2 February 2021 | 6 replies
Recommended treatment is to get a particular chemical treatment once every 5 years.
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10 February 2021 | 5 replies
3) Beside the smoke, there is also concerns about chemical, the fire was through the septic pipes, wires, plumbing in the basement were melt in the hot spot, so it’s really costly to remove all the chemical consider?
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14 December 2020 | 2 replies
If it had old refrigerators and such, you may also have some concerns about chemicals.
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1 January 2021 | 42 replies
Since they only took 8% of rent, increasing rents don't make much of a difference for them if its a small increase (ie $20/mo would be about an extra $220/year for me and only $20 for the PM company) so I had to stay on top of them to do the increases annually as they didn't seem to care.Those were the biggest concerns for me.The icing on the cake was they botched the moveout inspection by signing off on the tenant leaving saying the property was okay but then we found the blinds were bent (tenant taped it with scotch tape so it would look okay but once removed was clearly bent), a washroom door handle lock was no longer working as it was broken, there was damage to the FOB (more than wear in tear as there was a hole in the button like it was stabbed with something sharp) and there was also damage to the granite kitchen countertop (not even sure what chemical was cause it to become rough in a spot).
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25 December 2020 | 4 replies
BUT we do not use chlorine or any harsh chemicals we have only ever used Eco One, it's an amazing product.
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4 January 2021 | 8 replies
@Todd Carpenter look into shawn huss at TCF, used to be chemical bank. they have 5 of mine all under 100k. they do not do portfolio loans though.
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6 January 2021 | 4 replies
If you allow people to dump toxic chemicals on your property you deserve to get sued.
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7 January 2021 | 11 replies
if the garage will be doing servicing, better to have sewer. chemicals discharged to septics have been a source of groundwater contamination resulting in cleanups.
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11 January 2021 | 29 replies
The two chemicals together produce chloramine gases which in high enough concentrations can kill you.
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11 January 2021 | 5 replies
Hi Doug, I'm currently working with Shawn Huss at Chemical Bank and he has been super helpful.