The Euclid Beach Mobile Home Park鈥檚 residents' union handed a 5,000-signature petition to the Western Reserve Land Conservancy (WRLC) Tuesday, asking the conservancy to change its plans to displace residents.
About 30 people rallied in support of the United Residents of Euclid Beach (UREB) outside of WRLC鈥檚 Downtown Cleveland offices before UREB handed the petition over to the conservancy.
鈥淲e shouldn鈥檛 be replaced by a park system and by government funding when we are people and we have homes and we have a community,鈥 said UREB steering committee member Heather Malone. 鈥淚f they could just see a different vision of what we see, that maybe they could make that possible and they would become the real hero.鈥
The petition, which was made in partnership with the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless (NEOCH), not only asks WRLC and its partners to refrain from closing the mobile home park, it also asks for open dialogue with residents to explore alternative solutions.
鈥淩esidents are very willing to make compromise and appreciate expanded access to public parks is something that is not an inherently bad thing. It just shouldn鈥檛 come at the cost of displacing hundreds of people,鈥 said NEOCH Director of Organizing and Advocacy Josiah Quarles.
Several residents said a public park can coexist with the mobile homes.
鈥淚 know they can open their eyes to a different kind of vision,鈥 Malone said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 our homes. We don鈥檛 want to move.鈥
Malone handed the petition to Jared Saylor, WRLC鈥檚 Director of Communications and Public Relations.
Saylor said will serve as WRLC鈥檚 response to Tuesday鈥檚 rally. from several partners 鈥 including Cleveland Neighborhood Progress and the City of Cleveland 鈥 regarding plans for the future of the neighborhood.
The letter is consistent with WRLC Senior Vice President and Director of Thriving Communities Matt Zone鈥檚 message from a month ago that the WRLC did good by the residents by providing sufficient time, assistance and fair financial compensation to find new places to live.
鈥淲estern Reserve Land Conservancy could have closed EBMHC and provided 180 days鈥 notice to residents to vacate the property. Instead, it made significant upgrades to the mobile home community, froze rent increases for 14 months, and pledged to residents that no change in their tenancy would occur until after the Euclid Beach Neighborhood Plan was developed,鈥 the letter reads.
The last item on the petition asks for 鈥淕ood faith, human, respectful, and cooperative negotiations鈥 and that UREB be provided with financial and planning documents regarding plans for the mobile home park.
Some residents and supporters spoke at Tuesday鈥檚 Cuyahoga County Council meeting after the rally.
NEOCH Executive Director Chris Knestrick applauded the county鈥檚 latest strategic plan, which includes a goal to end homelessness in the county by 25%. But he said during the council meeting that the County Planning Commission鈥檚 involvement in the plans for the Euclid Beach Mobile Home Park ran counter to the county鈥檚 goal of minimizing homelessness.
鈥淐learly green space and human beings can live together and support one another and there seems no reason that we should be displacing people and ultimately making them homeless," Knestrick said, "But maybe more importantly, removing over 120 units of naturally occurring affordable housing in our community."
There are about 140 residents of the mobile home park. Most own their homes and pay a fee for their lots.
WRLC purchased the 28.5-acre plot of land from a Texas-based developer for $5.8 million in 2021 and told residents last month that the mobile home park will cease to operate by September 2024 and that the property would become part of the Cleveland Metroparks.