This article is remedial and essential to public interest, safety,
health and welfare. It establishes minimum standards for the continued
use and occupancy of all manufactured home communities. This article
shall be known as the city’s mobile home park regulations.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 1, adopted 10/18/07)
Accessory building.
A subordinate building, the use of which is incidental to
that of the main building on the same lot.
Alteration.
Replacing, adding, modifying, removing, or exchanging manufactured
homes or other structures, moving in a new or additional manufactured
home or other structure, changing or adding manufactured home community
plot or lot lines, and changing manufactured home community property
lines.
Back end.
The opposite end from the front end of the unit.
Back side.
The opposite side from the front side of the unit.
Building code.
The most recently adopted edition of the electrical code,
building code, fire code, mechanical code, and plumbing code adopted
by ordinance and currently in effect in the city, and the Manufactured
Housing Standards Act, chapter 1201 et seq. of the Texas Occupations
Code.
Building official.
The person employed by the city to perform building permit
review and inspections.
City official.
The city manager, police chief, fire marshal, fire chief,
building official/inspector, code compliance officer, and city engineer.
Clubhouse.
A building or rooms accessible to all residents, which is
used for meetings or recreational use.
Dangerous manufactured home.
A manufactured home or any other structure in or around which conditions exist as outlined in section
3.04.014 of this article, which could possibly threaten the health, safety or general welfare of any person.
Director.
The city manager or his/her designee.
Driveway.
A private accessway leading from a street or other thoroughfare
to a building, garage, recreational vehicle or HUD-code manufactured
home.
Dwelling.
A structure, including a HUD-code manufactured home or recreational
vehicle, occupied for a residential purpose.
Dwelling unit.
Any room or group of rooms occupied, or which is intended
or designed to be occupied, as the home or residence of one (1) individual,
group of individuals, family, or household for housekeeping purposes.
Family.
One (1) or more persons related by blood, adoption or marriage
and who are living together as a single housekeeping unit.
Fire chief.
The fire chief of the city or his or her designated representative.
Front end.
The end of the unit where the tongue would be attached or
where the headlights are located.
Front side.
The side of the unit where the front door is located or left
side when facing the tongue or headlights.
Garbage.
Putrescible animal and vegetable wastes resulting from the
handling, preparation, cooking and consumption of food.
Habitable room.
A room or enclosed floor space used or designed to be used
for living, sleeping, cooking or eating purposes, but not including
bathrooms, water closet compartments, laundries, pantries, foyers,
or communicating corridors, closets or storage spaces.
HUD.
The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.
HUD-code manufactured home.
A structure constructed on or after June 15, 1976, according
to the rules of the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development, transportable in one or more sections, which, in the
traveling mode, is eight body feet or more in width or 40 body feet
or more in length, or, when erected on-site, is 320 or more square
feet, and which is built on a permanent chassis and designed to be
used as a dwelling with or without a permanent foundation when connected
to the required utilities, and includes the plumbing, heating, air-conditioning,
and electrical systems of the home.
Installation.
The construction of the foundation systems, whether temporary
or permanent, HUD-code manufactured home, HUD-code manufactured home
component, or HUD-code manufactured home accessory, including fuel
tanks, on or near the foundation system, and includes supporting,
blocking, leveling, securing, anchoring, and properly connecting multiple
or expandable sections or components, and minor adjustments.
Law.
Federal, state, or local statute, ordinance, court decision,
rule, or regulation.
Litter.
Garbage, refuse, rubbish, and all other waste material deposited
on the ground or in any place other than in an approved garbage receptacle.
LPG.
Liquefied petroleum gas.
Manager.
A person who is responsible for the day-to-day operations
of a manufactured home community.
Manufactured home community.
Any lot, tract, or parcel of land used in whole or in part
for parking two (2) or more HUD-code manufactured homes.
Manufactured home unit plot.
A section of the manufactured home community designated for
the placement of a single HUD-code manufactured home.
Mobile home.
A structure that was constructed before June 15, 1976, transportable
in one or more sections, which, in the traveling mode, is eight body
feet or more in width or 40 body feet or more in length, or, when
erected on-site, is 320 or more square feet, and which is built on
a permanent chassis and designed to be used as a dwelling unit with
or without a permanent foundation when connected to the required utilities,
and includes the plumbing, heating, air-conditioning, and electrical
systems of the home.
Occupant.
Any person over one (1) year of age living, sleeping, cooking,
eating in or having actual possession of a dwelling unit.
Office.
The location on the property where business is conducted
for the property.
Owner.
