Thread: This Is Not A CraigsList Notice
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09-23-2012 07:15 AM #1
how skilled do you have to be to clean up debris ??? face it gary most of them didn't work before and will not work after . it is still not cleaned up to this day . there are many who will but they are the minority .
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09-23-2012 09:14 AM #2
They got taken away from where they lived and put into trailers. Then forgotten as a solution.Oh,then got evicted out of the trailers. The trailers where never meant to be lived in full-time in the first place so once the people where evicted they where in such poor condition had to be destroyed. I know about that from a huge RV site I am apart of where some where bought and people telling us how bad they where.
Some of those people didn't want to return because of the high risk the area has. Below sea level and storms all the time and no support to resolve that.Only more of the same of being ignored. Shine as you said some did in fact did work on the clean up,but also some took the forced move as a chance to make a better life for themselves else where. A chance to start over.
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09-23-2012 03:34 PM #3
[QUOTE=1gary;475293] The trailers where never meant to be lived in full-time in the first place so once the people where evicted they where in such poor condition had to be destroyed. I know about that from a huge RV site I am apart of where some where bought and people telling us how bad they where.
Maybe they weren't intended to be permanent residences but they weren't intended to be travel trailers either. They are presentable enough, though.
I'd love to have one parked beside a moderately remote lake where my grandson and I could wet an occasional fish hook!
Jim
Several years ago we did quite a good trip of USA, and on our trip we got to meet Mike and Christine Frade. We didn't stay long with them, but in that relatively short time we both gained a great...
We Lost a Good One