Trailer Trashed

Hallandale draws a bead on its most vulnerable citizens

Joe DeFalco: "They think everyone who lives in a mobile home is a piece of garbage."
C. Stiles
Joe DeFalco: "They think everyone who lives in a mobile home is a piece of garbage."

Serge Leon sits on a step in his recently renovated mobile home. He has clear plastic tubes running into his nose and a rather dazed, faraway look in his eyes. Then it changes to something like defiance.

"I love my house," says the 64-year-old Haitian immigrant before slapping his hand on the new linoleum. "I fix it very good. But it gone."

Leon still has a bit of fight left, just not much. He's one of the last holdouts at Tower Mobile Home and RV Park, across the street from Gulfstream Park Racing & Casino. His landlord is demanding that he abandon the home in which he's sunk everything he had.

The deal stinks. With help from relatives, he paid $12,000 for the trailer three years ago and put another $6,000 into fixing it up. The landlord is only willing to give him a $5,000 relocation payment. That payoff won't go far and, with a monthly income of just $615.60, he simply can't afford another place.

The stress is taking its toll on him.

"I not sleeping," he says in his choppy English (though he speaks Spanish and French just fine). "My mind working all the time."

Now the landlord is putting the screws to him. If Leon hasn't abandoned his home by March 31, the payment is cut to $3,500. With each month thereafter it goes down $500 until there's nothing at all. All residents must be out by October.

Leon is not alone in staying put. About 20 other homeowners in the park, which once held 85 residents, are in the same predicament. Among them are a disabled woman, a terminal cancer patient (and decorated World War II veteran), and a retired Hallandale police officer with Parkinson's disease. They are the hardcore holdouts, the desperate ones with nowhere to go.

And the cutthroat landlord? It's not some greedy developer or faceless corporation — it's the City of Hallandale Beach, which has made one bad move after another leading up to this sad final showdown with some of its own most vulnerable residents.

"We're just as bad as the developers now," says the city's vice mayor, Bill Julian, who regrets his vote for the project. "We've become them."

Refreshing truth from a local politician, but even Julian isn't sure how to remedy the situation (though he has some interesting ideas). And even as the city is low-balling the homeowners, it wildly overpaid for the land, which is located next door to City Hall off Federal Highway. The city bought the 4.5-acre park last year for the obscene amount of $10.4 million. Could hardly have picked a worse time for the purchase, just as the land and housing bust began in earnest. The tract of land today might go for half that.

The stated reason for buying the tract was to expand bordering Bluesten Park. Why the athletic park needed to be enlarged, however, is a bit of a mystery, since the city still has no plan for what exactly it will actually do with the land.

So you have millions of wasted dollars and a half-baked plan. On top of that, the city's move only adds to one of the worst problems facing South Floridians: the dearth of affordable housing.

To expand the park, the city needed to get rid of the residents. Needless to say, the people at Tower (so named because it lies under the shadow of Hallandale's water tower) weren't pleased with the development.

Most of them had spent anywhere from $12,000 to $30,000 for their mobile homes, the vast majority of which were impossible to move. That makes the $5,000 (which is actually a bit more than the state-mandated payment) more an insult than an offer. And at $380 a month rent for their spot of land, there wasn't a less expensive place to live in Hallandale.

So they banded together. Every beaten-down group fighting City Hall needs a leader, and the Tower holdouts have a notable one: Joe DeFalco, AKA "The Outdoorsman."

The mustachioed DeFalco is unique at Tower in that he has enough money to live in an oceanfront penthouse condo if he wanted to (and has, at Parker Plaza in Hallandale). The Long Island-bred DeFalco made his name in the hunting game, doing cable television shows and writing a book titled The Complete Deer Hunt, which he initially self-published and which sold hundreds of thousands of copies.

His exploits not only gave him a moniker but also earned him a bit of celebrity. In 1983, he was the subject of a six-page feature story in Sports Illustrated headlined "Hey, You Wanna Deer?" He's hunted with Mickey Mantle and George Foreman and taught Burt Reynolds and Jon Voight to use the bow for their roles in the classic film Deliverance. He has an album of photos of himself posing with a slew of celebrities, from Alec Baldwin to Katie Holmes.

DeFalco was also a developer in New York. On his kitchen table is a signed holiday card from another acquaintance, Eliot Spitzer, which comes complete with a perfectly lighted photograph of the recently disgraced governor with his wife and three daughters.

He lives in the park because it's across the street from the track (DeFalco is a long-time racing aficionado who has invested in racehorses) and gives him privacy and peace. But since the city began running his neighbors out of the park and trying to force him out for a paltry $5,000 (he paid $21,000 and put another $35,000 into his immaculate three-bed two-bath mobile home), his life hasn't been very peaceful.

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  • Danny Kelley 03/27/2008 5:15:00 AM

    First off , I'm not writing to complain about the web site, however I am asking you to at least talk about and research the article "trailer trashed" on page 8 of the New Times Magizine. I'm a victim of the extortion I lived there for two and a half years then bought a trailer, lived there another 16 months, then one beautiful morning i was told to get out! I was told to move! I'm on disability with no family and no where to go, yet staring me in the face was an article written in the Dade County paper the "Miami Herald" that my trailer park in Broward County, my home, had been sold! Sold to the city of Hallandale for an enormous over inflated price of 10.4 million dollars (that they had to borrow). With no money to use to build with, just with the persistence of getting us out of our homes. Where is the justification for such actions ??? The city of Hallandale has really blundered this time. They managed to throw out, evict, and condemn 85 people, who were old and on disability, their minds and their wallets stretched to the limit all ready and for what? They came in and stoled our homes, forced us to abandon our belongings and in some cases our pets with an iron fist. I have to say the Urban Group is good at their jobs they sure put a scare in me! Well I found the first and cheapest apt. (with no help from no one) and at the rate of payments going out I'll be homeless by Christmas. i have exhausted all of my savings and even had to borrow just to get by. I've lost my home and sanity not to mention my respect to the people who have taken every shred of confidence and self esteem I had of myself. Me, along side 84 other people have been bamboozled out of our homes and property so someone somewhere can feel real good about themselves in their cozy little homes in their cozy little world! well if they think were just going to fade away their wrong because one day, they too will pick up the paper and read their future, planned out in black and white for tehm. Law suits are being put together as I write and will be filed at the proper time and put together for the victims of their combined actions. We will not be forgotten.... anyone within ear shot of this letter Please feel free to get involved , the people of the park are in dire need of affordable housing. Sincerely, Danny Kelley p.s. Congratulations to Bob Norman on such a truthful and meaningful article on page 8 of the New Times March 27-April 2, 2008 edition

 

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