A person claiming, or in whom is vested, the ownership, dominion,
or title to real or personal property, including but not limited to
the owner of a fee simple title; the holder of a life estate; the
holder of a leasehold estate for an initial term of five (5) years
or more; the buyer in a contract for deed; a mortgagee, receiver,
executor, or trustee in control of real property; the agent of an
owner in fee simple, the holder of a leasehold, lessor, sublessor,
mortgagee, receiver, executor, or trustee; lessor, or sublessor of
a dwelling.
Permit.
An official document or certificate issued by the city authorizing
performance of a specified activity.
Person.
An individual, company, corporation, business trust, estate
trust, partnership, association, any other group, two or more persons
having a joint or common interest, or any legal or commercial entity.
Police chief.
The police chief of the city or his or her designated representative.
Porch or deck.
A structure adjacent to an entry door of a HUD-code manufactured
home.
Premises.
A lot, plot or parcel of land, including any structure on
it.
Recreational vehicle.
A vehicle which is built on a single chassis, four hundred
(400) square feet or less when measured at the largest horizontal
projections, self-propelled or towable and designed primarily not
for use as a permanent dwelling unit, but as temporary living quarters
for recreational, camping, travel, or seasonal use.
Street.
Any roadway, fire lane, accessway or alley.
Structure.
That which is built or constructed; an edifice or building
of any kind, or any piece of work artificially built up or composed
of parts joined together in some definite manner.
Swimming pool.
Any structure, basin, chamber, spa, or tank containing an
artificial body of water for swimming, diving, physical fitness, or
recreational bathing and having a depth of two (2) feet or more at
any point. This phrase does not include lakes or creeks.
Tenant.
Any person who occupies a dwelling unit for living or dwelling
purposes with the property owner’s or landlord’s consent.
Travel trailer.
A structure, having no foundation other than a permanent
chassis with wheels, which is 12 body feet or less in width, and is
less than 40 body feet in length, and is designed to be used as a
dwelling with or without a permanent foundation. The term “travel
trailer” includes folding hardtop campers transported behind
a motor vehicle, truck-mounted campers attached to and transported
behind a motor vehicle or pickup, recreational vehicles, campers,
or similar types of temporary dwellings intended for short-term occupancy,
travel, and/or recreation.
Unit.
Any HUD-code manufactured home, washateria, office, clubhouse
and athletic facility.
Unit plot.
A piece of ground set aside and designated for occupancy
by one (1) HUD-code manufactured home.
Unit plot line.
The imaginary line around any HUD-code manufactured home
unit plot.
Washateria.
A self-service laundry room accessible to all residents,
which contains two (2) or more pairs of washers and dryers.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 2, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) Manufactured homes.
It is unlawful for any person to
park a manufactured home within the city for longer than forty-eight
(48) hours. Affirmative defenses to the section are:
(1) That the manufactured home is in a manufactured home community;
(2) That the manufactured home is a recreational vehicle parked in compliance
with the city zoning ordinance and all other applicable laws;
(3) That the manufactured home is parked on property where manufactured
homes are manufactured or sold and where no one occupies a manufactured
home as a dwelling or sleeping place; and
(4) That the manufactured home is parked on the property as a temporary
office or display unit and where no person occupies a manufactured
home as dwelling or sleeping place.
(b) Occupancy of recreational vehicles and travel trailers.
It is unlawful to use a recreational vehicle or travel trailer as
a dwelling unit, except as provided by this subsection. Recreational
vehicles and travel trailers are only allowed as dwelling units in
existing manufacturing home communities, on the specific lots where
they are located as of the effective date of this article.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 3, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) The
owner, licensee, and manager of each manufactured home community shall
keep a roster of all manufactured homes and recreational vehicles
located within the manufactured home community. The roster shall contain
the following information:
(1) The make, model and year of each manufactured home and recreational
vehicle;
(2) The vehicle identification number and name of the owner of each manufactured
home and the license number and name of the owner of each recreational
vehicle and the state issuing the license; and
(3) Dates of each manufactured home moved into and/or out of the manufactured
home community.
(b) The
owner or manager shall make the roster available for inspection at
all times by law enforcement officers, appropriate employees of the
city, and fire department personnel.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 9, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) It
is unlawful for any person to alter or expand any existing manufactured
home community unless he or she has a valid permit issued by the city
in the name of such person for the specific alteration or expansion.
All alterations or expansions of a manufactured home community shall
comply with the city subdivision ordinance, the city zoning ordinance
and the setback requirements of this article. The regulations in this
article will prevail if any other ordinances are in conflict with
this article. The fees to alter or expand any existing manufactured
home community will be listed in the city fee schedule.
