Mark Weiss, J.D., has said in the interview that follows that he has been involved in the manufactured for the better part of forty years. During those four decades, Weiss has had a proverbial front row seat to the legislative, advocacy, and other details that he addresses in the exclusive interview with ManufacturedHomeProNews.com (MHProNews.com) that follows. This interview has been timed for release ahead of the Louisville Manufactured Housing Show for reasons that will be apparent to the well informed but will be specifically addressed in a planned follow-up article. Third-party artificial intelligence (AI) fact-checks will also be addressed in planned follow-ups. Board members, senior staff, and attorneys in the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) orbit are going to be invited to respond to this interview with Weiss, who is the President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR). As Weiss says, those new to the industry, as well as those peering into why manufactured housing has been underperforming in the 21st century should benefit from this Q&A. It will arguably also serve as a reminder to longer time industry professionals, investors, affordable housing advocates, and others as to why the industry finds itself performing at less than 30 percent of the industry’s last production high in 1998, despite favorable legislation, a growing population, and an administration that asserts it is in favor of regulatory reforms that should benefit consumer affordability and smaller businesses.
The exclusive Q&A is presented in Part I. This interview with Mark Weiss, J.D., was conducted by email for precision.
Part I. MHProNews interview with Mark Weiss, J.D., President and CEO of the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR)
MHProNews Q1. It’s now been nearly one year since President Trump took office. In the January 2025 issue of MHARR Issues and Perspectives, entitled “Trump 2.0 – The Industry’s Second Chance,” you wrote, “[W]ith a second Trump presidential term about to begin, and with a renewed and even more vigorous emphasis on regulatory reform and the availability of affordable housing being two of the central features of that impending administration, the industry cannot and must not fail yet again to achieve fundamental and long-overdue reform.” (Emphasis in original). Instead, you wrote, MHI in particular, as the self-proclaimed national representative of the industry’s post-production sector, must be focused on “resolving and remedying, once and for all, the … principal bottlenecks … that have stunted the growth and expansion of the HUD Code industry….”
Putting aside, for the moment, excessive and discriminatory U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) “energy conservation” regulations, which relate to both the production and post-production sectors of the industry, the remaining two fundamental bottlenecks, which lie fully within the post-production sector, are: (1) discriminatory and exclusionary state and local zoning laws; and (2) non-implementation of the “Duty to Serve” mandate with respect to manufactured home personal property consumer loans.
So, the question becomes, after one year of Trump 2.0, what – if anything – has happened with respect to the elimination of these two fundamental post-production bottlenecks plaguing the industry?
Mark Weiss A1. As you correctly point out, the two principal bottlenecks that are – and have been – severely suppressing the mainstream HUD Code industry, i.e., discriminatory zoning exclusion (which is directly addressed by the enhanced federal preemption of the Manufactured Housing Improvement Act of 2000 – 2000 Reform Law) and a lack of federal securitization and secondary market support for manufactured home consumer chattel loans (which is directly addressed by the Duty to Serve Underserved Markets – DTS — provision of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008), are national-level issues that lie within the industry’s post-production sector. Put differently, they do not relate to the nuts and bolts of the production of the home in the factory but, rather, what happens with – and can happen with – the home once it has been labelled as a HUD Code home by the manufacturer and enters the stream of commerce.
So, that being said, there are actually two elements to the question you have posed. The first is, “who within the national-level representation of the HUD Code industry is responsible to address and resolve these uniquely-destructive post-production sector issues? Then, with that responsibility clearly identified, defined and understood, the second – and ultimate – question is “what has been accomplished to remedy those post-production bottlenecks within the favorable regulatory environment provided by the second Trump Administration.”
