Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if there is anyone out there that can answer this. If you rent the same place like an apartment for a long, long time like 10, 12 years and the carpet was already old when you moved in can you get free carpet replacement? All they did was shampoo it the day before we moved in it was not new carpet. I want to ask but don't want to make anyone angry. Is carpet replacement after a certain amount of time a health requirement or a nicety they would do? Thanks!
as a renter, you should have the carpets clean each year if you plan to live their longer term
if the place is pre-1980, it's worth checking in one of the corners to see what the floor is beneath it. I grew up in NOVA in a house built in the 70's. Hardwood floors through out a majority of the house covered in wall to wall carpet even the carpets. This was the norm back then. so you might be surprised by what is underneath. if you have a decent hard floor, you could ask to take up the carpet, and just go with rugs if needed.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if there is anyone out there that can answer this. If you rent the same place like an apartment for a long, long time like 10, 12 years and the carpet was already old when you moved in can you get free carpet replacement? All they did was shampoo it the day before we moved in it was not new carpet. I want to ask but don't want to make anyone angry. Is carpet replacement after a certain amount of time a health requirement or a nicety they would do? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:
How is that a slum lord. My carpet is 17 years old and perfect shape.
Its not. PP is weird. We bought our current home 10 years ago. The carpets were not new then (but in very good shape.) They are still going strong. What's disgusting is how PP must be living in order think carpets are destroyed every 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you really want to make your case stronger test the carpet for mold, pests, asbestos, arsenic, anything you can think of — tons of labs out there; it will cost you a $100 or so if not in a hurry. Then you can take them to court for what they’re worth. Hate slumlords. Signed, Landlord
How is that a slum lord. My carpet is 17 years old and perfect shape.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you really want to make your case stronger test the carpet for mold, pests, asbestos, arsenic, anything you can think of — tons of labs out there; it will cost you a $100 or so if not in a hurry. Then you can take them to court for what they’re worth. Hate slumlords. Signed, Landlord
How is that a slum lord. My carpet is 17 years old and perfect shape.
Anonymous wrote:If you really want to make your case stronger test the carpet for mold, pests, asbestos, arsenic, anything you can think of — tons of labs out there; it will cost you a $100 or so if not in a hurry. Then you can take them to court for what they’re worth. Hate slumlords. Signed, Landlord
Anonymous wrote:It’s in the interpretation of the housing standards and habitability warranty. It is very easy to prove that what OP describes is not up to par.
I’d be very comfortable asking, doing myself and deducting from rent and it going to court. I’m a landlord myself and think many landlords on this board should have their licenses yanked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with it? What jurisdiction? If it's DC or MD you have to change every 5 years. If it's Virginia and it looks worse than when you moved in you could get charged.
Can you please point me to a document where this is stated for Maryland? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Bill of Rights is just the highest level of document, think of it like a Constitution but then there are lots of other regulations in DC code. Sorry, don’t know about VA. But here’s the DC code and resources. You could call the OTA and help clinics run by many lawschools (UVA must have one?)
https://ota.dc.gov/page/information-tenants
We are landlords and I hate bad landlords with a passion