(b) It
shall be unlawful for any mobile home owner, mobile home park owner,
or other person to replace an existing mobile home or add a mobile
home without first obtaining a permit from the city.
(c) All
applications for a permit shall contain the following:
(1) Name, address and telephone number of the applicant;
(2) Name, address and telephone number of the owner of the property;
(3) The address and legal description of the manufactured home community;
(4) A plot plan providing:
(A) The date of preparation, name of preparer, scale, and north point;
(B) Name of the manufactured home community and its owner;
(C) Location of property line boundaries and dimensions of the tract;
(D) Location and width of all accessways, driveways and parking areas;
(E) Proposed placement location of all manufactured homes; and
(F) All required front, rear and side setback lines in compliance with
this article.
(d) The
applicable fee of forty dollars ($40.00) shall be charged at the time
of permit application for moving a mobile home into a mobile home
community.
(e) It
is unlawful for any person to locate or relocate, alter, expand, or
construct a new manufactured home community unless he or she has a
valid permit issued by the city in the name of such person for the
specific placement, alteration, expansion or construction. All manufactured
home, recreational vehicle and accessory building placements, alterations,
extensions, or construction shall comply with applicable codes and
ordinances of the city.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 10, adopted 10/18/07)
When, upon review of the application and receipt of the required
fee, the city is satisfied that the proposed plan meets the requirements
of this article and all applicable laws, the appropriate city official
may issue a permit.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 11, adopted 10/18/07)
It is unlawful for any person to position, move, or locate,
or for a manufactured home community owner or manager to allow, permit,
or suffer any person to move, position, or locate, any manufactured
home, accessory building, or other structure within or into a manufactured
home community so that a violation of this article or other applicable
law is created or exacerbated.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 12, adopted 10/18/07)
The owner or manager of each manufactured home community in
the city shall provide in the manufactured home community:
(1) At
least one (1) driveway entrance or private street entering from a
public street into the manufactured home community that is at least
twenty-four (24) feet wide with a minimum turning radius of thirty
(30) feet.
(2) A
properly marked fire access roadway that abuts each manufactured home
plot and that is not less than twenty-four (24) feet wide at any point
with a thirty-foot turning radius and vertical clearance of not less
than fourteen (14) feet.
(3) Service
roads, fire lanes, accessways, private streets, and roadways constructed
and maintained so that they are weathertight and capable of supporting
the imposed load of a 40,000-pound fire department apparatus with
two-thirds (2/3) of the weight on the rear axle, capable of allowing
free passage of fire department apparatus. The city engineer may require
a manufactured home community owner to provide a laboratory testing
analysis with a certifying letter that the entire surface as stated
in the proceeding sentence is capable of meeting aforementioned conditions.
(4) Street
name signs at each end of each block of each platted public and private
street and unit numbers on each unit.
(5) Sidewalks,
parking spaces, parking lots, and other pavement maintained in a safe
and operable condition.
(6) Driveways
and parking for at least two (2) vehicles for each manufactured home
plot or lot may be constructed of an alternate design material with
approval of the city.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 13, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) It
is unlawful for any person to own or manage a manufactured home community
that contains any manufactured home built after 1976 that is not constructed
and installed in compliance with the Manufactured Housing Standards
Act, chapter 1201 et seq. of the Texas Occupations Code, and with
all laws, rules and regulations promulgated by the state department
of housing and community affairs pursuant to that act.
(b) It
is unlawful for any person to own, keep, or occupy a manufactured
home built after 1976 in the city limits that is not constructed and
installed in compliance with the Texas Manufactured Housing Standards
Act and with all laws, rules, and regulations promulgated by the state
department of housing and community affairs pursuant to that act.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 14, adopted 10/18/07)
It is unlawful for any person to own or manage a manufactured
home community that does not meet the following standards:
(1) Drainage.
Each manufactured home community and each
unit plot shall be properly graded and equipped to drain all surface
water in a safe and efficient manner.
(2) Maintenance of accessory structures and community buildings.
All accessory structures and community buildings in the manufactured
home community shall be maintained in a structurally sound and clean
condition, and kept free of any condition that might be detrimental
to the safety or health of any person.
(3) Collection and removal of waste.
Each manufactured home
community shall be provided with safe, clean, and adequate facilities
for the collection and removal of wastes and garbage.
(4) Electrical outlets.
Each manufactured home unit plot
shall be supplied with a separate electrical outlet supplying at least
one hundred ten (110) volts, permanently identified as belonging to
the individual plot it serves.
(5) Setbacks and separations.