With that framework established, the first question has an answer that cannot reasonably be disputed. Quite simply, as MHARR has maintained since it was first organized in 1985, it With that framework established, the first question has an answer that cannot reasonably be disputed. Quite simply, as MHARR has maintained since it was first organized in 1985, it (i.e., MHARR or the Association for Regulatory Reform — ARR — as it was known then). is a national organization of manufactured housing producers which is dedicated, in its founding charter, to address regulatory issues (and closely-related ancillary matters) affecting the production of manufactured housing and manufactured housing producers. Conversely, as the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) has asserted repeatedly, it (i.e., MHI) is a national-level organization that represents all sectors of the industry. And, needless to say, “all sectors” necessarily includes the post-production sector, which MHI has represented at least since its absorption of the former National Manufactured Housing Federation decades ago, and from which it receives substantial representational dues. MHARR, by contrast, has no post-production sector members and receives no dues from the post-production sector.
That said, however, after the enactment of the 2000 Reform Law, MHARR’s founders – while certain that production-related aspects of the new law would be aggressively advanced and promoted by MHARR – had serious remaining concerns about the post-production sector and its sector-specific problems, and the outflow impact that those problems would have on the broader industry and its homebuyers. As a result, the founders instructed MHARR to continuously monitor the post-production sector and — if its interests were not properly defended by MHI – to alert the broader industry and consumers to that situation. And that is what we have done – and will continue to do.
So, as far as the first element of your question is concerned, post-production issues and post-production problems fall within the exclusive ambit of MHI’s representation and responsibility. And with that established, the answer to the second element of the question is actually quite simple. The answer is “nothing.” Or at least nothing with any publicly reported or publicly evident impacts and/or tangible results. And again, let me emphasize that I’m talking here about the exclusionary zoning and DTS bottlenecks. The DOE energy standards are a separate and different matter that I’ll address separately before we’re finished.
The hard reality though, is that MHI has spent most (if not all) of its public energy in 2025 touting its work on – and support for – the ROAD to Housing Act in the Senate and, more recently, its counterpart in the House. And while these bills – which MHARR has publicly supported – would address the long-lingering “permanent chassis” issue and would establish HUD supremacy over manufactured housing construction and safety standards (which is addressed in greater detail below), they do not include provisions that would definitively address, remedy and resolve the primary national-level post-production sector industry bottlenecks which continue to harm the manufactured housing industry and the consumers who rely on the industry’s homes. MHARR has pointed this out repeatedly as the bills have been considered, and has even prepared and offered specific amendment language designed to close these major loopholes. Yet despite the undisputable destructive impact that these post-production bottlenecks have had on the industry — with 2025 annual production in danger of falling below that for 2024 – MHI has chosen not to publicly and officially support either the MHARR proposed amendments or other similar remedial language.
What the industry is left with then, after the first year of the second Trump Administration, is a proposed bill that would correct yesterday’s problems, while leaving today’s perennial industry bottlenecks unaddressed, unresolved and still an ongoing existential problem with industry production and shipments continuing to lag far behind historical norms and even the reduced numbers of recent years.
MHProNews Q2. Can you be more specific about the ways in which the first year of President Trump’s second term has “been wasted” from an industry regulatory perspective?
Mark Weiss A2. Well, MHI’s emphasis on the currently-pending legislation – as I alluded to in my response to your first question – essentially “misses the boat.” Sure, we should all want the “permanent chassis” mandate removed from the law. Its anachronistic and it limits or makes more costly certain installation configurations where manufactured homes could provide a cost-effective solution for more Americans in more and more diverse locations and areas. But that, in itself, is low-hanging fruit, not a real or significant challenge maintained by those who wish to suppress the mainstream manufactured housing industry or stifle (or eliminate) it as a competitor in the housing market.
Put simply, MHI is three decades behind the curve on this issue. MHARR had successfully included an optional chassis provision in an early 1990s bill to update the 1974 law, dubbed the “Hiler Amendment” after its chief sponsor, Rep. John Hiler of Indiana. Before a final conference committee vote on the bill, however, MHI withdrew its support and the amendment failed to advance.
