• @trash80@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    -37 months ago

    You said:

    These people likely sold their house and used that money to buy into the community - essentially paying for the right to use the building until they die.

    Company says:

    All were afforded the opportunity to stay in their townhome under their existing contracts until those contracts expired.

    What am I missing?

    • Overzeetop
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      27 months ago

      From the article it sound like there was no maintenance escalation clause limitation - they bought in for, say, $750,000 with a payment of $1000/month in fees, per their contract. Each year the contract maintenance increases (since costs increase) and it had gone up to ~$1300…then, all of a sudden, the owner decided that they weren't getting enough people with $750k to drop up front and added a $6.5k/month option with little or no buy in. When these residents rolled to their annual renewal, instead of the normal 3-6% increase, they were "upgraded" to the new rental-based prices - $6.5k.mo. Their contract is still valid, and they can still stay there, but based on the lawyers these people have gone to about the increase, it's all 100% legal because there is no limit in the contract on how much the fee can increase.

      • @trash80@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        17 months ago

        Thank you for taking the time to try to explain this.

        When these residents rolled to their annual renewal, instead of the normal 3-6% increase, they were “upgraded” to the new rental-based prices - $6.5k.mo.

        I did not think it was set up for annual renewal like that.