*Massachusetts law allows homeowners to reside in temporary mobile homes on their property up to twelve months while their residence is being repaired after a fire or other natural disaster. MGLA Chapter 40A sec 3.
*Rhode Island General Laws Chapter 45-24-37-General provisions- permitted uses: Anytime a structure, which is used for residential purposes, is rendered uninhabitable by virtue of a casualty such as fire or flood, the owner of said property shall be allowed to park, temporarily, a mobile home, elsewhere upon the land for use and occupancy of the former occupants until the building or structure is rehabilitated and made fit for occupancy.
*New Hampshire – RSA 674:32 (II) “Notwithstanding paragraph I or any law or rule to the contrary, no zoning ordinance or bylaw shall prohibit an owner and occupier of a residence which has been damaged by fire or other disaster from placing a manufactured home on the lot of such residence and residing in such structure while the residence is being rebuilt. The period of such occupancy shall expire in 12 months from the placement of such structure or upon the issuance of a certificate of occupancy, whichever occurs first. Any such manufactured home shall be subject to state and local requirements relating to water supply and sewerage disposal. A manufactured home that is placed on a lot under this paragraph shall not attain the status of a vested nonconforming use.”
*New Hampshire – Chapter Inst 600 Manufactured Housing Standards Inst 601.03 b) The standards pursuant to Inst 600 shall not apply to : 2) Sites for there installation of manufactured housing, which provides temporary relief from fire, flood, or other disasters for a period of 1 year from the placement of the house.
Manufactured home procedural and enforcement regulations 24 CFR 3282. (HUD LAWS)
§ 3282.11 Preemption and reciprocity. (a) No State manufactured home standard regarding manufactured home construction and safety which covers aspects of the manufactured home governed by the Federal standards shall be established or continue in effect with respect to manufactured homes subject to the Federal standards and these regulations unless it is identical to the Federal standards. (b) No State may require, as a condition of entry into or sale in the State, a manufactured home certified (by the application of the label required by § 3282.362(c)(2)(i)) as in conformance with the Federal standards to be subject to State inspection to determine compliance with any standard covering any aspect of the manufactured home covered by the Federal standards. Nor may any State require that a State label be placed on the manufactured home certifying conformance to the Federal standard or an identical standard. Certain actions that States are permitted to take are set out in § 3282.303. (c) States may participate in the enforcement of the Federal standards enforcement program under these regulations either as SAAs or PIAs or both. These regulations establish the exclusive system for enforcement of the Federal standards. No State may establish or keep in effect through a building code enforcement system or otherwise, procedures or requirements which constitute systems for enforcement of the Federal standards or of identical State standards which are outside the system established in these regulations or which go beyond this system to require remedial actions which are not required by the Act and these regulations. A State may establish or continue in force consumer protections, such as warranty or warranty performance requirements, which respond to individual consumer complaints and so do not constitute systems of enforcement of the Federal standards, regard-
less of whether the State qualifies as an SAA or PIA. (d) No State or locality may establish or enforce any rule or regulation or take any action that stands as an
obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress. The test of whether a State rule or action is valid or must give way is whether the State rule can be enforced or the action taken without impairing the Federal superintendence of the manufactured home industry as established by the Act.
[42 FR 2580, Jan. 12, 1977, as amended at 56
FR 65186, Dec. 16, 1991; 61 FR 10859