
1 May 2017 | 36 replies
Stat. 504B.173 Subd. 3:Subd. 3.Disclosures to applicant.If a landlord accepts an applicant screening fee from a prospective tenant, the landlord must:(1) disclose in writing prior to accepting the applicant screening fee:(i) the name, address, and telephone number of the tenant screening service the landlord will use, unless the landlord does not use a tenant screening service; and(ii) the criteria on which the decision to rent to the prospective tenant will be based; and(2) notify the applicant within 14 days of rejecting a rental application, identifying the criteria the applicant failed to meet.The remedy isn't terrible though as long as you weren't making material misrepresentations.

19 June 2017 | 6 replies
I think it all depends on: what the general practice is in your county, appetite of the lender to fund you knowing that there could be contamination issues, you're appetite and budget to get involved in what can be an extremely expensive remediation process, and the prevalence of tanks where the house is.

24 August 2018 | 24 replies
This includes the taxes owed of $734.01+interest and $6,529.82 for the mold remediation, debris removal and door repair.

25 May 2022 | 37 replies
I hope the remediation business is doing well, that sounded very promising.

27 August 2017 | 8 replies
I read a little home remedy online and thought I would try it.

5 September 2017 | 7 replies
You have to disclose, and most retail endbuyers will RUN away when they hear the word sinkhole.Only time I would ever even consider it if it was a buy and hold that I could get at a steep discount, and rent for enough cash flow to justify the risk....and could get a full inspection/review of the foundation remediation work done....and even then, I would pause.

3 November 2017 | 8 replies
I would recommend that you reach out to a structural engineer and have him/her assess the condition and recommend the remediation and contractor.

24 September 2017 | 4 replies
I called a mold remediation company to come do an estimate, 11k.

11 October 2017 | 22 replies
@MacKenzie ClintonThere is an enormous amount of panic and fear about mold and mold remediation in real estate these days.Here's a Wikipedia article to ease your worries about evil black toxic mold: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StachybotrysIt's perfectly possible there's mold behind the bed for some crazy reason that's the tenant's fault, although highly unlikely in just 5 months of occupation.

14 October 2017 | 37 replies
If there was no disclosure about the (poorly maintained and over full) septic, there may be able to go to the previous homeowners for some remediation??