Help Us Go Home. Tell California Leaders to Pass SB749.

The Issue

 

 

We are the residents of Palisades Bowl—a tight-knit group of Californians who found home in this unique mobile home community in Pacific Palisades, now burned down and fenced off. Hundreds of us lost our homes in the January 7th fire. Half of our community is made up of seniors, but we are also teachers, nurses, veterans, and young families with children in local public schools. We built lives here. And when the fire happened, the park owners gated off the property, stationed 24-hour security, and blocked us from even returning to search for burned belongings or properly grieve what we lost. Seven months later, we remain displaced—with no plan, no answers, and no right to return. Property we loved and cared for has been reduced to ash, and now our park owners are using a legal loophole to try to profit from our devastation.

And it’s not just us. Thousands of mobile home residents across the state are in similar positions, and millions more are vulnerable.

These communities are one of the last truly affordable housing options in California. Some of our neighbors bought their small homes 40 years ago for just $20,000—giving them a path to homeownership they otherwise never could have achieved. Even last year, residents purchased newer homes for hundreds of thousands—a fraction of any other alternative in all of Los Angeles. We’ve all invested our personal savings into these homes. Now we just want a chance to rebuild—and go home.

With your help, new legislation can ensure park owners do the right thing—while still preserving their rights. Everyone could win here. But instead, the owners are resisting even the most basic protections for residents—refusing to support even the most basic protections for residents, even in the wake of disaster.

These park owners don’t live here, don’t work here, and have never been part of our community. They are not required to rebuild or include us in future plans. They’ve made no commitment to help us return—or even communicated what their plans are. Instead, they’re trying to pass cleanup costs onto FEMA and taxpayers, despite having insurance and the financial means to do it themselves. Meanwhile, they stall, delay, and quietly explore options to redevelop and profit—while our land still sits as it did in January: piled with burned homes, ash, and debris, threatening the safety of public beaches just across the street. The photo in this petition is a recent image of how 14 acres of land still sits—untouched—along one of California's most beautiful public beaches.

It is wrong. It is heartbreaking. And, as of today, it is legal.

SB749 would change that.

It gives residents and park owners a path to work together. It says: if you're going to close or redevelop a mobile home park, give residents the opportunity to make a fair and competitive offer—and give them the dignity of a path home. That sounds reasonable, right? Yet some park owners resist even a balanced, constitutional law that respects both property rights and the rights of residents to remain in their communities.

And keep in mind, this isn’t just about our situation. SB749 protects every mobile home park resident in California—over 1.5 million people!

This law already exists in over a dozen other states—including Florida, New Jersey, Nevada, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and more. It works—and more states continue to adopt it because of its success. It prevents displacement. It builds stronger, more stable communities. Without SB749, homelessness will rise. Our housing crisis will deepen.

This law has already been approved by four legislative committees and passed by the California State Senate. In just a few weeks, it will go to a full vote on the Assembly floor—and we need California lawmakers to hear from all of us.

We are not asking for a handout. We are asking for a chance.

Help us go home. Support SB749.

—Palisades Bowl Community Partnership

avatar of the starter
PBCP Resident GroupPetition StarterWe are the Palisades Bowl Resident Partnership. We are a collective group of over 500 residents of the Palisades Bowl Mobile Home park in Pacific Palisades.

43,930

The Issue

 

 

We are the residents of Palisades Bowl—a tight-knit group of Californians who found home in this unique mobile home community in Pacific Palisades, now burned down and fenced off. Hundreds of us lost our homes in the January 7th fire. Half of our community is made up of seniors, but we are also teachers, nurses, veterans, and young families with children in local public schools. We built lives here. And when the fire happened, the park owners gated off the property, stationed 24-hour security, and blocked us from even returning to search for burned belongings or properly grieve what we lost. Seven months later, we remain displaced—with no plan, no answers, and no right to return. Property we loved and cared for has been reduced to ash, and now our park owners are using a legal loophole to try to profit from our devastation.

And it’s not just us. Thousands of mobile home residents across the state are in similar positions, and millions more are vulnerable.

These communities are one of the last truly affordable housing options in California. Some of our neighbors bought their small homes 40 years ago for just $20,000—giving them a path to homeownership they otherwise never could have achieved. Even last year, residents purchased newer homes for hundreds of thousands—a fraction of any other alternative in all of Los Angeles. We’ve all invested our personal savings into these homes. Now we just want a chance to rebuild—and go home.

With your help, new legislation can ensure park owners do the right thing—while still preserving their rights. Everyone could win here. But instead, the owners are resisting even the most basic protections for residents—refusing to support even the most basic protections for residents, even in the wake of disaster.

These park owners don’t live here, don’t work here, and have never been part of our community. They are not required to rebuild or include us in future plans. They’ve made no commitment to help us return—or even communicated what their plans are. Instead, they’re trying to pass cleanup costs onto FEMA and taxpayers, despite having insurance and the financial means to do it themselves. Meanwhile, they stall, delay, and quietly explore options to redevelop and profit—while our land still sits as it did in January: piled with burned homes, ash, and debris, threatening the safety of public beaches just across the street. The photo in this petition is a recent image of how 14 acres of land still sits—untouched—along one of California's most beautiful public beaches.

It is wrong. It is heartbreaking. And, as of today, it is legal.

SB749 would change that.

It gives residents and park owners a path to work together. It says: if you're going to close or redevelop a mobile home park, give residents the opportunity to make a fair and competitive offer—and give them the dignity of a path home. That sounds reasonable, right? Yet some park owners resist even a balanced, constitutional law that respects both property rights and the rights of residents to remain in their communities.

And keep in mind, this isn’t just about our situation. SB749 protects every mobile home park resident in California—over 1.5 million people!

This law already exists in over a dozen other states—including Florida, New Jersey, Nevada, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and more. It works—and more states continue to adopt it because of its success. It prevents displacement. It builds stronger, more stable communities. Without SB749, homelessness will rise. Our housing crisis will deepen.

This law has already been approved by four legislative committees and passed by the California State Senate. In just a few weeks, it will go to a full vote on the Assembly floor—and we need California lawmakers to hear from all of us.

We are not asking for a handout. We are asking for a chance.

Help us go home. Support SB749.

—Palisades Bowl Community Partnership

avatar of the starter
PBCP Resident GroupPetition StarterWe are the Palisades Bowl Resident Partnership. We are a collective group of over 500 residents of the Palisades Bowl Mobile Home park in Pacific Palisades.
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The Decision Makers

California State Assembly
24 Members
Avelino Valencia
California State Assembly - District 68
Esmeralda Soria
California State Assembly - District 27
Jose Solache
California State Assembly - District 62
Darshana Patel
Former Poway Unified School Board - Area A
Diane Papan
Former San Mateo City Council
Michelle Rodríguez
Michelle Rodríguez

Supporter Voices

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