Private Equity JACKS Up Trailer Park Rents Hurting Millions |Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar

Krystal and Saagar cover the massive increase in trailer park rents being caused by private equity entering the mobile home market leading to major issues for longtime homeowners

 

 

As a 30 year old still renting, these housing segments are always so demoralizing. I appreciate the honest reporting, don’t get me wrong. It’s just seeing the veil pulled back on all the lies I was told growing up. I always thought I’d have a house by now. I thought I’d have kids and a family of my own. These ghouls have made it unaffordable. They stole that from this and future generations and the government just stood by and let it happen. Helping, even, in some cases.

 

The first mobile home I sold as a realtor was the beginning of the year, since then, the cost of the land lease at that park has increased by about 200-300 per month. It’s not sustainable. These are our seniors, it makes me sick. This country is being ran by very indifferent, and sick individuals.
This happened to a friend of mine. She is very low income and the mobile homes in her park are literally glorified shacks. A big company bought the park and doubled the rent. Residents are moving in with each other just to make ends meet. It is criminal that big companies are gouging poverty stricken people.
I am not surprised at all. I personally know people who are experiencing this. Private equity is deadset on ensuring that no one other than them is able to own their own homes or land. If they are not already, they will be targeting RV parks next. Absolutely nowhere is safe from what can only be described as the cancerous growth that is private equity.
Rents are getting crazy. Moreover they’re now actually charging renters for things that previously were always just things the landlord just did. My friend showed me his lease, if lightbulbs in hallways go they charge $40 to replace them, if you need your toilet snaked it’s $30, and so on. I swore that those things we’re the landlord’s responsibility anyway, and in some cases they are. What they do is charge for them and if someone wants to fight it to the point that they’re willing to go to court, they might win but when the lease is up at the end of the year the “properly management” entities (ie these investment companies) will either jack up the rent or just decide not to renew it and the renter has to leave. It’s disgusting and i believe may be the proverbial Straw that breaks the camel’s back. This is unsustainable. I have two different friends that are currently living in tents. Both have jobs, they’re don’t have mental health or substance abuse issues or any other of the usual reasons that are behind being homeless; they just flat out can’t afford to rent anything that’s available. The reason that this has been on mind is because unless SOMETHING changes in my own situation, there’s a high likelihood that come this October I’ll be setting up camp right next to them.
I felt this recently. Two years ago I was priced out of a home. Then last year I started looking at a mobile or manufactured home, because it’s time I own something. Well I got priced out again and people are outbidding each other on piece of crap mobile homes going over +200k.
You can’t have the American dream. But you can rent it… For a little while.
so many of my clients are in this position. Lot rents 700-1200 just for space with extremely high criteria to meet in order to qualify. It’s so unfair for a specific portion of the population that struggles to get by

What Wall Street Doesn’t Want You to Know About Hospital Emergency Rooms

Yves here. We’ve written regularly on Eileen Appelbaum and Rosemary Batt’s important investigations into how private equity has taken over more and more of hospital staffing, including of emergency rooms. This in turn has allowed them to override patient efforts to have only in-network doctors assigned to their case, as well as to engage in other practices that greatly inflate patient charges (so-called surprise billing).

The legal fig leaf that allows private equity firms like Blackstone and KKR to play doctor is that their deals are structured so that  MD or group of MDs is the nominal owner of the specialty practice, even though the business is stripped of its assets and the operating contracts are widely believed to strip them of any say. The now-notorious incident of Blackstone’s TeamHealth firing whistleblower Dr. Ming Lin confirms who is really in charge.

By Eileen Appelbaum, the Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and visiting professor, School of Management, University of Leicester, UK and Rosemary Batt, the Alice Hanson Cook Professor of Women and Work, Cornell University ILR School. Produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute

Doctor Ming Lin is the first emergency room doctor to be fired for going public with his concerns about poor hospital emergency room safety practices and shortages of medical supplies and protective gear for health workers. He won’t be the last.

Like many hospitals in the US, PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center in Bellingham Washington, where Ming Lin worked for the past 17 years as an emergency room doctor, has outsourced the management and staffing of its emergency rooms. So, Lin works on-site at the hospital’s emergency room, but he is employed by a physician staffing firm that runs the emergency room. These staffing firms are often behind the surprise medical bills for emergency room services that patients receive after their insurance company has paid the hospital and doctors, but not the excessive out-of-network charges billed by these outside staffing firms.

About a third of hospital emergency rooms are staffed by doctors on the payrolls of two physician staffing companies—TeamHealth and Envision Health—owned by Wall Street investment firms. Envision Healthcare employs 69,000 healthcare workers nationwide while TeamHealth employs 20,000. Private equity firm Blackstone Group owns TeamHealth, Kravis Kohlberg Roberts (KKR) owns Envision.

Care of the sick is not the mission of these companies; their mission is to make outsized profits for the private equity firms and its investors. Overcharging patients and insurance companies for providing urgent and desperately needed emergency medical care is bad enough. But it is unconscionable to muzzle doctors who speak out to advocate for the health of their patients and co-workers during the global pandemic that is rapidly spreading across the US.

Yet, that is what Blackstone-owned TeamHealth just did. Why would an experienced emergency room doctor be fired in the middle of a pandemic? One clue may be that Blackstone’s CEO, Stephen A. Schwarzman, is part of President Trump’s inner circle. He may not want to risk that relationship by allowing TeamHealth’s doctors to inform the public about Washington’s mishandling of the allocation of supplies and protective gear. The President might conclude that TeamHealth doctors didn’t appreciate him enough, and where would that leave Schwartzman?

PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center may have the distinction of being the first hospital to have a doctor outsourced from a physician staffing firm unceremoniously fired for telling the public the truth. But it won’t be the last. Hospitals are now telling doctors treating coronavirus patients they will be fired if they speak to the press.

The American Academy of Emergency Medicine protested Dr. Lin’s ouster and questioned how TeamHealth is allowed to provide hospital services when the law requires that physician practices must be owned by a licensed medical practitioner. TeamHealth skirts the law by owning all the assets of the physician practices it acquires—the real estate, offices, equipment, supplies, inventory, and even accounts receivable.

On paper, the physician practices are owned by a doctor-led organization that TeamHealth has set up to comply with the law. But what does it mean to own a physician practice if the practice has no assets and no possibility to exist on its own?

The furor over patients hit by surprise medical bills revealed that TeamHealth controls the billing for the doctors it supplies to hospital emergency rooms. The firing of Doctor Ming Lin pulls back the curtain and reveals that TeamHealth controls the doctors as well.