Aside from that, the HUD supremacy language has significant weaknesses that could well undermine its utility as a safety valve against unreasonable non-HUD regulation. I don’t want to publicly explain those weaknesses here, but I have noted them in other contexts and they are significant.
So, bottom line, even if the current ROAD legislation goes through and is adopted, it will not do anything, per se, to address and resolve the industry’s major national-level post-production bottlenecks going forward.
As I noted, MHARR has drafted amendment language which, if added to the ROAD bills could remedy these bottlenecks, but MHI – to the extent that we know — has not opted to support those amendments. And without those amendments, the principal bottlenecks will just drag-on, suppressing industry production.
For those who care, the evidence is already available. As MHARR has detailed many times, industry production, even after “recovering” to some extent from the severe shock of the 2008-2009 financial crisis, has never – over the past two decades – even approached the consistent annual production numbers that were routine decades ago. And even having “stabilized” at or about the old “benchmark” figure of 100,000 new homes per year, 2023 industry production fell below 100,000 homes and 2025 production is in danger of doing so based on the latest HUD data.
Meanwhile, the nation has – in office – an administration, led by President Trump, that is ideologically committed to the reduction of federal regulation that needlessly increases costs for consumers. This commitment, moreover, has been especially emphasized by the Administration within the housing sector. Quite simply, the Administration, through its public statements and actions, has prioritized a reduction in federal regulations targeting private sector businesses and especially the housing sector and smaller businesses within the housing sector (as shown particularly by the U.S. Small Business Administration’s De-Regulatory Strike Force announcement in December 2025).
How more straightforward could this be? The housing sector includes us. The vast majority of HUD Code industry businesses are small businesses. HUD Code consumers are Americans in need of affordable housing.
This is an open invitation for the industry to aggressively seek, pursue (and achieve) fundamental regulatory reform through the full and proper implementation of the enhanced federal preemption of the 2000 Reform Law and federal securitization and secondary market support for manufactured housing consumer chattel loans in accordance with DTS. But we cannot achieve what we do not seek. MHI’s failure to seek and demand such fundamental reforms is a self-fulfilling prophesy.
MHProNews Q3. Well, let’s address the pending “ROAD to Housing” legislation. Can you explain how that would principally benefit higher-cost manufactured homes (as well as the market-dominant consumer financing providers under the Berkshire Hathaway umbrella) rather than mainstream, affordable manufactured housing consumers?
Mark Weiss A3. The answer to your question lies in the intersection or inter-connection between Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s non-implementation of the DTS mandate and the permanent chassis recission of the pending ROAD bill.
As MHARR has pointed out repeatedly, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (and the Federal Housing Finance Agency – FHFA – as their federal regulator) have violated DTS for nearly two decades by refusing to provide any support whatsoever for the industry’s manufactured home chattel loans which dominate the consumer lending sector, comprising more than 70% of all new manufactured home consumer purchase loans. Instead, the entire implementation of DTS has been within the manufactured housing real estate sector (i.e., used to finance homes sited and titled as real estate). Within this sector, both MHI and its Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary members have prioritized, advocated and advanced the production of so-called “cross-mod” homes. Titled as real estate and designed to mimic site-built homes, these “cross-mod” homes have a purchase price that is significantly higher than that of mainstream, affordable manufactured homes, but are strongly favored for secondary market and securitization support by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, allegedly pursuant to DTS.
Rather than taking an effective stand against Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s discrimination against mainstream affordable manufactured housing and mainstream affordable housing consumers, MHI, through the chassis removal provision of the ROAD bills, appears to be priming the waters for what it expects will be a greater production and sales level for more costly manufactured homes (including but not limited to so-called “cross-mods”) that – being built without a chassis – would be more easily suited to annexation to real estate and, therefore, financed as real estate.
