Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone else feel *really* badly for the friend/landlord?
I'm picturing this person seeing OP's name on his caller ID, gritting his teeth and muttering "God dammit" under his breath, and then forcing a bright smile and higher-than-usual cheery voice "Hello? ....Oh dear, I'm sorry to hear that is still going on, yes, so sorry...you're right... yes... hmm mmmh, he is a lovely child yes...absolutely....yes"
And then holding his head in his hands for a moment on his desk before he gets back to his laptop.
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So badly. As a person who is looking into renting my condo in NW DC this is a nightmare scenario. You're not only being a mega-irritant to everyone who lives there but also ruining 'my' reputation as a conscience owner. Crapdoodles. >.>
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This building is the most NOT child friendly building ever. The management company as well as the board would be thrilled if my kid fell off the roof. They are jerks. They say that my child's fingerprints on the lobby doors lower the value of the property as a whole. They hate children. They even made me remove my blackout blinds in the baby room because it's "against" regulation although the not in writing to have anything but standard blind up.'they are horrible. I'm harassed daily by the property manager who literally looks for my child to touch something or make a loud noise and break the noise violation code. It's horrible and I feel helpless.
OMG, we live in a building like that, but it's more the residence who hate children.Rumor has it that kids under 4 were not allowed at the pool about 8 years ago and prior. The pool rules overrules a federal law. Kids get yelled at by elderly residents when they speak in the corridor and so on. It's so sad.
Just like on airplanes, in close confines small children are to been seen not heard. I do not want to be woken up from a nap or disturbed from my work by children screaming or running up/down halls. I pay way too much money for that.
No you don't, you live in a multifamily arrangement. Noises others make are a part of the deal. Buy a house if you want perfect control over your surroundings.
this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kind of legal action could they possible take against our landlord since we haven't violated any laws. Bike lock at the pool is hardly grounds for eviction. I'll take the lock down right now and call a good friend at DCRA to come inspect the roof. Not a problem at all. Also when I asked for the condo rules or whatever they said I'm not entitled to them.
Now she's going to get a private roof inspector on the property?! To do a personal inspection for her as a renter?!
This is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Our landlord doesn't like the board and also doesn't care. Doesn't live in the area and could care less. When something breaks we fix it. We rarely talk to him.
Anonymous wrote:What kind of legal action could they possible take against our landlord since we haven't violated any laws. Bike lock at the pool is hardly grounds for eviction. I'll take the lock down right now and call a good friend at DCRA to come inspect the roof. Not a problem at all. Also when I asked for the condo rules or whatever they said I'm not entitled to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone else feel *really* badly for the friend/landlord?
I'm picturing this person seeing OP's name on his caller ID, gritting his teeth and muttering "God dammit" under his breath, and then forcing a bright smile and higher-than-usual cheery voice "Hello? ....Oh dear, I'm sorry to hear that is still going on, yes, so sorry...you're right... yes... hmm mmmh, he is a lovely child yes...absolutely....yes"
And then holding his head in his hands for a moment on his desk before he gets back to his laptop.
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This building is the most NOT child friendly building ever. The management company as well as the board would be thrilled if my kid fell off the roof. They are jerks. They say that my child's fingerprints on the lobby doors lower the value of the property as a whole. They hate children. They even made me remove my blackout blinds in the baby room because it's "against" regulation although the not in writing to have anything but standard blind up.'they are horrible. I'm harassed daily by the property manager who literally looks for my child to touch something or make a loud noise and break the noise violation code. It's horrible and I feel helpless.
OMG, we live in a building like that, but it's more the residence who hate children.Rumor has it that kids under 4 were not allowed at the pool about 8 years ago and prior. The pool rules overrules a federal law. Kids get yelled at by elderly residents when they speak in the corridor and so on. It's so sad.
Just like on airplanes, in close confines small children are to been seen not heard. I do not want to be woken up from a nap or disturbed from my work by children screaming or running up/down halls. I pay way too much money for that.
No you don't, you live in a multifamily arrangement. Noises others make are a part of the deal. Buy a house if you want perfect control over your surroundings.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone else feel *really* badly for the friend/landlord?
I'm picturing this person seeing OP's name on his caller ID, gritting his teeth and muttering "God dammit" under his breath, and then forcing a bright smile and higher-than-usual cheery voice "Hello? ....Oh dear, I'm sorry to hear that is still going on, yes, so sorry...you're right... yes... hmm mmmh, he is a lovely child yes...absolutely....yes"
And then holding his head in his hands for a moment on his desk before he gets back to his laptop.
Anonymous wrote:What defines a disturbance? She can't even get the rules to follow