Tag Archives: April

When can I vacate my apartment due to a rent increase?

I am in the process of moving out of my apartment because the rent is increasing. The lease states that I need to give notice on the first of the month in order to leave without having to continue to paying (my lease is month-to-month right now). The landlord sent out rent increase notices on February 27th for a rent increase on April 1st. I didn’t get the notice until March 4th. If I would have received the noticed before the beginning of March I would have given notice at that time. The landlord is trying to charge me for April rent and I do not think I should pay April rent because the notice was not received before March 1st. Any thoughts?
Thanks for the notices. I will move out before the rent incrases on April 1st. I wil be out March 25th. I live in Washington, DC. I know this has a lot ot do with local laws and leases. The lease states to give notice at the beginning of the month, but I would have given notice if I had received the rent increase notice before the beginning of the month.

making an offer soon?

I am looking at a property that has been listed on the market since april of 07. They have had no offers to date. It is a large acreage 45, cross fenced pastures, horse barn, but the problem is the house has been left with many cosmetic needs, paint, flooring, need to update kitchen, old ac systems, pool liner had been ripped out since katrina and has frogs and turtles residing in it. They tell me they have reduced the asking price considerably over the last 8 months and are now at 424K. At this point I think they are just hoping to get their first offer. I don’t want to lowball them. But I don’t want to move in somewhere that I need to adress all these issues after the sale, when I know there is not a huge number of buyers looking to purchase pasture land to raise horses, especially when almost 10-15 acres is lowland flood area also. Is it okay to make an offer and ask for the pool repair, and an allowance for flooring/and paint work?

Should I join the army or keep my sales assistant job?

I decided to join the army after I broke up with my long term boyfriend in March. I have passed all the tests, and am waiting for my offer, which will be ready for me to sign in less than two weeks. In April, I found a good job as a sales assistant at a new homes salkes office. It’s 25-35 hours a week at $12/hour. So I make between $550-$650 every two weeks. The army is going to pay me a little more, and to go to school for the first year, too. I have to get though 2 months of Basic Training and 2 months of Soldier Qualification before I start learning my chosen trade, which is like a computer/communications engineering technician. Thing is, I am really good at my sales job, too. I’ve been here 4 months now. I’m not sure I want to leave. This is one of the best jobs I’ve ever had. What if I don’t get though Basic Training and I can’t get my job back? I’m confused. Any ideas or advice?
I should add that I am Canadian, and will be joining the Canadian Military. I welcome answers from any country. Thanks!
I would be just fine in the army. I am strong and fit. I don’t doubt that I CAN do it. I know I can. Will I like it? I know there’s lots of girls in the army. They seem fine…
My chosen trade isn’t offered in reserves.

This is a rental house that was for rent and for sale and was sold.?

If my friends land lord had her pay for a whole months rent for April and told her to be out by or on the 28Th and then came to the house on the 27Th after calling, and forced her to move out on the 27Th because she was having a bad couple days. Can my friend do anything legally that could help her, and because of the inconvenience she and her 2 children had to spend 4 days in a hotel before being able to move to her new place?

Who is more energy efficient? BUSH or GORE?

Published on Sunday, April 29, 2001 in the Chicago Tribune
Bush Loves Ecology — At Home
by Rob Sullivan

The 4,000-square-foot house is a model of environmental rectitude.

Geothermal heat pumps located in a central closet circulate water through pipes buried 300 feet deep in the ground where the temperature is a constant 67 degrees; the water heats the house in the winter and cools it in the summer. Systems such as the one in this “eco-friendly” dwelling use about 25% of the electricity that traditional heating and cooling systems utilize.

A 25,000-gallon underground cistern collects rainwater gathered from roof runs; wastewater from sinks, toilets and showers goes into underground purifying tanks and is also funneled into the cistern. The water from the cistern is used to irrigate the landscaping surrounding the four-bedroom home. Plants and flowers native to the high prairie area blend the structure into the surrounding ecosystem.

No, this is not the home of some eccentrically wealthy eco-freak trying to shame his fellow citizens into following the pristineness of his self-righteous example. And no, it is not the wilderness retreat of the Sierra Club or the Natural Resources Defense Council, a haven where tree-huggers plot political strategy.

This is President George W. Bush’s “Texas White House” outside the small town of Crawford.

Yes, the same George W. who believes arsenic and drinking water might not be such a bad combo, the same man who reneged on his campaign promise to lower carbon dioxide emissions from power plants, the same man who is doing everything in his power to fling open the Alaskan Natural Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling.

How does the President reconcile an eco-friendly abode for his own family with his persistent stand against anything that smacks of an environmentally friendly agenda for the nation as a whole? The answer to that perplexing question is a real mystery.

Perhaps sound ecological practices are only for those who can afford them: as a self-proclaimed strict constructionist of the U.S. Constitution, Bush must be aware that clean air and clean water are not guaranteed in that glorious document. Perhaps in Bush’s Brave New Corporate World, clean natural resources are merely commodities in a free-market economy: if you can pay for them, fine; if not, tough. The rest of us will just have to put up with more toxic dumps and more public lands being turned over to logging, mining and oil companies.

According to David Heymann, the house’s architect and associate dean of the University of Texas architecture department, Heymann designed the house so that “every room has a relationship with something in the landscape that’s different from the room next door. Each of the rooms feels like a slightly different place.”

In a USA Today interview, Heymann said, “There’s a great grove of oak trees to the west that protects it from the late afternoon sun. Then there is a view out to the north looking at hills, and to the east out over a lake, and the view to the south . . . out to beautiful hills.”

I suppose in George W.’s architectural world only the rich and powerful have views; vistas that the public owns as part of its shared heritage are up for lease and sale.

Heymann also termed the house “stunningly small.” Really? Would it be stunningly small for a single mother in South Central Los Angeles? How stunningly small would it be for an immigrant Latino family in San Antonio Maybe in the rarified heights where second homes are the norm, 4,000 square feet is small and on a stunning scale as well, but in Main Street America that much elbow room is pretty big for the first and only home.

But then most of us can’t reconcile what might at first glance appear to be inherently irreconcilable. Maybe some day, like our noble president, we will be able to make that kind of staggering mental feat. That is, if we ever stop misunderestimating ourselves.

Rob Sullivan is a freelance writer based in Los Angeles.