While this would arguably benefit the Berkshire Hathaway entities by increasing the production and financing of more costly “cross-mod” and similar real estate-financed manufactured homes (under but not exclusively pursuant to DTS), the increase in these more costly homes would come at the expense of the industry’s mainstream affordable homes which have been the backbone of the HUD Code industry and its economy for decades. Effectively, then, the effort to eliminate the current permanent chassis requirement would create a financing advantage for the producers (and financers) of more costly real estate-financed manufactured homes. But, it does not solve the problem of “affordability” that mainstream manufactured housing can readily and abundantly provide if enhanced federal preemption and DTS support were both fully and properly implemented.
MHProNews Q4. Looking at the “principal industry bottlenecks” that MHARR has identified and analyzed, let’s address each of those in the questions that follow, and why the resolution of each is crucial to the industry’s evolution and expansion to reach its full, unbridled potential.
First, let’s come back to DOE energy regulation, as previously promised. Can you give us a brief summary of how that got started and where it has gone over the years, because it’s been such a long, tortuous process, I can imagine that many in the industry today do not know the full story of what has occurred, in order to have a full understanding and appreciation of where the entire matter stands today. Can you explain, briefly?
Mark Weiss A4. Sure. For better or worse, having been affiliated with MHARR and the industry for so many years, I’m probably one of the few people still active today who was around for the beginning of the so-called “energy regulation” saga for manufactured homes.
Energy special interests – i.e., “climate change” ideologues and other related hangers on – decided in the early years of this century that HUD had dragged its feet on adopting manufactured home energy standards as directed by Congress in the early 1990s (an entire saga in and of itself). They were also intent on nationalizing energy regulation for buildings under the guise of the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) — an International Code Council (ICC) code where they and their allies exercised undue influence – and saw manufactured housing energy regulation as an easy vehicle to advance that objective. So, when the opportunity came – with congressional consideration of the so-called Energy Independence and Conservation Act of 2007 (EISA) – they had their congressional allies insert a provision in that law that did two basic things. First, it transferred jurisdiction over manufactured housing energy standards from HUD – a housing agency – to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), at that point a collection of like-minded climate ideologues. Second, it directed DOE to adopt manufactured home energy standards based upon the “latest edition” of the IECC subject to consideration of purchase and operating cost impacts.
And that is where the matter stood, at least publicly, from 2007 to 2014. DOE published an early Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) in 2010, but did little else on the public record.
Then, in 2014, seemingly out of nowhere, DOE publicly announced the establishment of a “negotiated rulemaking” regarding manufactured housing energy standards and the creation of a negotiated rulemaking committee. Through subsequent Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, MHARR received documents showing that the DOE “negotiated rulemaking” was requested by a group of energy special interest actors and MHI. Based on secret negotiations among the special interest participants, the “negotiated rulemaking” was planned and targeted to be, essentially, a “rubber stamp” designed to provide official cover and a facial veneer of legitimacy for a regulatory framework that had already been developed behind closed doors by the same group of special interest actors (and MHI). Accordingly, that group approached DOE and proposed a negotiated rulemaking for manufactured housing energy standards with a “minimum number of meetings” and a two-month timeframe for the supposed development of complex and potentially costly technical standards. Those limitations, however, were obviously proposed with the knowledge that the “negotiated rulemaking” process itself would be a fraudulent “red herring” designed to cover up the collusion underlying the entire process. This group, accordingly, in collusion with DOE, rigged the so-called negotiated rulemaking process to deliver and presumably legitimize a known, pre-ordained and pre-agreed result.
The one thing the group did not count on, however, was MHARR insisting that it be included in the negotiated rulemaking committee, and then engaging in extensive FOIA requests to uncover the truth when it became apparent that the entire “negotiated rulemaking” process, as structured by DOE in alignment with the group, was a sham.
Ultimately, after an “extension” of the term of the negotiated rulemaking committee, MHARR cast the only “no” vote against the committee’s proposed regulatory “term sheet.” This vote reflected not only MHARR’s conclusion that the entire DOE process had been corrupted, but that the proposed DOE standards were excessive, unnecessary and would needlessly devastate both the HUD Code industry and manufactured housing consumers.
