
19 June 2019 | 14 replies
Do not go with Shawnee property mgmt - we ended up renting/buying the house we moved into that they had (it was part of their family portfolio and we saw potential in fixing it up and the school district it was in so lived with it but until we knew we were staying in it and would buy they would hardly respond to anything - a couple times the AC quit and I was at work/wife was at home and it was 90 plus inside the house, when we moved in the house was completely filthly and had not been cleaned at all - walking around on the laminate floors your feet would be black in about 5 mins due to all the dirt - bugs/spiders everywhere -- House needs completely rebuilt and is in a great location - quite frankly house is a piece of crap but it's what we could afford and I felt comfortable buying not to mention I believe it has a ton of upside in just cleaning up the 6 acre lot, we strategically add on to the house and rebuild it and the sky is the limit - but they were completely non responsive and check out their google reviews - they are accurate)I'd heard from some of our employees that either WCW or RMS (I probably have the initials wrong on both but it's close enough) were good - one of those 2 have good reviews online and whichever was the good one the employee mentioned they had rented from/through them for quite a while and had been having a good experience and responsiveness if anything was ever wrong.In WIchita I manage my own stuff and manage a couple of properties for others but my younger brother does/has lived in a rental for a couple of years that is managed by Cedar Mills - he's had a pretty good experience with them - I was also at his house in March when the UFC fight came to town as I stayed the night there - anyways long story short on Saturday afternoon around 4pm there was a ghetto rigged sprinkler riser pipe buried in the ground in front of the water hydrant (the homeowner did this when they lived there) - my brother didnt know about it as it had some sort of rotted piece of plywood covering it up - he stepped to shut off the water faucet and broke through the wood breaking the riser - it didnt have the proper shutoffs on it so we had to cut the water at the meter to the house - Cedar Mills had a plumber out at his house in a couple hours to fix it and - I was actually impressed - I'd have a hard time pulling that off on a Saturday that late.

17 May 2023 | 12 replies
I say that for two reasons:1) while I'm very convenient for hospitals I'm a bit inland and nurses visiting here typically want to be right in the coastal area or the trendy downtown districts if they're looking for the 'experience' of staying in Socal.

24 June 2022 | 5 replies
In residential districts, accessory buildings may be detached garages, workshops, storage sheds, hobby-type greenhouses or similar minor buildings (roofed structures).Not ADU like in "habitable".

30 March 2022 | 3 replies
Dunedin has a whole page dedicated to STR and what zoning districts allow them.

9 May 2023 | 15 replies
Also, there a several pockets of St Pete that are in historical districts even if they don't seem to be.
21 January 2021 | 6 replies
Most of that area is a historical district and history has shown us that historical preservation societies are quick to mess up your CapX budget.

18 September 2019 | 31 replies
Some investors like the short North or Arena district or Gahana, Reynoldsburg.

16 November 2021 | 7 replies
Watch those guys as they provide comps from miles away in completely different neighborhoods, crossing major roads, and even in different school districts.

19 February 2024 | 12 replies
WE can get numbers to work in Columbus Ohio but I don't think anywhere else in ohio unless it was a city school district within 2 miles of urban core and new construction is above $210 per square foot and even then we'd have to look at land cost because land is cheap in columbus. we are expanding now to florida since the numbers are even better. not the opposite. just my 2 cents.

25 July 2020 | 14 replies
So, the removal of occupants (former owners) will not be by eviction, but by a different type of lawsuit called an "ejectment" - eviction is handled by district justices, whereas ejectment is in a higher level of court (common pleas).