Equity Lifestyle Properties mobile home parks across Florida dealing with flooding everyday and management is MIA

For several weeks now in Pinellas County Florida, mobile homeowners living on leased land owned by equity lifestyle properties have been dealing with massive flooding in their mobile home parks. Im not saying other parks owned by other companies aren’t having issues as well but Im only concerned about ELS because thats who I pay my rent to.

After a storm a few weeks back , almost a weeks before Debbie came through , the flooding had started after a hard afternoon rain and its been the same ever since. Management is non existent although our park manager Robert Kelsey says hes been on property all day evaluating the situation, but nothing is being done. Our regional manager Doug Jefferies did respond to one of my emails complaining about the damage being caused to our homes and property from speeding vehicles while the streets were flooded but all he said was write down the license plate numbers . Are you kidding me

4 hours after the rain the water is receding
This is typical in an ELS owned mobile home park after a summer afternoon rain
This poor guy Darrin has spent thousands of dollars on vapor barrier and skirting just to have it ripped out because of the wake caused by speeding drivers

ELS refuses to acknowledge that this is a problem. I live on a corner with a stop sign and residents as well as visitors and delivery services rarely stop, flying through at 50 mph

Robert Kelsey our park manager has been sent countless emails about the situation and just keeps passing the buck saying speed bumps are a safety hazard, so I took the request to his manager and Equity Lifestyle Properties regional manager Douglass Jefferies out of the Tampa office and the jury is still out on his decision. If you want to contact Mr Jefferies with any questions or complaints his email is Douglass_Jefferies@equitylifestyle.com Robert Kelsey email is Robert_Kelsey@equitylifestyle.com and the CEO Marguerite Naders email would be Marguerite_Nader @ equitylifestyle.com

We are waiting on the Guardian to do another story but unfortunately we have to wait a little bit longer , but in the meantime we are sending hundreds of our photos and our emails to management to whoever will listen including out district councilman our state representatives , and the general public so we can warn them to stay away from ELS and its 50 year old infrastructures that have seen their lifespan play out.

ELS says its the county’s problem, they had storm drain cleaners in here a week ago after Debbie and have claimed the park’s drainage is fine that the problem is on the county side. My street has 1 storm drain and its the only one for 150 yards after you enter our complex and it goes into our pond ( its actually a retention pond to collect rainwater but its so full of mud that it usually fills before the roads flood and this is where our problem lies. We also have a small pond in the back but that doesn’t hold much of anything, I guess thats why the drain cleaning company decided to dump all the sludge they sucked up into that little mud pond

The fact of the matter is that Equity Lifestyle Properties doesn’t give a shit about their residents although they did make sure that our office secretary was safely removed from the park around 10 am last week before she couldn’t leave because of the flooding, but not a word to the residents about what is being done

Equity Lifestyle Properties has opened itself up for another class action lawsuit and this blog will be shared with a dozen firms who we are hoping will come calling soon

4 responses to “Equity Lifestyle Properties mobile home parks across Florida dealing with flooding everyday and management is MIA”

  1. I would assume a class action law suite would include the value of the homes going down because of lack of service, maintenance and security

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Plus a whole lot more than that. How about changing our parks from 55 and over retiring parks to all age parks I mean, who’s allowed to do that without getting any permission from the resident who believe they’re living in a retirement community

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  2. Bridget Tierney Avatar
    Bridget Tierney

    I live in Countryside, Vero Beach we have not had a pool since June 15th. They closed the clubhouse to do floor replacement, found asbestos ended up being closed an additional month. Couldn’t open the pool because no access to bathrooms, then upon open they “found” a leak in the pool so now closed indefinitely. Zero answers from the office, I called corporate and was told they would give us weekly updates but that hasn’t happened. No pool, weight room, library, bingo, zero social activities! ELS is horrible!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Catherine Gestewitz Avatar
    Catherine Gestewitz

    I live in Park City West, Davie Fl. Our park has steadily gone down hill since Covid. I moved into a 55+ gated, retirement community. (So I thought). There are young families, kids, babies, felons, etc living here. 4,5,6,7,8 people in one home. 3,4,5,6 cars being parked wherever they can fit. The prospectus says no more than 3 persons living in each home. How is it fair to the legal residents (2or3 people in a home) to pay the water bill when other homes have 4,5,6,7,8 people using the water??!! And we are paying for the rental properties water usage! Our gate is constantly broken. The speeders are ridiculous. The streets are full of pot holes. The trees have not been trimmed (the city said they should be trimmed zoo every 6 months)! ELS are slum lords!

    Liked by 1 person

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