Simonton Street Trailer Park: Forsaken Promises…

 
 

Issue 24 Trailer Park for web

It’s a completely dilapidated trailer kept very clean and homey, enveloped by a reef of flowers, a contradiction explained away by the one single sign painted on the door:  “Life is Good.”  Or at least it was.

Reyna and sonToday, gesturing with one hand to support her plea in broken English and with the other hand holding her two-year old son, Reyna F is getting pretty frantic about her family’s relocation away from the Simonton Street trailer park.  The park is scheduled to close permanently on December 5th. It will leave a hundred or so people desperately trying to squeeze themselves into Key West’s jam-packed rental market.

“If you don’t have at least $ 3,000 you can not rent anything in Key West,” she explained, “They promised to help us relocate.  But we came and asked for the $ 2,500 and they said we will only get the money after we have moved.  But we counted on the money to pay first month and deposit.”

What $ 2,500 is she talking about?  That would be the $ 2,500 that developer, Joe Cleghorn, promised to give to each tenant to “help them relocate”.  It may have been very generous of him, but actually according to some, he didn’t really have a choice:  He was one vote short of having the City Commission approve his development agreement.  At the last minute, Cleghorn managed to swing Commissioner Lopez’ vote by promising to help his tenants find new rentals and to give them each $ 2,500 to make the move.


The problem is that when the residents tried to cash in on Cleghorn’s promises they were sent away by an array of new excuses and conditions.

They told me, “would you take one thousand dollars cash today?” says Santo C.,  “I didn’t go for their ‘bargain’.  I had made a deal with a landlord for an apartment.  I needed the full amount.”

“Where am I going to go,” said Carlos M, “after all these years I now have 7 dogs. They are small dogs, but who is going to rent to me?”

Rita W. is one of the few who owns her own trailer.  It’s got a running engine.  It’s ready to move. BUT there is nowhere to go.  Cleghorn had told the City Commission he would relocate trailer owners to Lazy Lakes Trailer Park at Mile Marker 18 – but this is what Rita told us:

Rita and Doggie“When we went up there to set up the move they said we needed to be put on a ‘waiting list’.”

At least one elderly couple we talked to seemed to be completely unaware they were going to have to relocate.

“I’m going to move to KOTS,” said Candy X, referring to the homeless shelter on Stock Island.

Her neighbor lives in a trailer so caught up in the roots of a gigantic fig tree that it might as well be a tree house.  She has a more elaborate plan.  She is going to move out and store all of her belongings beneath another trailer and try to cash the Cleghorn $ 2,500 and from there try to find a new place.  In response to the question, “Aren’t you concerned about ending up homeless?” she said she’d be fine because all of her belongings would be out of the rain beneath the trailer.

Really?  Is this really the way we treat each other in our “One Human Family”? These are not snow-birding homeless coming here for a winter vacation.  These are homeless of our own making; the result of our own inability and unwillingness to keep the fabric of our society from being shredded.  Under our current code, or so we are told, the developers of the trailer park are not even required to maintain 30% of units as affordable.

And while we’re at it:  Is this the way of the Catholic Church? To throw families, old people, and the poorest of the poor onto the street?   Because on paper, it appears that the Archdiocese of Miami may still own that trailer park.  Cleghorn “bought” the trailer park on April 30, 2009 for $2.4 Million.  However, it appears from the public records that he didn’t put any of his own money into the purchase.  He got a woman named Kimberly Parker to front $ 550,000 towards a down payment.  According to the Promissory Note filed with the Monroe County Clerk of Court, that Balloon Mortgage was due in May of 2011.

That same day in April 2009 Cleghorn’s Southernmost Cabana Resort paid the Archdiocese of Miami, a $ 480,000 down payment and signed on to a Mortgage and Promissory Note promising to pay monthly interest-only payments of $ 8,800 with the principal balance of $ 1,920,000 due on April 30, 2013.  But, the Monroe County Clerk’s website contains no documents showing satisfaction of either mortgage.

In fact, Southernmost Cabanas Resorts [Cleghorn’s company] is actively seeking investors to back their project and points to a “total cost of acquisition of the land inclusive of closing costs [of] $ 1,627,400” and development cost projections include a “partner buyout” of $ 500,000.  See link to website here.

Cleghorn has a plentiful history of foreclosure suits with banks on previous land deals including BB & T, Penny Mac, First State Bank, Branch Banking Trust, Citibank, Flagstar Bank, and Centennial Bank.

It appears that none of Cleghorn’s big-hearted promises to tenants of the park have come to pass.  He promised to put together a “relocation team” which would assure that people would not end up on the street.  But no one we talked to at the trailer park has seen or heard of any such team.

At press time we are waiting for an answer from the Archdiocese of Miami as to their position on the treatment of these tenants and any possible default on Cleghorn’s 2009 purchase agreement.  Stay tuned.

See previous article on this topic [The Gentrification of Simonton Street Trailer Park] here.

  No Responses to “Simonton Street Trailer Park: Forsaken Promises…”

  1. Shameful Shameful. I hope the City Commission is reading this.

  2. great reporting and i for one look forward to the ‘stay tuned’. seems cleghorn has many skeletons in the closet or perhaps now out of the closet. imho the renters from the well known ‘trailer park’ need to do a tennant’s association quickly and hire one of our well heeled local attourneys hopefully pro-bono to put a freeze on any eviction proceedings until all the details are sorted out which may take a year or more from what i gather from the convoluted nature of cleghorn’s supposed ‘deal’. i say supposed since it seems cleghorn is not very willing to part with 2500 per tennent until they are gone and then its possibly a ‘good luck collecting’ dance routine and it also seems he did not meet the terms of the agreement and close the deal with the church. and btw shame on the church for not providing for the renters originally in the deal. business is business but i thought the whole purpose of the church was to assist the unfortunate? however it would seem the tennents were thrown to the wolves so to speak!

  3. Looks like the level of intelligence of the city Commission is floating below water again. They can’t get streets redone to benefit citizens and they sure do not have any idea how to make people keep promises. PUT IT IN WRITING AND MAKE THE CONTRACTOR PUT MONEY IN THE BANK BEFORE HAND TO ENSURE PROMISES ARE KEPT. Then the bank would pay each trailer enter after they have moved out. Contractors must love doing business in Key West. They don’t have to keep their word.