Setbacks and separations shall
be maintained for all manufactured homes, accessory buildings and
other structures as follows:
(A) Porches and accessory buildings must be a minimum of five (5) feet
from the edge of an interior street and/or from any adjacent manufactured
home.
(B) A carport may be attached to the manufactured home it serves but
may not be closer than five (5) feet to any adjacent manufactured
home.
(C) A freestanding accessory structure shall be no closer than five (5)
feet to an adjacent manufactured home at any point. It is an affirmative
defense to this subsection that the accessory structure is located
within eight inches of the manufactured home it serves.
(D) Between any end of a manufactured home and [edge of] internal private
roadway: five (5) feet; or seventeen (17) feet from the center of
the road.
(E) Between any side of a manufactured home and edge of internal private
roadways: five (5) feet; or seventeen (17) feet from the center of
the road.
(F) Separations between manufactured homes:
(i) Front side to back side: Fifteen (15) feet.
(ii)
Front side to end: Fifteen (15) feet.
(iii)
End to end: Ten (10) feet.
(iv)
End to back side: Ten (10) feet.
(v) Front side to front side: Fifteen (15) feet.
(vi)
Back side to back side: Fifteen (15) feet.
(G) Setbacks from property lines of the mobile home park:
(i) Between any side of a manufactured home and the property line: Ten
feet (10').
(ii)
Between the end of the manufactured home and the property line:
Five feet (5').
(6) Exposed ground.
All exposed ground shall be covered
with pavement, stone screenings or other solid or semi-porous material,
or vegetative growth that is capable of eliminating soil erosion and
dust and that is free of holes and depressions that may injure a person
or property.
(7) Maintenance of drainage devices.
All drainage ditches,
culverts, and other drainage devices shall be maintained so that they
are free flowing and free of trash, debris, and all other obstacles.
(8) Fire hydrants.
Any manufactured home community established
after the effective date of this article shall have at least one (1)
fire hydrant maintained in compliance with all applicable laws within
five hundred (500) feet of each outside wall of each structure in
the manufactured home community, measured along a route approved by
the fire department. It is an affirmative defense to this section
that an alternative design has been approved by the fire chief and/or
that the manufactured home community existed before the effective
date of this article.
(9) Trees, tree limbs and branches.
No trees, tree limbs,
or branches may exist that are reasonably capable of damaging a structure
or that are reasonably capable of causing injury to a person or which
are within fourteen (14) feet of any accessway or fire lane measured
vertically from the surface of the street or fire lane to the lowest
point of the tree limb or branch.
(10) Excavations or other dangerous conditions.
No holes,
excavations, sharp protrusions, or any other object or condition may
exist on the property which may cause injury to a person.
(11) Uncovered wells, cesspools or cisterns.
No wells, cesspools,
and cisterns that are not securely covered or securely closed.
(12) Storage of pool chemicals.
All pool chemicals must be
stored in compliance with all applicable laws.
(13) Broken sewer lines.
All broken sewer line(s) must be
repaired or replaced and all residue must be removed, and affected
areas treated with a suitable disinfectant, within seventy-two (72)
hours of notification or discovery that the sewer line is broken.
(14) Address numbers and other required signage.
All street
address numbers, unit numbers, lot or plot numbers, and any additional
signage as required by applicable laws must be provided and maintained
on each manufactured home and structure, and on the property.
(15) Fences.
All fences on the property must be maintained
in compliance with all applicable laws.
(16) Swimming pools and spas.
All swimming pools, spas, and
pool fences and gates must be installed and maintained in compliance
with all applicable laws.
(17) Electrical supply lines.
All supply lines for electrical
service to each dwelling unit intended for human occupancy must be
installed and maintained in safe, operative condition and in compliance
with all applicable laws.
(18) Water and sewer systems.
All exterior water and sewer
systems must be installed and maintained in compliance with all applicable
laws.
(19) Fire lanes and paved areas.
All fire lanes and required
paved areas must be installed and maintained with legible parking
and fire lane markings in compliance with all applicable laws.
(20) Access control devices.
Any vehicular or pedestrian
access control devices must be installed and maintained in compliance
with all applicable laws.
(21) Fuel supply lines and fuel containers.
All fuel supply
lines to each dwelling unit and all fuel containers for each dwelling
unit that is heated by natural gas or propane or has a water-heating
device or stove fueled by natural gas or propane must be installed
and maintained in compliance with all applicable laws.
(22) Sidewalks, ramps, bridges, parking lots, stairs and steps.
