Empowering Mobile and Manufactured Home Communities: The Role of Local Technology Advisory Councils (LTACs)

Empowering Mobile and Manufactured Home Communities: The Role of Local Technology Advisory Councils (LTACs)

10/1/20245 min read

As technology continues to shape and revolutionize our daily lives, it’s critical that every community has a voice in the technological decisions that affect them. This is especially true for mobile and manufactured home communities, where access to reliable technology and digital services is often limited. At the Department of Technology, we propose the creation of Local Technology Advisory Councils (LTACs) to give mobile and manufactured home residents the representation they need. These councils would ensure that technology infrastructure and policy decisions are driven by community needs, ethical standards, and digital equity.

For mobile and manufactured home communities, LTACs would focus on overcoming specific challenges—including the unique issue faced by many homeowners who rent the land on which their home sits. In parks owned by predatory companies, homeowners can find themselves in an especially precarious situation, unable to influence improvements to infrastructure, including internet access. LTACs would give these residents a platform to advocate for their technological rights and bring much-needed balance to these unequal dynamics.

What Are Local Technology Advisory Councils (LTACs)?

Local Technology Advisory Councils are community-based groups designed to bridge the gap between residents, local governments, Departments of Technology, and technology providers. Their primary goal is to identify technology needs, ensure fair access to resources, and drive infrastructure development that benefits everyone in the community. For mobile and manufactured home residents, LTACs would serve as an essential platform for advocating improvements to internet access, mobile coverage, and overall digital inclusion.

Why Are LTACs Crucial for Mobile and Manufactured Home Communities?

In many mobile and manufactured home communities, access to high-speed internet is either unreliable, too expensive, or nonexistent. This is especially true in rural or underserved areas where technology providers have been slow to expand infrastructure. Limited internet access can hinder educational opportunities, restrict telehealth access, limit remote work options, and prevent access to smart home technologies—disadvantages that disproportionately affect mobile and manufactured homeowners and renters.

Furthermore, many homeowners in these communities rent the land their homes sit on. This arrangement can create an especially vulnerable situation, particularly if the park is owned by a predatory company. Predatory landlords often prioritize profit over the well-being of their tenants, making little to no investment in infrastructure improvements like high-speed internet or modern mobile networks. For these homeowners, LTACs provide a means to push back, demand improvements, and create a unified voice advocating for fairer treatment and better technology.

By establishing LTACs for mobile and manufactured home communities, residents will have the power to influence the decisions that affect their digital lives. These councils can help ensure that technology investments are made with their best interests in mind, rather than the financial interests of predatory park owners.

The Benefits of Renters and Owners Working Together

A core principle of LTACs is that they unite renters and homeowners in their shared goal of improving technology access. Although renters and owners may face different challenges, they both benefit from enhanced internet connectivity, reliable mobile networks, and fair treatment from technology providers and landlords. By working together, they can ensure that the specific needs of mobile and manufactured home communities are addressed.

When renters and owners collaborate within an LTAC, they can:

Identify and Address Common Problems: Issues like poor internet service, weak mobile reception, and outdated infrastructure affect all residents, regardless of whether they own or rent their homes.

Propose Practical Solutions: By coming together, renters and owners can develop strategies that are feasible for both the community and local governments, such as advocating for municipal broadband or working with private providers to install modern infrastructure.

Engage Directly with Local Governments and Providers: LTACs serve as a formalized platform for residents to communicate their needs to local officials and internet providers, ensuring that their voices are heard in decision-making processes.

Protect Against Predatory Landowners: For homeowners renting their land, LTACs provide a way to collectively negotiate with park owners for better technology and infrastructure. This can include efforts to bring in competition among internet providers or even working with local governments to introduce affordable public broadband options.

Promote Digital Equity and Community Resilience: Technology is essential not just for convenience but also for safety and well-being. With improved internet and mobile services, mobile and manufactured home communities can better access emergency services, keep up with vital information, and ensure a stronger, more connected community.

Addressing the Vulnerabilities of Homeowners Renting Their Land

One of the most pressing issues in mobile and manufactured home communities is the fact that many homeowners don’t own the land on which their home resides. This leaves them at the mercy of landowners—who may be predatory—and limits their ability to influence improvements to infrastructure. In parks owned by profit-driven companies, technology upgrades such as high-speed internet access are often neglected, as landlords focus on maximizing rent rather than investing in the community.

LTACs would provide homeowners a collective voice to demand better services. These councils would allow residents to unite and push for infrastructure investments that benefit all, while also providing a mechanism for holding park owners accountable for their responsibilities. With LTACs, homeowners would no longer be isolated in their demands for better internet or mobile coverage; instead, they would have the collective power of their entire community behind them.

How Would LTACs Be Established?

The establishment of LTACs would involve collaboration between mobile home park residents, renters, homeowners, tenant associations, local governments, and technology providers. Here’s how it might work:

Community Mobilization: Homeowners, renters, and other stakeholders would form an initial advisory group dedicated to addressing technology needs within their community.

Collaboration with Local Government: This group would approach local government officials to formally establish an LTAC, ensuring that it has the legal standing to make recommendations and represent the community in technology-related discussions.

Engagement with Technology Providers: The LTAC would work with internet service providers, mobile network operators, and other technology companies to identify gaps in infrastructure and negotiate improvements that benefit all residents.

Ongoing Advocacy: The LTAC would meet regularly to assess ongoing technology issues, propose new solutions, and monitor the progress of technology upgrades and infrastructure improvements.

When Should LTACs Be Established?

The time to establish LTACs is now. As technology becomes increasingly essential for day-to-day living, mobile and manufactured home residents cannot afford to be left behind. By forming LTACs today, communities can begin to address their technology needs, advocate for better services, and ensure a more equitable distribution of digital resources.

Where Should LTACs Be Focused?

While LTACs would benefit mobile and manufactured home communities everywhere, they are particularly needed in rural and underserved areas where internet service is spotty or nonexistent. By focusing on these regions, LTACs can help close the digital divide and ensure that all communities, regardless of location or ownership status, have access to modern technological resources.

Summary

Mobile and manufactured home communities are home to diverse groups of people, including low-income families, veterans, retirees, and the elderly. These residents, like all of us, deserve access to reliable internet and modern technology infrastructure. However, they often face unique challenges in securing these essential services.

By coming together to form Local Technology Advisory Councils (LTACs), these communities can unite their voices—regardless of whether they rent or own their homes. These councils provide a platform for residents to advocate for their rights and push for necessary technological improvements.

LTACs are particularly valuable for homeowners who rent their land, especially in parks owned by companies that may prioritize profits over resident well-being. These councils give residents the collective power to demand better services and hold park owners accountable, helping to level the playing field.

Through LTACs, mobile and manufactured home communities could take an active role in shaping their technological future. This empowerment ensures that these vital communities are not left behind in our rapidly advancing digital age, but instead have the tools and infrastructure they need to thrive.