And, needless to say, MHARR has continued to oppose the DOE standards in all of their various iterations and mutations ever since, for the same essential reasons – the only national industry organization to do so from day-one.
In short, manufactured homes already have energy costs that are lower across all energy types than site-built homes. There is no legitimate basis for imposing discriminatory and excessive energy standards on HUD Code manufactured homes and unfairly penalizing the lower and moderate-income Americans who rely on the inherent affordability of mainstream HUD Code homes. Nor is there any legitimate basis for separating federal jurisdiction over manufactured housing energy standards from all other manufactured home construction and safety standards and vesting that separate jurisdiction in DOE.
For all these reasons, accordingly, the DOE energy standards (and proposed enforcement regulations) must be withdrawn. Moreover, EISA section 413, which purports to establish such DOE jurisdiction, should be repealed. That repeal, moreover – and the repeal of the DOE standards — should be express and not simply implied, as, for example, under the ROAD Act with its erstwhile HUD “supremacy” clause.
That is why MHARR is supporting a separate bill that would expressly repeal both the DOE standards and EISA section 413.
MHProNews Q5. Now, similarly, with respect to the Duty to Serve (DTS) and the availability of competitive consumer financing for mainstream manufactured homes, there has been a long and tortured history that may not be fully known to or understood by those who have entered the industry more recently. Can you summarize that history, how we got to where we are now, and what still needs to be done to achieve the full and robust implementation of DTS? And even more importantly, why is all of that crucial to both the industry and consumers?
Mark Weiss A5. The Duty to Serve (DTS) provision is an outgrowth of Congress’ response to the financial crisis of 2008-2009 and the historical failure of the federal mortgage giants, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to properly serve the mainstream, affordable HUD Code manufactured housing market.
DTS requires Fannie and Freddie to provide securitization and secondary market support for three enumerated “underserved” markets, including the HUD Code manufactured housing market. In doing so, it is explicit in extending the reach of DTS to both manufactured home consumer finance loans where the home is titled as real property and also where the home is titled as personal property – i.e., “chattel” loans. This duality – including both real estate and chattel loans – is crucial within the manufactured home consumer financing market, where chattel loans have historically accounted for more than 70% of all placements. Put differently, the 2007 law makes it unmistakably clear that a failure to serve the chattel component of the HUD Code manufactured housing consumer financing market – because it accounts for the vast majority of manufactured home consumer loans — amounts to a failure to serve that market altogether.
And that, quite simply, is what has occurred. At first, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac did nothing regarding DTS because they allegedly needed to do “research.” Then they fell back on their age-old plan to favor higher-cost manufactured homes titled as real estate and variously referred to over the years as “MH Select,” “MH Plus,” “cross-mod” and other made-up “boutique” designations. As a purely mathematical proposition, this amounts to “serving” no more than 30% of the HUD Code market comprised of the most affluent buyers purchasing the most costly HUD Code homes outside of the mainstream of the market. Meanwhile 70% of the same market, representing the industry’s most affordable mainstream homes and the lower and moderate-income American consumers who Congress obviously sought to benefit with DTS, remain – and continue to be – completely unserved by Fannie and Freddie under DTS.
So, what is the impact of this failure? The impact is that the dominant chattel financing market remains totally within the hands of “portfolio lenders” who do not need – or wish – to offload their existing loans via the secondary market or securitization through Fannie and Freddie. And within that category, a significant portion remains concentrated in the hands of the two Berkshire Hathaway/Clayton Homes-affiliated lenders, 21st Mortgage Corporation and Vanderbilt Mortgage Corporation, which do not require access to securitization or secondary market capital. This, in turn, results in higher-than-necessary interest rates for manufactured housing chattel consumers for a number of reasons including, but not limited to, the higher cost of default risks that cannot be off-loaded via Fannie or Freddie. And within the manufactured housing market, which serves consumers with less available income than other segments of the housing market, this means fewer eligible purchasers and, as a result, fewer homes sold and lower production levels as have characterized the past two decades.
