Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Worst nightmare has happened - house down the street was sold and now they're renting out to multiple families and people. They now have multiple cars everywhere, have been parking on my neighbor's lawn, left trash strewn in the street because they don't care, and don't take care of the yard/property of course cause they're renters. Is it legal in Montgomery County to do this? Absolutely zero work and construction was done in the house, so the house is still built with rooms, kitchen, and bathroom like it is for a single family.
It's really justifying up the steet and declining the quality of life for everyone.
Worst nightmare??? Come on stop being a dramatic!! Also try living an apartment with shared walls and a bunch or people living next to you, above you to the side of you then come back here to fake cry.
Grow up.
Where do you live? Let's see how you like of the home next to you goes from a single family to now 5 families parking 8 cars now all in the drive way and in the yards and throwing trash all over the street in front of your house..let's see how much you'd like it.
But it's not the home next to you. You said it was down the street and next to your neighbor. I get it, though. What does your neighbor intend to do about it?
It's still a home on the same block, dimwit. One sh!tty house ruins the character of the neighborhood and home values. Then next house flees and then the next. Now the enitre area is a ghetto dump with cars parked all over lawns, trash in the streets, and crime increasing. That affects long time residents. Of course you're probably too dense to comprehend it..
We have a multi-family house on our street. One guy there edges our lawn and some other lawns for free. I guess we are lucky as a recent visitor commented on how nice the lawns look.
A multi-family home doesn’t have to mean there will be more trash, etc. I don’t love what they do with their backyard so am strategically planting flower bushes.
My neighbor in the multi-family home actually came over and helped us dig a hole for a flower bush.
Maybe they will get the hang of things. If they are from another country, they may not be aware of expectations here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP might be racist I suspect
Clearly they are. Their worst nightmare is very concerning op needs to get some real problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is talking about 4-5 families not 4-5 professionals living in a home. Very different. It is happening in many SFH and town homes across the county. I work in home health and see it all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s probably not legal. In single family neighborhoods the cap is typically one family or four unrelated adults, so multiple families would be a problem. But as a practical matter the county might not enforce those rules, especially against renters that aren’t engaging in criminal conduct.
Nobody had a problem with me and my four housemates and our five cars in our group house in Bethesda.
Because you didn’t throw trash in the street.
Five PhD students with their families (spouse and 1 child each) would be ok?
Anonymous wrote:If that’s your worst nightmare your life is a dream. Get over yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry you live in a poor neighborhood. Move.
We have lawyers, economists, computer programers, and PhD scientists on our street. Yeah, ok, our homes aren't worth $2M, but it's not like it is a crappy neighborhood. It is being turned into trash and being made poor by sh!try new investment people turning good homes into garbage rentals.
If this is a preview of what Thrive MoCo is going to do to SFH neighborhoods, we are getting the hell outta the county quick.
Anonymous wrote:OP is talking about 4-5 families not 4-5 professionals living in a home. Very different. It is happening in many SFH and town homes across the county. I work in home health and see it all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s probably not legal. In single family neighborhoods the cap is typically one family or four unrelated adults, so multiple families would be a problem. But as a practical matter the county might not enforce those rules, especially against renters that aren’t engaging in criminal conduct.
Nobody had a problem with me and my four housemates and our five cars in our group house in Bethesda.
Because you didn’t throw trash in the street.
Anonymous wrote:Multifamily housing is the future.
Anonymous wrote:Search the county code. There are limits on number of unrelated people in X amount of space.
Anonymous wrote:Worst nightmare has happened - house down the street was sold and now they're renting out to multiple families and people. They now have multiple cars everywhere, have been parking on my neighbor's lawn, left trash strewn in the street because they don't care, and don't take care of the yard/property of course cause they're renters. Is it legal in Montgomery County to do this? Absolutely zero work and construction was done in the house, so the house is still built with rooms, kitchen, and bathroom like it is for a single family.
It's really justifying up the steet and declining the quality of life for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Every single thing you mentioned is happening next door to me as well. I am not sure why you think construction is needed. They just all share the kitchen etc. It was not turned in to apartments. It is a group house. We are going on year 3 right now. They are generally quiet so that is good...except when cars pull up blasting the radio for pickups/drop offs.
You neighbor can for sure complain about cars parked on her lawn though. Our neighbors just park on their own lawn.
Anonymous wrote:OP is talking about 4-5 families not 4-5 professionals living in a home. Very different. It is happening in many SFH and town homes across the county. I work in home health and see it all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s probably not legal. In single family neighborhoods the cap is typically one family or four unrelated adults, so multiple families would be a problem. But as a practical matter the county might not enforce those rules, especially against renters that aren’t engaging in criminal conduct.
Nobody had a problem with me and my four housemates and our five cars in our group house in Bethesda.
Because you didn’t throw trash in the street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry you live in a poor neighborhood. Move.
We have lawyers, economists, computer programers, and PhD scientists on our street. Yeah, ok, our homes aren't worth $2M, but it's not like it is a crappy neighborhood. It is being turned into trash and being made poor by sh!try new investment people turning good homes into garbage rentals.
If this is a preview of what Thrive MoCo is going to do to SFH neighborhoods, we are getting the hell outta the county quick.