Support

“I wonder if anyone has had a similar experience to advise on a situation I have encountered as a tenant.”

tenant
Photo by PoPville flickr user LaTur

“Dear PoPville,

I wonder if anyone in the community has had a similar experience to advise on a situation I have encountered as a tenant. We lease a row house to a property management company that oversees our space (in addition to others) owned by a landlord living outside the country. We have been living here for about 2 years and have never been directly billed for our water use. The first several months of our residence we were continually receiving bills and delinquent payment notices addressed to homeowner, some of which included DC Water. After notifying the property manager several times, including expressively inquiring the status of the DC Water account, we were assured that it would be taken care of.

Our lease states that we are responsible for ‘individually metered’ water utility charges but the bills have since sopped arriving in our post box. However, we’ve just received a call from the property manager that the landlord has (only now) realized that he has had the water account setup to automatically debit the full bill amount from his personal credit card/bank account each month and has unknowingly paid for our collective water usage for over 24 months.

This is not the first occasion where our management company has shown exteemly poor oversight for the properties they are responsible for. We have always minded their absent, “hands off” approach in the past, including delinquent responses to pest control issues, badly repaired structural maintenance tasks, and an overall lack of authority for the legalities of renting a home. This attitude came off at first as a minuscule tradeoff for the autonomy we felt as tenants but this has gone to far. How much recourse is the landlord owed and what is the worse case scenario for us as tenants? Looking at the math, this could be between 60-80$/month X 24 months = ~$1500-1800! Are we to be expected to refund the landlord? Can it be deducted from our security deposit? Might he sue us? The property managers? Help!”

Recent Stories

This rental is located at 1803 Belmont near 18th Street. The Craigslist ad says:

photo by Josh Bassett “Dear PoPville, I wanted to reach out to share an experience for the dc women. Monday morning a man on the red line

photo by Samuel Breslow “Dear PoPville, URGENT. city center removing front desk position, replacing with amazon lockers. our beloved staff FIRED with one day notice . HAVE YOU HEAR ABOUT…

“Dear PoPville, Thought you might like an update since the last time you posted about them the chat was a lively discussion (and/or doom spiral depending on your point of…

For many remote workers, a messy home is distracting.

You’re getting pulled into meetings, and your unread emails keep ticking up. But you can’t focus because pet hair tumbleweeds keep floating across the floor, your desk has a fine layer of dust and you keep your video off in meetings so no one sees the chaos behind you.

It’s no secret a dirty home is distracting and even adds stress to your life. And who has the energy to clean after work? That’s why it’s smart to enlist the help of professionals, like Well-Paid Maids.

Read More

Submit your own Announcement here.

Metropolitan Beer Trail Passport

The Metropolitan Beer Trail free passport links 11 of Washington, DC’s most popular local craft breweries and bars. Starting on April 27 – December 31, 2024, Metropolitan Beer Trail passport holders will earn 100 points when checking in at the

DC Day of Archaeology Festival

The annual DC Day of Archaeology Festival gathers archaeologists from Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia together to talk about our local history and heritage. Talk to archaeologists in person and learn more about archaeological science and the past of our

×

Subscribe to our mailing list