As with the DOE energy standards, there is no legitimate basis for the ongoing refusal of Fannie and Freddie to serve the dominant manufactured home chattel consumer financing market under DTS. Their failure to do so is a continuing violation of DTS and the will of Congress and should not be sanctioned by the Trump Administration – an administration that has acknowledged the glaring need for a greater national supply of truly affordable housing and homeownership.
MHProNews Q6. Turning now to discriminatory zoning exclusion, please elaborate on the problem itself as well as the means to resolve and eliminate that bottleneck once and for all?
Mark Weiss A6. This issue has always interested me, from the very start of my association with the industry 40+ years ago. On the one hand, the underlying issue, i.e., federal preemption, can be extremely complex. But in the case of manufactured housing, it is – and should be – amazingly simple.
A basic analysis would proceed as follows. First, zoning authority is an aspect of the “police power” which the Constitution largely devolves to the states (and to localities as political subdivisions of the states). In areas of traditional state (and local) authority, federal preemption is not lightly assumed by the courts. But the Constitution (and cases interpreting it) recognize that there are areas in which federal interests are dominant and federal law can prevent (i.e.., preempt) states and their localities from undermining or interfering with those interests.
The next step in the analysis, therefore, is to determine what those areas are, substantively, and how far any such preemption reaches.
In some (indeed, many) instances, a dominant federal interest is merely implied, either by the subject matter involved or some related aspect or provision of federal law. Fortunately, though, that is not the case with manufactured housing.
When Congress adopted the National Manufactured Housing Construction and Safety Standards Act of 1974, it included an express preemption provision which barred states (and localities) from adopting or maintaining manufactured housing construction or safety standards applicable to the “same aspect of manufactured home performance” that were not identical to an existing federal standard adopted by HUD pursuant to authority conferred by the Act. As is evident then, the original 1974 law established a structure of “conflict preemption” targeting non-identical state and/or local construction and safety standards. With this structure in place, however, HUD refused to take any action against discriminatory and exclusionary zoning targeting HUD-regulated manufactured housing. It claimed in this regard that the 1974 preemption language was not strong enough or specific enough to take such action. Now, of course, that has all been changed, but HUD still refuses to take action on this fundamental bottleneck.
Specifically, the structure of the 1974 preemption provision was extended and strengthened by the 2000 Reform Law in ways that now implicate exclusionary zoning. First, the 2000 amendments provided that the scope of federal preemption under the Act was to be “broadly and liberally” construed. Further, and more important, the 2000 amendments extended the scope of federal preemption to include not just conflicting state or local construction and safety standards, but all state or local “requirements” relating to manufactured housing. This amendment language, moreover, must be read together with the existing language of the HUD regulations, which provide, at 24 C.F.R. 3282.11, that the test of preemption is whether such a state or local requirement “impairs” the “federal superintendence of the industry” or stands as an “obstacle to the accomplishment of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”
To determine the “purposes and objectives of Congress” under federal manufactured housing law, one need simply consult the “Purposes” section of the 2000 Reform Law. That section, 42 U.S.C. 5401(b) states, in relevant part, that the congressional purposes of the law include the purpose to “facilitate the availability of affordable manufactured homes and to increase homeownership for all Americans.” (Emphasis added).
It is not a matter of rocket science to conclude or determine that discriminatory and exclusionary state or local zoning, which permits other types of single-family homes, but excludes HUD-regulated manufactured homes, undermines and impairs the stated federal objective of the 2000 Reform Law, to “facilitate the availability of affordable manufactured homes and to increase homeownership for all Americans” and, therefore, stands as an “obstacle to the accomplishment of the full purposes and objectives of Congress” under federal manufactured housing law.
As a result, HUD can, should and must assert the enhanced federal preemption of the 2000 Reform Law against discriminatory and exclusionary zoning targeting HUD-regulated manufactured homes and, if necessary, should seek judicial enforcement of such a prohibition in an appropriate case (all the way to the Supreme Court – if that is what is required).
