
26 July 2021 | 5 replies
You can have these people give you visual reports so you know if the tenants are destructive.Otherwise, if you vet your tenants, you'll tend to get people who are respectful and care about getting their deposit back, so they will take good care of the property.That said, property managers can't make money if they milk their clients dry.

9 August 2021 | 4 replies
Source:https://comptroller.texas.gov/...Seems pretty cut and dry, but wondering if I'm missing something.Thanks in advance!

29 July 2021 | 2 replies
I have only been at my current job for one year as an independent contractor hair stylist and don’t have two year work history since I took a long break for personal reasons.

5 August 2021 | 3 replies
One options is to put dry wall directly, which would make first room very small and second room very big.

1 August 2021 | 7 replies
It sounds good, but what happens when the reservations dry up and they're not making enough money?
7 August 2021 | 17 replies
At any rate for "evidence" she had pulled up (and thrown away) a small piece of carpet claiming once she did that she found "mold" and "dried blood" under it.
3 August 2021 | 6 replies
After it dried the stench was worse and the stains ,and rips, and tears are fully visible.

11 August 2021 | 93 replies
If your contract was indeed contingent upon financing, and you can no longer obtain financing, then this seems pretty cut and dry.

4 August 2021 | 4 replies
And it's not cut and dry either - there are also C/D areas outside those neighborhoods, there are areas bordering those neighborhoods that are much better, there are no magic lines you can point to as the boundaries, etc.Also, very often MLS listings omit anything that makes the property sound less appealing (so they'll say "Elmwood" instead of "South Providence", or "near East Side" instead of "below Camp St").

17 August 2021 | 3 replies
The site was once an auto repair shop, across the street was once a dry cleaners, and next door was once a gas station.