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Mobile home tenants press Cary council candidates to do more on affordable housing

Over 600 people attended a Cary Town Council candidate forum hosted by ONE Wake, a non-profit based in Raleigh. The town’s election day is set for Oct. 10.
Over 600 people attended a Cary Town Council candidate forum hosted by ONE Wake, a non-profit based in Raleigh. The town’s election day is set for Oct. 10. The News & Observer

Four months ago, Enir Oseguera moved with his young family to one of Cary’s last affordable housing communities,

The immigrant father had been saving money and thought he’d found a place where his two children could be safe and thrive at Chatham Estates, a diverse mobile home park where rent is $400 a month.

Soon after the move, however, Oseguera learned the park property was for sale, putting hundreds of people who live there at risk of displacement and homelessness.

“What do we do?” he asked. “We all know the cost of renting an apartment even nowadays and then buying property, well, that’s more of a question for many people.”

At a Cary Town Council candidates forum Monday night, Oseguera was one of three Chatham Estates residents who asked the candidates for help.

The mobile home park, owned by Curtis Westbrook Sr., of Cary’s Westbrook & Associates, mostly houses Latinos who moved to the town from elsewhere in Wake County or other countries. Many have young children and work at nearby businesses.

There has not been an official offer of compensation for residents affected by the Chatham Estates property sale. Moving a mobile home could cost up to $20,000.

Over 700 people live in Chatham Estates Mobile Home park on E. Chatham Street in Cary. The area is one of two mobile home parks in the town. Las Americas off Southeast Maynard Road is another.
Over 700 people live in Chatham Estates Mobile Home park on E. Chatham Street in Cary. The area is one of two mobile home parks in the town. Las Americas off Southeast Maynard Road is another. Kristen Johnson The News & Observer

Although Chatham Estates has not yet been sold, developers have plans to tear down the park and the businesses in Chatham Square at the corner of SE Maynard Road and East Chatham Street. The property could be sold for about $50 million, according to Lee & Associates, the listing agent.

Still, park residents are appealing to candidates in Cary’s Oct. 10 municipal election for help and to stay in town.

Candidates make commitments

ONE Wake, a nonprofit, hosted Monday’s forum, which featured five of the nine candidates for Town Council. The nonpartisan organization has supported the town’s affordable housing efforts, including rezoning 921 SE Maynard Road to provide housing for residents who make 30% of the area’s median income.

The Cary Housing Plan provides financial aid to home buyers, offers incentives to developers who build affordable housing, develops affordable homes on town-owned land, and funds emergency housing programs to keep residents in their homes.

ONE Wake is also asking candidates to support churches and other nonprofits developing their own affordable housing. It also wants the Town Council to make sure the potential redevelopment of Cary’s town hall campus includes affordable homes.

“In Cary today, rising home prices and rents are straining housing options for middle- and low-income households,” said Mycal Brickhouse, pastor of Cary First Christian Church. “Teachers, nurses, construction workers, food and retail service workers increasingly cannot afford to live in town.”

Candidates Lori Bush, Don Frantz, Michele Craig, Rachel Jordan, and Mary Insprucker attended the ONE Wake Cary Town Council candidate forum on Sept. 18.
Candidates Lori Bush, Don Frantz, Michele Craig, Rachel Jordan, and Mary Insprucker attended the ONE Wake Cary Town Council candidate forum on Sept. 18. Kristen Johnson The News & Observer

Since 2010, Cary has added about 20,000 jobs in those occupations, but has lost about 4,000 housing units that cost under $1,000 a month to rent.

At-large Council member Lori Bush and Mayor Pro Tem Don Frantz, who represents District B, attended the forum alongside candidates Michelle Craig (District B), Mary Insprucker (at-large) and Rachel Jordan (District D).

All of the candidates publicly agreed to advocate for the residents and spoke briefly about their plans if elected.

“My mother was a single mother, and we lived in subsidized housing,” said Bush. “I know what it’s like to wonder where your head will lay in the evening and to wonder where your next meal will come from.”

Bush and current council members have supported using the town’s federal Community Development Block Grant money on housing initiatives.

Jordan described moving to Cary from Washington, DC, after the loss of her job and her baby’s death from birth complications.

“I understand that fear,” she said, “I understand that sense of not being able to sleep at night because you don’t know where you’re going to go.”

Frantz, Insprucker and Craig shared their own struggles and commitment to residents who “deserve a right to live in Cary.”

“I do believe in mixed-income developments. ... I do believe affordable housing development on church-owned land is a fantastic, brilliant idea,” Insprucker said. “Especially with so little land left in Cary. I also believe that (this) has to be done the right way according to the Cary Community Plan and Cary Housing Plan.”

Early voting runs from Thursday through Oct. 7.

This story was originally published September 20, 2023 at 4:29 PM with the headline "Mobile home tenants press Cary council candidates to do more on affordable housing."

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Kristen Johnson
The News & Observer
Kristen Johnson is a local government reporter covering Durham for The News & Observer. She previously covered Cary and western Wake County. Prior to coming home to the Triangle, she reported for The Fayetteville Observer and spent time covering politics and culture in Washington, D.C. She is an alumna of UNC at Charlotte and American University. 
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