MHProNews Q7. So, in summary, given the existence of these fundamental bottlenecks (i.e., DTS non-implementation and discriminatory zoning exclusion) within the industry’s post-production sector, and the representation of that sector by MHI, have the opportunities offered by a second Trump presidential term been engaged by that group? – To their full extent? – To any extent? And what are the consequences of those failures for the industry and its members?
Mark Weiss A7. The short answer to this question – from MHARR’s perspective – is “no.” As I explained in response to your first question, MHI, to the extent that it has done anything substantive over the past year, is largely aiming at low-hanging fruit – i.e., chassis removal. The ROAD Act that is pending now would effectively do nothing to remedy the other major national post-production bottlenecks that MHARR has identified and analyzed and would therefore leave in place the issues that have – and continue to – suppress industry production. While that is not good for anyone in the industry, it is especially harmful to the industry’s traditional core of smaller businesses. This trajectory is not a good one, and must be changed, as MHARR emphasized when President Trump first took office for his second term.
MHProNews Q8. It’s important for the industry to know how the first year of Trump 2.0 has been wasted by MHI, especially since there is such an effort to create an “illusion of motion” particularly in connection with the so-called “ROAD” act and its low-hanging “optional chassis” fruit. That said, though, what should be done – or must be done – in your view, to change the narrative for the industry and to remove the bottlenecks that continue to suppress its growth?
Mark Weiss A8. The most direct and simple answer would be to definitively address and resolve the bottlenecks that continue to suppress the industry. Regarding DTS and zoning exclusion, there are statutory fixes that could be included in the ROAD Act. MHARR has drafted and submitted these fixes. If MHI were serious about advancing the industry and homeownership for millions of lower and moderate-income American families, it would publicly support the inclusion of those measures – but it has not, at least yet. Its members should, therefore, urge them to support the inclusion of such fixes as well as other and further action, as described previously – and if necessary – to address and remedy the industry’s principal bottlenecks.
It is noteworthy that in the face of an ongoing housing crisis, with the industry building its best homes ever – homes that could help to significantly alleviate that crisis and help expand the supply of genuinely affordable homes and homeownership — the utilization of affordable, mainstream HUD Code homes continues to be needlessly suppressed by problems specific to the time and environment after these homes leave the factory in which they are produced. And these problems – these fundamental bottlenecks: (1) will not go away on their own; and (2) will continue to get worse as time goes on. Indeed, we have already seen these problems, which were once primarily state and local in nature, now bleed-over to negatively impact and suppress national-level production and shipments.
Thus, members of the post-production sector of the industry (including, but not limited to, retailers, communities, developers, community managers, finance companies, insurance companies and others) have a decision to make as to how they wish to be represented on a national level. Do they wish to be represented in Washington, D.C. by an independent organization that answers only and specifically to them? Or do they persist with the current dysfunctional arrangement that is not achieving concrete and significant results, as is shown by the industry’s stagnant production and shipment statistics? The answer seems clear.
Part II. MHProNews Programming Notices and Postscript
1) As longtime readers of MHProNews know, this publication has done similar written interviews conducted via email with professionals that included numbers of Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) members. Several of those are found at this link here.
2) MHProNews has continued to invite MHI leaders to respond to inquiries that point to issues often related to what Weiss addressed in the above. Some examples are linked here, here, and here. Dozens of articles include a public invitation for MHI officials or others to respond.
3) On MHLivingNews and/or MHProNews there is a planned follow up to this article that will include our typical contemporary standard of putting the draft of an article to third-party artificial intelligence (AI) that does a fact check of the responses. Watch for it. That pending report will include additional insights and commentary via MHProNews’ industry expert analysis. Don’t miss it.
As a housekeeping note, the featured image was created using ChatGPT.
4) It is simply a truism that:
There is always more to know.
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