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4 May 2014 | 4 replies
I work with many low income tenants and elderly tenants who don't have an email account.
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5 May 2014 | 14 replies
This may be a long shot, but in our city you can actually apply for a waiver for elderly and disabled folks and the city will come and fetch the trash can for you (we used to have backyard pickup for everyone until a few years ago and this compromise is how they accommodated the many complaints when they finally took away that service).
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8 October 2011 | 18 replies
Elderly lady moved from NC to GA.
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23 November 2011 | 8 replies
If no to all of the above, what if I have identified the new buyer and they do not have children and are not elderly, can they sign the waiver?
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14 January 2012 | 35 replies
I wrote him back saying I have an elderly women 72 years old, as well as a pregnant woman in her 40s go up and down those stairs twice a day without incident and to go bark up another tree.
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4 April 2013 | 68 replies
Another S-8 tenant that I had was an elderly disabled single person with no kids living at home.
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1 February 2012 | 8 replies
An elderly long term tenant.
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2 March 2012 | 8 replies
He’s very elderly and trusted the wrong person.
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3 April 2012 | 8 replies
Yeah Dave you made a newbie mistake.Seasoned tenants know these things.Here we also have a program where you can have an agreement with the power company where if a tenant leaves they automatically transfer power into the landlords name so you can work on the unit.Otherwise you have to pay a 30 connection fee each time to turn on for the landlord.Problem is tenants call power company and say they are moving when they are not.Power company then transfers power into landlords name while the tenant is still living there.You the landlord now find out you have a nice bill for the last 2 months.Also if it is transferred into your name and then you get it cancelled the tenants cry foul and say you turned off utilities for non-payment.If it's an emergency or elderly person then the power company will turn back on and bill the landlord here.How I get around all of this is I do not have a landlord agreement with the power company.The power is always in the tenants name.If the power company cuts off for non payment it has nothing to do with me nor can the tenant pull a scam and say they are leaving to get put in my name because I do not have that agreement in place with the power company.If after a tenant leaves I need to work on a unit I get it turned on and then turned off before a tenant is allowed to move in.Then it's on them to get turned on.Never let a tenant move in while you have any utilities on in your name.I do have water and trash in our name but that is included in the rent for my apartment buildings but you wouldn't do that for a house.
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28 March 2012 | 6 replies
Also finding code violations, fire damaged homes, and elderly people who have paid off homes?