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In reply to the discussion: The new risk for residents of senior living communities - private equity's search for profits [View all]dalton99a
(92,216 posts)Article is at
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/vietnam-vet-found-dream-senior-living-community-new-owners-jacked-rent-rcna195175
A Vietnam vet found a dream senior living community. Then new owners jacked up the rent by 365%.
Residents of senior living facilities typically expect to live out their remaining years when they buy into a community. But a new dynamic in the industry is altering the deals these residents agreed to.
March 29, 2025, 5:00 AM CDT
By Gretchen Morgenson
When Martha Bray and her husband moved into River Glen of St. Charles, a senior living community west of Chicago, she figured it would be her last home. The couple loved the neighborhoods tree-lined streets, tended lawns and tidy red-brick townhomes.
The Brays paid a $314,000 entry fee for their townhouse in 2013, plus a monthly maintenance fee. They didnt own the property, but if they decided to leave, their contract promised theyd receive 85% of the current value determined by a local realtor.
A Vietnam veteran, Bray, 84, thrived at River Glen even after her husband died in 2016. But all that changed with a knock at Brays door in late June 2023. River Glen had been sold to a private equity firm and real estate investment group, she was told, and her financial contract was changing.
River Glens new owners, Jaybird Capital of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Citrine Investment Group of Chicago, were jacking up Brays monthly maintenance from $1,395 to $6,500, a 365% increase, Bray said. And if she didnt like the deal and left the community, she would receive only 75% of the entry fee shed paid more than a decade earlier.
We had to agree to their conditions by Sept. 1 or move, Bray recalled.
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