*Plink*

Dec 13, 2007 08:20

So when did you get up? I've been up and awake since 4 a.m. That's when I went to the bathroom and noticed (kinda hard not to) that there was water coming down from the ceiling in great wet, splotchy drips. It presently became a hefty trickle. The ceiling is bowed low and the paint is all bubbled out with more water. Luckily I was able to move ( Read more... )

home and hearth

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Comments 10

hazelhawthorne December 13 2007, 17:29:35 UTC
My main problem with just documenting the whole process while allowing it to sit until Sunday is the possibility of the ceiling caving in. I think you should either call the plumber and get it taken care of NOW! and then start looking for a new place in a reasonable time frame, or let her be a fucktard and wait to deal with the water damage but get your stuff out NOW! and let her know that you will not be paying any further rent as she has allowed the apartment to become unlivable and therefore invalidated any rental agreement/lease agreement that was previously between you. As a matter of fact, if you can get all of your shit out this weekend, you should try suing her for the rent you have already paid for the rest of this month. And the deposit. It ain't your fault there is going to be extensive water damage to the place.

the evil-nasty-would-never-be-allowed-out-to-play-with-others part of my brain is recommending that you get your upstairs neighbor in on the plan and after you both have all your stuff out you go up stairs and ( ... )

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avingail December 13 2007, 17:46:59 UTC
The woman let the three-bedroom, which has 4 confirmed adults and three children (possibly more) go without a stove for AN ENTIRE MONTH!!! because she didn't have time to get to it. They were on vacation or something and forbade the tenants to deal with it on their own. Oh yeah, and that was the manager and her family, not just some random tenant. I was pretty shocked when I heard that. I wouldn't have put up with it.

There already is extensive water damage from previous explosions. The LandLady's husband does all the fix-it work and he is NOT a plumber.

I'm already considering taking a drill to the ceiling (the drywall is hosed anyways) so that the water can drip down where I want it to, but that would make me liable for something. Upstairs guy sighed a great sigh and admitted that something like this has happened before.

*Waaailll* I hate moving! But I suppose if I have help . . .

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eliensign December 13 2007, 20:21:31 UTC
The Landlady's past and present behaviour is illegal.

You are entirely within your rights to call a plumber, document the entire fixing experience, pro-rate/demand-refund-of the rent, and get the hell out when you so wish.

I am available between this Saturday and New Years everyday except the 21st & 22nd.

Lemme know!

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gchpaco December 15 2007, 01:50:10 UTC
Elizabeth is correct here. Landlords as a class are generally scum. I can help move if you need me to. Absolutely document it. Photographs, video, other people's statements, all help tremendously.

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f1ymetothemoon December 13 2007, 18:22:54 UTC
Oh my god... unreal. I'd answer your survey, but I don't know which choice is most legal. But definitely document the hell out of it. Photos, photos, photos, preferably time-stamped.

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sidelong December 13 2007, 19:14:58 UTC
I am pro these actions in this order: 1) document, 2) give notice, 3) call a plumber out of your own pocket, 4) burn the building down. Well, maybe burn the building down and THEN call a plumber.

However, I can't read directions for the life of me, so I clicked 1 as most and 5 as least and really screwed up your statistics. Sorry.

Document, document, document. Seriously. And I'm with Hazel, definitely evacuate your stuff. Find a new place to live.

The god damn of calling your own plumber is that they may not be legally able to fix a problem that originated in property you aren't renting, like someone else's apartment 2 floors up, because the legal renter didn't give them permission. Best to let her handle it. After you burn the building down. Should have nice, easy access to the pipes from there.

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eliensign December 13 2007, 20:25:40 UTC
Your landlady is either relying on her Authori-tay and Renter's Ignorance to bully her tenents into submission, or she is not familiar with the basic legal responsibilities inherent in her position.

Much smackdownage is required.

Go Alaina!

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duckflambe December 13 2007, 21:50:00 UTC
Let me know if you need help moving.

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