Rent payments to off-campus apartment daughter moved out of?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?


Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.


No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?


Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.


No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.

None of those things cancel her obligations under the lease.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you have a college-aged child and don’t understand how contracts and leases work. Of course you pay.


the state as mandated an evacuation, this isn't the same thing idiot, the contract is void in time of war, state of emergency and natural disaster

There is no "evacuation" of apartments anywhere.


Only kids left in my kid’s college town are some international kids who are struggling to work out logistics. Everyone is home. Campus is shut down. Nowhere to eat. Campus jobs all ended. How is that the kid’s fault? You don’t think there will be any relief from gov for impacted property owners?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?

Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.

No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.

Then I guess it’s your daughter’s credit that will be ruined. That’s your choice but it’s not a smart one.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?

Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.

No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.

Then I guess it’s your daughter’s credit that will be ruined. That’s your choice but it’s not a smart one.


Are you a slumlord?

How can she pay without a job — and why pay for uninhabitable apt? No food or safety? A natural disaster took her job and closed down the place she ate in. Town is a ghost town. Do folks pay rent after a hurricane sweeps thru a coastal town?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you have a college-aged child and don’t understand how contracts and leases work. Of course you pay.

the state as mandated an evacuation, this isn't the same thing idiot, the contract is void in time of war, state of emergency and natural disaster

There is no "evacuation" of apartments anywhere.

Only kids left in my kid’s college town are some international kids who are struggling to work out logistics. Everyone is home. Campus is shut down. Nowhere to eat. Campus jobs all ended. How is that the kid’s fault? You don’t think there will be any relief from gov for impacted property owners?

No. I think there will be support for hourly workers who jobs are furloughed during this time. If your daughter falls into that group then she can apply for those funds, and pay her landlord.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?

Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.

No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.

Then I guess it’s your daughter’s credit that will be ruined. That’s your choice but it’s not a smart one.


Are you a slumlord?

How can she pay without a job — and why pay for uninhabitable apt? No food or safety? A natural disaster took her job and closed down the place she ate in. Town is a ghost town. Do folks pay rent after a hurricane sweeps thru a coastal town?

The apartment is not uninhabitable.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Do you think all contracts are automatically void in time of war, state of emergency, and natural disaster?


Are you a lawyer? Or a policy wonk working on this corona bill? Or neither?


I'm someone highly confused by the post about void contracts.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?

Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.

No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.

Then I guess it’s your daughter’s credit that will be ruined. That’s your choice but it’s not a smart one.

Are you a slumlord?

How can she pay without a job — and why pay for uninhabitable apt? No food or safety? A natural disaster took her job and closed down the place she ate in. Town is a ghost town. Do folks pay rent after a hurricane sweeps thru a coastal town?

Ok now you’re just trolling. Her apartment isn’t uninhabitable. She’s welcome to live there. Are you really so clueless as to how the world works? It’s shame that it’s not your credit that will be harmed since you’re the one that made poor choices for your child.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Commercial RE owners are freaking out that students won’t pay. It all rolls up to larger investors who made money off the 08 financial crisis so don’t worry about this one. Maybe karma?

Whoever co-signed the lease will get their credit hurt. Maybe people won’t care.

No co-signer. We were traveling for work, they let my daughter sign. Now college is cancelled, cafeterias she ate at closed and her job is gone.

Then I guess it’s your daughter’s credit that will be ruined. That’s your choice but it’s not a smart one.


Are you a slumlord?

How can she pay without a job — and why pay for uninhabitable apt? No food or safety? A natural disaster took her job and closed down the place she ate in. Town is a ghost town. Do folks pay rent after a hurricane sweeps thru a coastal town?


Wait -- she doesn't know how to cook? She can only eat prepared food from a particular place? I don't understand.
Anonymous
OP, posts like yours make me wonder whether an 18 year old is posing as a parent.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you have a college-aged child and don’t understand how contracts and leases work. Of course you pay.


the state as mandated an evacuation, this isn't the same thing idiot, the contract is void in time of war, state of emergency and natural disaster

There is no "evacuation" of apartments anywhere.


Only kids left in my kid’s college town are some international kids who are struggling to work out logistics. Everyone is home. Campus is shut down. Nowhere to eat. Campus jobs all ended. How is that the kid’s fault? You don’t think there will be any relief from gov for impacted property owners?


What are the other adults doing who live there? What do the other adults do who suddenly find themselves without work?
Anonymous
Amazon probably has ramen available with Prime shipping. Send her some. Or not; have her come home. None of that is relevant in any way whatsoever to your/her obligations under the lease.

Some states may put a temporary moratorium on evictions. That doesn't change the fact that rent is owed.
Anonymous
A college student really shouldn’t be working just to keep a roof over her head. If that’s the case, she picked a college that was too expensive. College jobs are supposed to be for books and “spending money.”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you have a college-aged child and don’t understand how contracts and leases work. Of course you pay.


the state as mandated an evacuation, this isn't the same thing idiot, the contract is void in time of war, state of emergency and natural disaster


The state mandated your non-minor child come home to live in your house and told her she was being evacuated from private landlord housing? Mandated that it was not an option to stay where she was?


college is closed, would you rather have someone living their rent free? thats the rules brah sorry you don't like it, either rent free no evict or lease is invalid at this time

https://www.ocregister.com/2020/03/13/calls-for-eviction-ban-as-coronavirus-threatens-paychecks/
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