Bill

Bill > A790


NJ A790

NJ A790
"The Manufactured Home Park Protection Act"; expands opportunity to purchase for resident homeowners in certain manufactured home parks; modifies certain requirements for disposition of private residential leasehold communities.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
01/13/2026
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
01/13/2026

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill gives homeowners in a mobile or manufactured home park (resident homeowners) the opportunity to preserve their communities by providing the resident homeowners the opportunity to purchase their mobile or manufactured home park, or private residential leasehold communities (PRLC), if the landowner anticipates selling or changing the use of the land. Mobile homes, manufactured housing, and factory-built housing are important, unsubsidized, and effective ways to meet New Jersey's affordable housing needs. As many people living in a PRLC own their home but not the land upon which it sits, landowners can wield significant power over housing security. If a landowner pursues redevelopment of the PRLC, resident homeowners are at risk of losing their investment. The scarcity of vacancies in other PRLCs and the high costs of relocating a mobile or manufactured home make relocation nearly impossible. When a PRLC closes, resident homeowners can find themselves pushed into poverty. Accordingly, this bill requires the landowner of a PRLC to provide certain notices, and the right of first refusal, to resident homeowners of the PRLC if PRLC land (community land) is offered for sale, or if the PRLC landowner (landowner) has received a bona fide offer to purchase the community land that the landowner intends to consider, or make a counter-offer on. Specifically, the bill requires the Department of Community Affairs (department) to publish, on the department's Internet website, a list of nonprofit organizations committed to preserving affordable housing, as specified in the bill. The bill requires a landowner to give notice of the offer, as specified in the bill, to the department, the municipal clerk and the mayor or other chief executive officer of the municipality in which the community land is located, the persons and entities on the list published on the department's Internet website, and to each resident homeowner in the PRLC. The notice is required to state the price, terms, and conditions of the offer and a contact person for further information. Current law enables affected homeowners in a PRLC--by and through an association of unit owners, with two-thirds consent of the unit owners, provided the unit owners have met the price, terms, and conditions of the landowner--to exercise the right to purchase the community land, if the contract is executed within 45 days of receiving the initial notice from the landowner. This bill enables the affected resident homeowners, by and through a resident homeowner group, as defined in the bill, to exercise the right to purchase the community land if 51 percent of the resident homeowners in the PRLC consent to the purchase, and the resident homeowner group meets the price, terms, and conditions of the landowner by executing a contract with the landowner within 120 days of receiving the initial notice. The bill sets forth procedures and a timeline for negotiating, extending, and financing the purchase; permits a landowner to set a refundable earnest money requirement of up to $50,000; provides that a resident homeowner may consent to the purchase by signing a petition or any other document indicating consent; and requires that negotiations be conducted in good faith. The bill imposes a nondisclosure requirement upon a landowner, resident homeowner group, and all resident homeowners in the PRLC (parties to the transaction). Specifically, the bill prohibits the parties to the transaction from disclosing confidential information, as defined in the bill, to any person or business entity other than the parties to the transaction. The bill requires that the parties to the transaction only use confidential information for the internal evaluation of the feasibility and desirability of the transaction, and hold confidential information in strict confidence and take reasonable precautions to protection the information. The bill permits the parties to the transaction to impose additional contractual obligations or provide exceptions to the unlawful disclosure of confidential information, which would otherwise constitute a violation of the bill. The bill provides that the parties to the transaction, which are involved, directly or indirectly, in the course of any discussions, negotiations, and due diligence related to a transaction described in the bill, agree to the confidentiality requirements set forth in the bill, and agree that disclosure of confidential information is to constitute irreparable harm suffered by the adversely affected party, entitling the adversely affected party to injunctive relief, and all other rights and remedies available at law or in equity. The bill permits resident homeowners to select and designate up to seven representatives, who may be assisted by certain counsel to receive, evaluate, and negotiate the purchase or prospective purchase of the PRLC by the resident homeowner group or a cooperative, nonprofit corporation, or similar entity formed by the homeowners. The representatives would consist of, and be controlled by, the resident homeowners and be open to all resident homeowners in the community. The bill authorizes a resident homeowner group that has rights pursuant to the bill, at the resident homeowner group's election, to assign their rights to the municipality in which the resident homeowner group is located, a housing authority, an agency of the State, or a nonprofit corporation or cooperative, for the purpose of continuing the use of the property as a manufactured home community. Following assignment, the assignee would be entitled to exercise the rights that the bill grants to the assignor-resident homeowner group. Further, the bill permits the resident homeowner group, or the Attorney General, to file an action in the Superior Court, Law Division, for a violation of P.L.1991, c.483 (C.46:8C-10 et seq.), and provides that a violation would constitute an unlawful practice pursuant to the New Jersey consumer fraud act, P.L.1960, c.39 (C.56:8-1 et seq.), and subject a landowner to penalties. Additionally, the bill exempts from "The Planned Real Estate Development Full Disclosure Act," (PREDFDA) P.L.1977, c.419 (C.45:22A-21 et seq.) the disposition of a PRLC to a resident homeowner group or its assignee, whether or not the form of ownership would otherwise fall within the definition of planned real estate development pursuant to PREDFDA. The bill repeals sections 6 through 9 of P.L.1991, c.483 (C.46:8C-15 through C.46:8C-18), which concern the formation of an association created pursuant to P.L.1991, c.483 (C.46:8C-10 et seq.), notice and recording of a purchase, and the association's purpose and governing documents. The bill omits all references to the creation of an "association of unit owners" to receive, negotiate, consider, and purchase a PRLC, and replaces that language with resident homeowners or resident homeowner group.

AI Summary

This bill, the "Manufactured Home Park Protection Act," aims to give residents of manufactured home parks, referred to as "resident homeowners," a greater opportunity to purchase their communities when the landowner decides to sell or change the land's use. It requires landowners of these communities, known as private residential leasehold communities (PRLCs), to provide advance notice to resident homeowners and the Department of Community Affairs (department) before selling the land. This notice must include the sale price, terms, and conditions, and residents will have a significantly extended period, 120 days instead of the previous 45, to organize and secure financing to purchase the community, with a lower threshold of 51% resident homeowner consent required for the purchase to proceed. The bill also introduces strict confidentiality requirements for all parties involved in the potential sale to prevent the misuse of sensitive information during negotiations. Furthermore, it allows resident homeowners to assign their purchase rights to a municipality, housing authority, state agency, or nonprofit organization to ensure the community remains a manufactured home park, and it clarifies that violations of these provisions can be treated as unlawful practices under consumer fraud laws, potentially leading to penalties for landowners. Finally, the bill exempts the sale of a PRLC to a resident homeowner group or its assignee from certain disclosure requirements under "The Planned Real Estate Development Full Disclosure Act."

Committee Categories

Housing and Urban Affairs

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Withdrawn Because Approved P.L.2025, c.362. (on 01/13/2026)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...