
11 August 2018 | 7 replies
The airline pays laundry and cleaning and I pick up the utilities, maintenance and lawn care.

17 July 2018 | 7 replies
And qualifying for citizenship would mean he has a clean background.

5 September 2018 | 28 replies
I only have leather like living room furniture as well, less penetrating material, easier to sterilize and clean.

17 July 2018 | 6 replies
Editing to add we are a little more worried than usual (we would probably just run fans and a humidifier and clean up ourselves) but our forced hot air system comes from this basement and we have a newborn baby so really don’t want to be having mold coming through our air vents!

17 July 2018 | 3 replies
I always allow for 3-5 days of vacancy because I need time to properly inspect, arrange for cleaning and repairs, etc.

23 July 2018 | 11 replies
not enough deposit to cover rent, damage, cleaning, etc.

26 July 2018 | 17 replies
My advice is fix it up as much as you can with as little money as you can (clean, repair, do yard work, make lipstick improvements, paint but don't paint yourself into another corner haha) and get out of this deal as soon as possible.

17 July 2018 | 4 replies
You are usually cleaning up someone else's mess with a multi-family purchase.

18 July 2018 | 2 replies
I need someone to come out twice a month and do a basic cleaning/sweeping, occasionally cut the grass, etc.Any referrals would be appreciated.thanks, lenny

19 July 2018 | 9 replies
Once they get 1% of landlords revenue I could see it going up to 2% ,3% in the next years .On the related note San Francisco is also proposing an additional tax on businesses for the homeless . https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/17/san-francisco-to-consider-tax-on-companies-to-help-homeless.html——OAKLAND — As the Bay Area struggles with an alarming homelessness crisis, voters may soon decide whether to force Oakland’s biggest landlords to pay up to help house the city’s most vulnerable residents.Oakland Councilwoman Rebecca Kaplan wants to impose an extra 1 percent annual tax on rental revenue that exceeds $200,000, and use that money to fund homeless shelters, help homeless residents secure permanent housing and clean up the sprawling encampments that line many of the city’s sidewalks.The city needs more money to tackle the problem, and collecting it from Oakland’s biggest-earning landlords makes sense, Kaplan said.