April 16, 2026

6 thoughts on “Former Sea Breeze Residents Share Their Current Status

  1. I applaud you both for sharing how being displaced from Seabreeze has affected your lives. I’ll keep you both in my prayers, thank you so much for sharing, please keep speaking up. Can either of you give any details as to how Seabreeze got in such disrepair to become condemned? Do you think that it was allowed to deteriorate in order to sell the property for more money than what the owners were getting from low income residents living there? Do you think the same will happen to Myrtle Landing?
    I think the more we discuss this in public spaces, the less CORRUPTION CAN HIDE ITS EVIL UGLY FACE.

    1. The first response person was not a part of anything that happened with the people having to leave in 2 (not 3) hours. She had already been evicted for non payment of rent, material non compliance (destroying the unit,etc). Simply a non factor in this discussion. Response number 2 is quite honest. Basically she was bullied into moving across the bay because she couldn’t find a place right away. The 2 hour thing was heartbreaking for all concerned. 3 of those residents were senior citizens (2 of them are now residents of Myrtle Landing). Residents were told the buildings were ” not structurally sound). When the property was in the process of being sold,however, the buyer’s inspector said they were structurally sound. Of course, it was said all along that it was a land grab by money people who invade Cape Charles and try to change everything and erase history.

  2. Thank you for having the courage to share your heartbreaking experience with being evicted from SeaBreeze apartments. And thank you to the Mirror for giving them a platform. It must have been terrifying to be told, at around 5 p.m., on a dark February evening, that you had 3 hours to get out, because your home was not safe. Especially those of you with children. I don’t know if, retroactively, there is a way to make this right for you, but hopefully, by you sharing your story, and a light being shined on what is happening at Myrtle Landing, the same thing will be prevented from happening to those residents. In the 80s, when no one wanted to live in Cape Charles, it was good enough to build section 8 housing here. Now that everyone wants to live in Cape Charles, some people think it is too good for section 8 housing. Shame on those people.

  3. The value of the almost beach front property is the guiding light of all all of what’s happened and what’s going to happen.
    Big Bucks Developers
    Nothing personal. Just busine$$.
    Good luck getting any respect or justice.

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