RVer:
a. Came in from out-of-town for a 6-month, one year, or whatever temp. job.
b. A visiting, contract nurse who signs for 13 weeks, then may have contract
extended.
c. A person who is selling their home and building a new one.
d. A person whose home was damaged in a fire or windstorm.
e. A person has a large park model with 5 slides by the lake, and thoroughly
enjoys the RV Park life.
f. From out of area, got a job, and living in RV while house-hunt.
Believe me, the list of reasons go on and on and in most cases the persons are not living in the RV because they can't afford anything else.
Finally, if the RV park didn't have the steady income from those long-term guests, you would probably be paying a lot more for your nightly visit.
โJun-04-2014 05:30 PM
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โJun-04-2014 01:21 PM