Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:About a month ago a pipe burst in a wall while we were at work and flooded our entire basement. Our house has a walkout basement that contains 3 of the four bedrooms in the house. The top floor is just the primary bedroom/bath, kitchen, living/den and small dining room. The basement is not livable as there are about a dozen fans still running. Work is expected to begin soon.
Here’s the issue: we rent the house and our 3 children have been displaced from their room. The landlord has said the house meets the definition of livable and the three kids can sleep upstairs while repairs (which could take months) take place. Kids are ages 7-12.
We have rented this house for 4 years and have 9 months more on our current lease.
I’m at a loss of what to do. I don’t want to break the lease and move/ most likely lose being in boundary for our current school, but having five people live in approximately 750 square feet with one bed/bath is getting unmanageable.
I assume we have no recourse here. Yes, we have renters insurance. The landlord is not very open on what their homeowners insurance covers (does it cover us at all?).
Any suggestions on making our current situation manageable or what we should be asking the landlord for?
If it is "livable" but as described I would just move. Id ask to break my lease.
If it is not livable ask to not pay rent so you can use that money to live elsewhere.
Is he right technically?
Yes, he’s technically correct as we have AC, a working kitchen, a bathroom, running water, etc. We are just cramped and will be for the foreseeable future. The other issue is he doesn’t come let the workers in, we have to do that. So I’m also running through PTO as I WOH. I’m just getting frustrated with the process.
Hmmm, I'd invest some time in either researching your rights as a tenant or some money in talking to an attorney. Because there are several things wrong here. First, you overseeing the repars. I'd let the landlord know right now in writing - email - cc' your spouse - that you are no longer available to oversee repairs. That's the LL's responsibility, period.
Sit down with your spouse and figure out what you want here - do you want to tough it out and receive reduced rent? Do you want to move? Do you want to move into temp housing until the repairs are done? Once you've figured that out, read the lease, read the laws in your jurisdiction (or consult with an attorney), and then present a demand to the LL.