Our forefathers would be stacking bodies over that issue, and justifiably so. Personally I can’t imagine such, the list of things I can’t do on my personal property is a short list.
I was the youngest kid in a large family. When I went off to college my parents sold their house and moved into a much smaller home. There were no "extra" bedrooms. When I came "home" at Christmas the only room available was the small motor home.
I lived in a trailer in a trailer park in the snow in the mountains. It had a forced air gas furnace. And that was a 1959 Stardust model. We were comfortable.
I can understand the state position if they come from a more permissive stance and got rattled by unscrupulous land&rv owners who did not follow simple rules of hygiene and dumped their nlack/grey water tanks someplace in their backyard, thus threatening the local water supply and neighbors' land.
That doesn’t sound like private property to me? Parking lots? Does the owners of the property not care if they are there? How about this as a compromise. Keep the law, unless the primary resident is the property owner? Would that work?
Comments: Add Comment