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All Forum Posts by: Sean Buruschkin

Sean Buruschkin has started 4 posts and replied 4 times.

I am renting a single family home since December 2018. It has well water and a septic system. In mid-April, we had a clog and water leaked through the kitchen sink and dishwasher all over the kitchen. Roto-Rooter came out and cleared out the line. It was mostly due to feminine products and toilet paper. Fair enough. Ever since, we have made it a point to only put septic safe toilet paper down any drain. Fast forward to today. I mowed the lawn and there is toilet paper and human waste all around the septic drain. It smells terrible. Only two people live in this home. Two human beings cannot possibly cause this using septic safe toilet paper two months after Roto-Rooter fixed the last issue.

What could possibly be wrong?

Hi, I am looking to learn from an investor currently employing the BRRRR strategy. I'm a very able body willing to work for free on a rehab over the weekends. All I ask is to exchange your knowledge for cheap labor.

I started a lease on 12/15/2018 and I am the tenant. It is a three-story home and rehabbed in 2018. I am the first tenant since it's been rehabbed. To give you full context, the home is located in a flood zone in Phoenixville, PA, which is Montgomery County. When the home was being rehabbed, the city did not allow the contractor to put any duct work below the second floor. On the first floor is a living room and kitchen and each have only one vent in the ceiling. The living room vent is located by the stairwell and the hot air essentially escapes up the stairs and the return vent is in the stairwell wall about 1 to 2 feet away from the living room vent. I've tried redirecting the air into the room but this has not helped. The kitchen vent is located above a cabinet. The cabinet has molding that directs the air straight into the ceiling. I have four thermometers spread out. One is on the kitchen counter, one resting on the thermostat, one on the coffee table, and one on the end table by the sofa. The thermostat itself, which is in the direct path of where I've been able to redirect the hot air, reads 68 degrees. The thermometer resting on the thermostat got as high as 67 degrees. The kitchen thermometer gets only to 61 degrees. The coffee table one gets to 62 degrees and the one near the sofa gets up to 59 degrees. Needless to say, it's very cold on the first floor.

An HVAC worker has been out twice to inspect this and make any necessary changes. It's an electric heat pump HVAC system. The system can be on for one to two hours at a time and then starts blowing out air colder than air conditioning in the summer. I have woken up multiple times in the early morning hours to the system blowing really cold air. Everything I am reading about electric heat pumps suggests they are designed for southern United States climates where the winters are mild and outside temperatures typically do not drop below 40 degrees.

Are these grounds to work with the landlord to break the lease because there are rooms that cannot be heated to necessary minimum temperatures?

I own a condominium in the Olde Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia, PA. The insurance policy I have on it is the HO6 policy. This will be my first rental and want to make sure I've got all of my insurance in place. The tenants will obtain their own renter's insurance. Is there any extra insurance I need in addition to my HO6 policy when it is rented?