His reasoning: The state inspected the park regularly in response to complaints, eventually triggering a parkwide inspection. The department provided the owners plenty of notice and chances before cutting off rental income, which they would need to fix issues and keep people safely housed. When those failed, it let the local government take over. After a drawn-out process, a new owner is to take over Stockton Park Village, preserving it as a housing option.
“I think things are working, and they're maybe frustrating for some and maybe painful for others, because it takes time for those violations to ultimately be corrected,” Krause said. “But there are proper tools in place for all those things to happen.”
Heather Riley bought her father a used camper trailer in Chinese Camp, in the foothills of the Sierras, and moved it into Stockton Park Village for him four years ago. It was his chosen retirement community, after the friend who for years rented him his house, also in Stockton, fell ill and his brother sold the home. Riley’s name continues to languish on multiple waitlists for government-subsidized affordable housing, his daughter said.
His trailer is cramped but cozy. Nestled between his built-in bed and a loveseat, the self-proclaimed Okie Boy sits long hours in his pilled black Reebok hoodie and his leather armchair watching Westerns. Mementos from 87 years of life frame his TV screen, including photographs of his children and his old motorcycle club.
“I was president of that club for 21 years,” he wistfully recalled on a cold January morning.
Before the manager stopped collecting rents in 2020, Riley was paying less than $400 a month for his lot. Average rent for a 1-bedroom apartment in Stockton now costs more than three times as much. Across California, mobile home residents paid a little more than half the monthly housing costs of people living in single-family homes in 2021, according to the American Housing Survey, a subset of the U.S. Census.
But a mobile home offers none of the security of a single-family home. Residents like Riley own their homes, but rent the dirt they sit on, and have little to no control over the infrastructure they’re hooked to. Older mobile homes cost thousands of dollars to move, if their rickety frames can even withstand it, and most parks don’t accept older trailers like his.
Amid the desperation for affordable housing in the wake of World War II, factories spat out mobile homes, and parks sprang up across the country to accommodate them, reaching their peak in the 1970s. In California, nearly 90% of parks for which the state housing department has construction date data were built before 1980. Stockton Park Village was built in 1948, state records show. But parks weren’t built for permanence, and housing experts say that’s evident by their often sputtering water, septic and electric systems.
“Those systems are increasingly failing, partially because they weren't built to super high standards to begin with and partially because there's, in some cases, a tendency to skimp on maintenance and to maximize profits for landlords,” said Zach Lamb, a planning professor at University of California, Berkeley, who specializes in mobile home parks. “And so you have many, many communities that are facing pretty dire infrastructural challenges.”
A 2022 report from the housing department addressed to the state Finance Department notes “deferred maintenance of park infrastructure and aging manufactured or mobile homes have thrown into question the viability of these homes and made mobile home park residents particularly vulnerable to climate change and displacement.”
The report goes on to say that “many mobile home park owners are financially unable to rehabilitate their parks.”
It’s hard to quantify exactly how many parks have failing infrastructure because no one is keeping track. But studies from California and other states show parks everywhere are hurting.
“I can tell you, especially from talking to people who are supposed to be overseeing and trying to fix issues where people don't have clean water in the state, mobile home park-run water systems stand out,” Pierce said.