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Article Courtesy of Anna
Maria Island Sun
By
Leslie Lake
Published July 13, 2025
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BRADENTON BEACH – Pines Trailer Park homeowners are expressing frustration about
the lack of communication as a possible park closure date looms on July 31.
A Feb. 4 email to homeowners from Fort Lauderdale-based property acquisition
company The Urban Group stated in part: “As you have been previously informed,
and as a direct result of the community-wide damage dealt by Hurricanes Helene
and Milton, coupled with non-payment of lot rent, Pines Trailer Park is no
longer sustainable as a trailer park, and must be closed, with an official park
closure date of July 31, 2025.”
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That email also offered homeowners some
options, which included turning over title to the mobile
homes in exchange for extended tenancy until January 2026
along with state statute-required compensation for
abandoned units.
Several Pines homeowners have told The Sun that there has
been no confirmation of the closing date either from park
owners or The Urban Group.
Pines Homeowners Association President Neil Lind told The
Sun on July 2 that the attorneys for the HOA and Pines
owners Pines Park Investors LLC are currently “in
negotiations” but said he was not authorized to elaborate.
“I have not heard a thing,” Pines homeowner Mary Mox stated
by text on July 3. “No one is talking.”
The Sun emailed Sarasota-based Attorney David Fredericks of
Anderson, Givens and Fredericks P.A., who represents the HOA,
for comment about the park closure on July 2, but did not
receive a response.
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Lorraine D’Agostino awaits confirmation about a Pines
Trailer Park closure date that will impact her 37 Laverne Drive
mobile home
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The HOA filed a lawsuit in March in part to stop park closure and evictions.
Park owners made a motion for the dismissal of that lawsuit. A hearing is
scheduled on the motion on Monday, July 28.
Pines homeowners react to park closure
Debbie Bouts’ family has a long history with Pines Trailer Park. Her
grandparents bought into the park in the 1970s and her parents traveled from
Ohio to spend five months there each year for many years.
She said after the 2024 hurricanes, they drove two days from Ohio to replace
floorboards in a unit with no electricity and hired someone to clean the trailer
out.
“He’s (Shawn Kaleta) keeping us hostage in a way,” Bouts said. “I think this was
the perfect storm for him to have the land grab. He was able to take it over.
This is breaking our hearts, it’s such a part of the community and he has taken
so much from us.”
Bouts is concerned that when people see the current unkempt condition of the
park, they will think the homeowners didn’t care.
“We have tried to do a lot even without electricity and plumbing,” she said.
“There are a lot of us who are willing to fight for what’s ours.”
Bouts said she would like a decision on the future of the park to be made soon.
“We’ve paid rent for a year on a place we’re not able to use and we can’t get an
answer,” she said. “Our dream is to get our place back. There weren’t any
services and we’ve been paying over $1,500 a month. We should have the basic
amenities. This is a perpetual whirlpool I find myself in.”
Lorraine D’Agostino and her husband purchased a trailer in the park in 2020 as a
vacation getaway from their home in New York. She has a flight booked at the end
of July in case the park closure necessitates cleaning out their unit.
She said she would like to say to Kaleta, “Why couldn’t you be honest and
communicate with us? If you had really sat down with us and talked to us, you
would have gotten a response.”
Another Pines homeowner, who asked not to be named, wrote the following in a
text to The Sun which reads in part: “For decades, Pines Trailer Park has been a
safe haven – a quiet, close-knit community nestled in the heart of one of
Florida’s most picturesque coastal towns. Generations of families have called
this place home, with neighbors watching out for one another, sharing tools,
memories and a deep-rooted sense of belonging. But today, that spirit is being
tested like never before.”
The homeowner described a change in tone after Hurricanes Helene and Milton and
wrote that 80 families were left waiting for clarity and guidance, but instead
heard silence.
“Nothing from Mr. Kaleta, the man behind the LLC that now owns our park. Nothing
from his investors. Just cold legal notices and whispers of evictions and
threats.”
The homeowner said local municipalities seemed paralyzed to challenge Kaleta and
seniors on fixed incomes in the parks don’t have the resources to fight back.
“When the new owners bought Pines Trailer Park, we understood that the sale
contract included a stipulation: the park was to remain a mobile home community
for five years. That was our safety net, our lifeline. And now it seems it’s
being ripped away. Is anyone listening?
“Pines Trailer Park isn’t just land. It’s our home. It’s our history. It’s the
place where our neighbors became family. We are not just property to be bought,
bulldozed and sold off to the highest bidder. We are 80+ families and we deserve
to be heard.”
That homeowner said on July 2 that he was told by The Urban Group that no lot
rent payments would be accepted after July 31, as more than 80 homeowners wait
for official confirmation of a closure date.
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