Jon K.
Curry/Spice/Fish/Strong Cooking Smells... allowed?
17 November 2012 | 20 replies
Then you are technically allowed to "discriminate", so you can just pick and choose based on someone's curry consumption or ethnicity etc.
Carrie Smith
Rental leases in Colorado since the marijuana law passed
19 November 2012 | 8 replies
Some of them also don't drink alcohol and don't serve or allow alcohol at their properties or events.
Bill Gulley
Sandy Hook
5 February 2013 | 173 replies
Outlawing alcohol to reduce drunk driving death is more analogous to outlawing bullets to cut down on gun deaths.
Jason Mak
do you ever pit lenders against each other?
21 October 2013 | 8 replies
If you are talking about the wholesale rate sheet, that is not usually shown to the borrower, it's strictly for the mortgage broker's consumption.
Michael Seeker
New siding, but neighbor is refusing to let contractor go in their yard
21 October 2013 | 25 replies
Beyond liability, if they are providing drug/alcohol rehab to persons still under the control of the courts through probation type arrangements, there may be some legal reasons that they have to limit contact with outside persons who could supply drugs.Scaffolding?
Michael Wentzel
Giving back to tenants?
18 October 2017 | 38 replies
But how do you know if they want the alcohol or the gift card?
Sam Leon
Late rent - habitual
12 November 2013 | 22 replies
Unless you have a true deadbeat this will work.In most cases it's a matter of having the tenant realize that rent is a priority - before car payments, alcohol, cigarettes, recreational drugs, child support, vacations, gambling, haircuts, and dining out.
Brian Anderson
Explanation of Hard Money to Conventional Loan
1 May 2014 | 22 replies
The guys love doing work as a part of their therapy, making a few bucks and staying occupied and away from drugs/alcohol/crime.
Leona King
Wholesaling business on a shoe string budget?
6 December 2015 | 16 replies
I would take others investors sign on monday afternoon if they were still out, wipe the permanent marker off with rubbing alcohol or cheap colon and write my own words on it.
Amy A.
Rejected for Tweeting?
19 June 2014 | 14 replies
I am not an lawyer (and I do not play one on TV ;-)) but I went looking on masslegalhelp.org and found this nugget on Federal public housing:Federal public housingIf you are applying for federal public housing, a housing authority must deny your application if it finds that:A household member is currently engaged in illegal use of a drug, or the Housing Authority has reasonable cause to believe a household member's illegal use of a drug or pattern of illegal use of a drug may threaten the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents.1 The Housing Authority has reasonable cause to believe that a household member's abuse or pattern of abuse of alcohol may threaten the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents.2 Importantbefore denying a person housing based on illegal drug use or alcohol abuse, a housing authority may consider evidence of rehabilitation3.Any member of your household is subject to a lifetime registration requirement under a state sex offender registration program.4 Any household member has been convicted of the manufacture or production of methamphetamine in federally assisted housing.5 Any household member has been evicted from federally assisted housing for drug-related criminal activity within the past three years.6 ImportantA housing authority can also let your household in if the person who engaged in the drug-related criminal activity has successfully completed a supervised, approved rehabilitation program, or if the circumstances leading to the eviction no longer exist—for example, the household member has died or is in jail.7 In addition to the automatic denials listed above, a housing authority may deny applicants "whose habits and practices reasonably may be expected to have a detrimental effect on the residents or the project environment."8 This means that a housing authority has wide discretion over whom it allows into its federal public housing programs.