GPW, they're not intended to be a solution to the ultimate problem
only a bandaid approach for those wanting to remain on or close enuff to their property to be able to get it cleaned up and rebuilt
they are built like cheesy travel trailers not mobile homes and not intended as a permanent residences
any such portable dwelling would cost more to renovate for resale after being used as intended than they could ever be sold for so the least expensive materials available are employed in their creation
i was involved(drove the 3rd charter bus thru the barricades) w/ the efforts to evacuate low country residents just days after Katrina struck
those who owned nothing and lost everything were deemed better off being removed to higher ground(in my case they were transported to DFW area hotels n motels where FEMA support systems were closer)
i was also involved w/ catering to the drivers who drove the supplies and trailers to the folks who chose to stay after Katrina
the trailer haulers told stories of families that were so happy to have something ... ANYTHING to live in while they rebuilt
YES those trailers are minimum magnificent butt they beat a tent all to H E double ugly and they offer folks a chance to get back on their feet when other assistance isn't avaiable(like when they don't have insurance and have to rebuild on their own out of pocket over an extended period of time)
i think a btw is in order here ... while helping clean up after Harvey i met Tommie an elderly lady who lived in a house in Port Aransas Texas that got lifted off it's foundation and floated 25' back by effluent from the local sewage plant which reached 7' inside in the process

- Tommie's House.jpg (134.27 KiB) Viewed 668 times
her home was immediately condemed and she was tickled to death to have the smallest of those cheesy FEMA trailers to live in while she cleaned up her property one trash bag at a time
just this old man's 2¢ worth this morning
sw