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Updated about 8 years ago on . Most recent reply
Tenant took down smoke alarms. What is my risk?
Hello hello. I was just inside one of my units fixing some plumbing, and I noticed they had taken down 3 smoke alarms and the only carbon monoxide alarm. Only two of the original 5 smoke alarms were still up (though I didn't test them) and they were each inside a bedroom. They removed the alarms from one bedroom, the hall, and the utility room next to the gas furnace.
The following is in their lease:
When one of the tenants came home, I asked her what happened to the smoke alarms. She said the batteries had all died at the same time and they needed to get new batteries. I told her that I would have gotten her new batteries if someone had let me know. (They moved in in March 2015. I replaced all smoke alarms with new ones from Costco and installed the CO alarm at that time.)
This is also in their lease:
I know that at least one of the tenants does smoke, but I've seen her walk down the street to do so. When I replaced the kitchen drain today, it smelled like cigarette ash had been rinsed down it. But maybe I'm extra paranoid.
It's 3 women in their late 20's who pay rent on time and who have been very friendly. We live next door to each other but I'm moving soon.
I'm worried 1) that everyone will die in a fire and 2) that I'll lose everything I have because someone died in a fire. There are no sprinklers here. It's a 1958 duplex.
What would you do in my situation? I'm ordering batteries right now, but my concern is that they will continue to remove the alarms (because they might be smoking. But I have no proof.) But if there is a fire, people and property could burn to the ground. And then whose fault is it?
I'm going to email all 3 of them about the smoke alarms (and the furnace filter, because that was completely clogged today when I checked) and quote from the lease, issuing a formal warning, and will replace the alarms with 10 year batteries as soon as they arrive. Any other suggestions?
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My observation only, but in my opinion your letter/e-mail was far too detailed. There's really no reason to go into that much detail. State the issue and the remedy, be pleasant and end it. The more words you use, the more a tenant will believe the issue is open to debate or interpretation.
"Dear tenant: Today during a routine inspection I noticed smoke detectors, required by law, have been removed in X location. These detectors need to be replaced immediately, as it is a violation of X (lease/law). Reinspection will be performed in X days/hours, and any detectors not having been reinstalled will be replaced at your expense. Thank you for helping obey the law and keep everyone safe, the Landlord". Or similar.
- JD Martin
- Podcast Guest on Show #243
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