
9 June 2018 | 23 replies
I happen to live at 6000 feet so bed bugs and fleas are not an issue for my properties, but using an ounce of "tenant paid" prevention may be worth more that 10 pounds of cure if a problem is found.

15 December 2016 | 7 replies
She went to them for a restraining order, and they basically told her to pound salt.I'm wondering if he leaves voluntarily, would having him sign a "return of possession" document be enough?

27 February 2017 | 12 replies
If the landlord doesn't like the smell of the apartment before then, tell her to go pound sand.

22 May 2017 | 18 replies
In this case you are not rejecting due to family status, which is protected, you are rejection due to a undesirable fit.

29 November 2017 | 46 replies
Not all tenants are clearly desirable or undesirable, so if a tenant is just so-so, or is a pain to deal with, and if he's been in place for a while and the property is in need of some cleaning and refurbishment anyway, the landlord might decide to end the lease and start fresh with a tenant paying higher rent.

21 October 2017 | 7 replies
I see if it's under 6000 pounds, it's a certain limit, around 11k I believe.

30 November 2017 | 31 replies
I would tell them to pound sand.

8 April 2018 | 5 replies
Between walking and playing with there baby the pounding is getting so bad.

8 February 2018 | 9 replies
The middle ground, of course, is to allow things like small unders under __ pounds excluding breeds, such as _______.

4 May 2018 | 51 replies
I currently live in a hot market (the SF-Bay Area) , where finding property isn't an impossible task but just unlikely to meet ones goals just starting out in today's market climate without High income or moving to an undesirable location.With this also will be my First deal so I am just trying to do my Due Diligence and reach out to the masses and get an opinion .