Mad Eyed Screamer
Moderator
My daughter just lost power in Plant City - 24 miles east of Tampa
My mobile home, insurance is S1000 a month. Needless to say I don't have insurance.
I paid $32,000 cash for it 3 and a half years ago which was 42 months ago. Do the maths.
The vast majority of mobile home parks in Florida are 55+ communities, very few cater for all ages.That's crazy but I can understand why. I'm guessing nobody has insurance there?
I'm flicking through channels between local NBC and CBS and they are either using the same camera or standing in the same area in Tampa which is under cover (think they are on the ground floor of a multi story car park.)I'm watching a live report on sky news from Tampa in Florida and although it's very windy with torrential rain the reporter is standing there chatting comfortably. There is no struggling to stay on his feet. Or course other areas may be hit harder and I guess a surge could cause flooding. He looks fine there though.
Just had to Google what HOA means.. it's the same as we have here but they're called body corporate committees.HOA fees and insurance costs are the killer.
The vast majority of mobile home parks in Florida are 55+ communities, very few cater for all ages.
When I moved in aged 58, I was 'the young buck'' (Rooney would love it here) and lowered the average age down considerably. The majority are living week to week on their social security pension and insurance is the last thing on their mind.
I've been texting my neighbour Joan, aged 76 who stayed put with her disabled husband - where would they go and how would they get there? She has a golf cart that gets her to the doctors and the supermarket up the road. She said she lost power but the mobile home is still standing firm.
I'm flicking through channels between local NBC and CBS and they are either using the same camera or standing in the same area in Tampa which is under cover (think they are on the ground floor of a multi story car park.)
My home was built in 1987 so it’s survived a few storms so maybe this one too? Though none have been as big and direct as this.Hopefully they will be okay. What actually happens to the people you described with no insurance and just a basic income if their mobile homes get flattened? Homeless I guess.
With the frequency these events occur in that area you'd think they would have a decent contingency plan rather than move out until it passes.
My home was built in 1987 so it’s survived a few storms so maybe this one too? Though none have been as big and direct as this.
This is my 4th in the 9 years in Florida and the other 3 barely touched Tampa but obviously caught the outer waves from it.
Locals always feared that Tampa was due a big one as it had been avoiding one for so long…..