All sidewalks, ramps, bridges, parking lots, stairs, and steps
must be installed and maintained in safe and operative condition and
in compliance with all applicable laws.
(23) Maintenance of yards.
Yards around and adjacent to manufactured
homes or mobile home parks shall be maintained in accordance with
applicable city ordinances and state or federal laws.
(24) Storage area.
A manufactured home community may provide
a storage area for residents’ use for boats, recreational vehicles,
campers, and additional vehicles, as well as park maintenance equipment
and supplies, as long as it is screened from all adjacent properties
or if visible from the public right-of-way by a six-foot minimum blind
fence.
(25) Exemption from setback and separation requirements.
The standards set forth in subsection
(5) of this section shall apply to any manufactured home moved into, onto, or within a manufactured home community after the effective date of this article. It shall be an affirmative defense to prosecution under the provisions of subsection
(5) of this section that the manufactured home in question has not moved since the effective date of this article.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 15, adopted 10/18/07)
Each owner or manager of a manufactured home community within
the city which may be used for human habitation or residence shall
comply with the provisions of this article and all other applicable
laws for each manufactured home community over which he or she has
control.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 16, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) Maintenance of facilities and equipment.
The owner or
manager of a manufactured home community shall provide adequate supervision
to maintain the community and its facilities and equipment and to
keep it in an operable and sanitary condition at all times.
(b) Supervision of placement of manufactured homes.
The
owner or manager of a manufactured home community shall supervise
the placement of each manufactured home on its lot or plot, insuring
safe installation and set-up in compliance with all applicable laws.
(c) Supervision of installation of LPG containers.
The owner
or manager of a manufactured home community within the city shall
ensure safe installation of liquid petroleum gas (LPG) containers,
including propane gas, in compliance with all applicable laws, and
shall ensure that they are securely anchored to the ground directly
beneath the container.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 17, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) An
owner or manager shall disclose to a tenant or to a city staff member
acting in an official capacity:
(1) The name and street address of the holder of record title of the
dwelling rented by another tenant or inquired about by the applicable
city official; and
(2) If an entity located off-site from the dwelling is primarily responsible
for managing the dwelling, the name and street address of the management
company.
(b) Disclosure to a tenant under subsection
(a) must be made by:
(1) Giving the information in writing to the tenant on or before the
seventh day after receipt of the tenant’s request for the information;
(2) Posting the information in a conspicuous place in the dwelling or
the office of the on-site manager or on the outside of the entry door
to the office of the on-site manager; or
(3) Including the information in a copy of the tenant’s lease or
in written rules provided to the tenant.
(c) Disclosure of information to a tenant may be made under subsection
(b)(2) before the tenant requests the information.
(d) Disclosure
of information must be made by giving the information in writing to
the city staff member on or before the seventh day after the date
the owner or manager receives the city’s request.
(e) A
correction to the information may be made by any of the methods authorized
for providing the information.
(f) For
the purposes of this section, an owner or property manager may disclose
either an actual name or names or an assumed name if an assumed name
certificate has been recorded with the county clerk.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 18, adopted 10/18/07)
(a) A
dangerously damaged or deteriorated manufactured home whose condition,
in the building official’s judgment, presents a substantial
danger to its occupants or adjoining property or persons and which
has some or all of, but not necessarily limited to, the following
structural deficiencies:
(1) Parts or pieces that may fall and injure a person or property.
(2) Damage by fire, explosion, wind, vandalism, or elements of nature
so that there may be a danger to life or safety or to the general
health and welfare of a person.
(3) Absence of the availability of an essential utility for seventy-two
(72) hours or more, in an occupied structure.
(4) Any leaking sewage and/or exposed wastewater lines.
(5) Inaccessibility of any part of the community to fire, police, EMS
or other emergency vehicles.
(b) Individuals,
owners, or tenants who allow their dwelling units to fall into a state
of disrepair are in violation of this article and may be cited and
fined. Owners or managers of a manufactured home community who allow
the community to fall into disrepair may also be cited and fined.
(Ordinance 440-2007, sec. 21, adopted 10/18/07)
In the event that a HUD-code manufactured home occupies a lot
in the city, whether located in a manufactured home community or not,
the owner of the HUD-code manufactured home may remove the HUD-code
manufactured home from its location and place another HUD-code manufactured
home on the same property, provided that the replacement is a newer
HUD-code manufactured home, and is at least as large in living space
as the prior HUD-code manufactured home. Except in the case of a fire
or natural disaster, the owner of the HUD-code manufactured home is
limited to a single replacement of the HUD-code manufactured home
on the same property.
(Ordinance 737-2018 adopted 12/20/18)