Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be sure you can evict before you complain to DCHA. They can pull the voucher and you'd still have a nonpaying tenant you can't evict!
Definitely check this. It is a fantasy that you will get the rent and legal costs from a section 8 tenant who has not been paying. She will never pay again and you will probably eventually have to evict, but at least keep getting the 80% until the eviction moratorium is lifted. As soon as you start eviction proceedings, she may destroy your property, because she will lose her section 8 voucher which is A Really Big Deal. (and again, you will never get a dime in compensation for the damages.)
Does a tenant lose section 8 voucher if they are evicted for non-payment of rent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be sure you can evict before you complain to DCHA. They can pull the voucher and you'd still have a nonpaying tenant you can't evict!
Definitely check this. It is a fantasy that you will get the rent and legal costs from a section 8 tenant who has not been paying. She will never pay again and you will probably eventually have to evict, but at least keep getting the 80% until the eviction moratorium is lifted. As soon as you start eviction proceedings, she may destroy your property, because she will lose her section 8 voucher which is A Really Big Deal. (and again, you will never get a dime in compensation for the damages.)
Anonymous wrote:You're getting a lot of bad advice here, OP.
You can't file for an eviction in DC now. You can't send a notice to quit. You can ask for mediation with DCHA (email Khalilah Payne kpayne@dchousing.org) but they can't make her pay, can't evict her, and are unlikely to pull her voucher (and you don't want them to because then you're going to get nothing and you can't evict her). If her income went down she could recertify and DCHA could pay more, but if it hasn't that's not an option.
You can't apply for most of the relief at https://coronavirus.dc.gov/rent --section 8 and rapid rehousing providers are excluded--but look into each one and see if your tenant might be able to apply for any of them. Your tenant, or maybe even you, could contact your councilmembers (including the at-large ones) and see if they can pay out of their constituent service funds--not all of them have one and they vary widely in their size and rules.
Your tenant could apply for a transfer voucher if she wanted to move, but it doesn't seem like she does and it takes a few months to get approved for the transfer and then she'd have to find a new place. And DCHA won't approve the move unless she's current on rent (or current on a payment agreement you set up with her) so tenants don't have much incentive to move.
But mostly you are stuck. You can talk to a landlord-tenant lawyer about this (Eddie Cordone, Emilie Fairbanks, Stephen Hessler, etc. basically you want someone who is in landlord-tenant court so much that they have their own office there...this is not an exaggeration; there are literally lawyers who have their own spaces in the courthouse to do negotiations and the like) but they aren't going to be able to get your tenant out--they can't even get out squatters, people selling drugs, tenants who scream all night or damage the property--nonpayment is the least of the city's concerns. And honestly, if they did get your tenant out you probably aren't going to find someone for a while. Be happy with the 80% you're getting. See if your mortgage lender will reduce your rate or give you some other relief.
--Section 8 landlord in a very similar position. And nonpayment is far from the worst of the tenant's behavior. But financially I'm doing fine with the DCHA portion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that this landlord said they already had a section 8 tenant in the property when they bought it. But as far as future landlords, aren’t there specific inspection requirements, etc to have the house qualified to be section 8 housing. So can’t the landlord just decline to go through the inspection process and therefore doesn’t qualify to be a section 8 landlord?
Who knows. I know people who have been sued by the district for saying they don’t take housing vouchers. They city is cracking down now. It’s all in the name of fairness or some BS. Essentially if you were some small time person trying to run out your house on craigslist because you need to move and someone emails you and says hey do you take vouchers and you say no you are fair game to be sued by the city. It costs thousands of dollars to fight these lawsuits all because you are a gentrifying, heartless piece of sht who doesn’t want to rent your row house to some family of 10 from EOTR who has a massive section 8 voucher, but a history of putting out cigarette butts on cornice molding and ripping our copper piping. Just take anyone! Just do it! Right? It’s only your stupid house. You should be forced to put anyone up. You are such a bad person if you don’t.
Anonymous wrote:My neighbor had multiple low income properties. Please don’t laugh he had an actor follow up on late payments.
Extremely scary looking guy who looked like a hit man from the sopranos.
He was harmless and only asked for the money by x date to landlord or he would come back.
Worked 95 percent of time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that this landlord said they already had a section 8 tenant in the property when they bought it. But as far as future landlords, aren’t there specific inspection requirements, etc to have the house qualified to be section 8 housing. So can’t the landlord just decline to go through the inspection process and therefore doesn’t qualify to be a section 8 landlord?
Who knows. I know people who have been sued by the district for saying they don’t take housing vouchers. They city is cracking down now. It’s all in the name of fairness or some BS. Essentially if you were some small time person trying to run out your house on craigslist because you need to move and someone emails you and says hey do you take vouchers and you say no you are fair game to be sued by the city. It costs thousands of dollars to fight these lawsuits all because you are a gentrifying, heartless piece of sht who doesn’t want to rent your row house to some family of 10 from EOTR who has a massive section 8 voucher, but a history of putting out cigarette butts on cornice molding and ripping our copper piping. Just take anyone! Just do it! Right? It’s only your stupid house. You should be forced to put anyone up. You are such a bad person if you don’t.
Anonymous wrote:I get that this landlord said they already had a section 8 tenant in the property when they bought it. But as far as future landlords, aren’t there specific inspection requirements, etc to have the house qualified to be section 8 housing. So can’t the landlord just decline to go through the inspection process and therefore doesn’t qualify to be a section 8 landlord?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s probably too late to advise you not to buy rental properties in DC becaus renter’s rights....
Give them 30 days notice to pay you the back rent or you’ll start the eviction process.
Can't start the process. In DC right now, because of COVID, you can't kick someone out. Quite frankly, you should be happy that you are getting the 80%. I know people who are renting at market and people are paying rent. We have a friend whose tenant is stiffing them on $3500 per month and they also have a job. They work for the state department and are using this as an opportunity to get over.
I would be reporting this to the state department,
+1 We have a military contractor pulling this crap. It took a little work but I have her CO's number now in my speed dial. If she is late or calls with a sob story one more time then I'm calling the CO. I don't care what happens to her clearance. She is paying for private school but she can't pay her rent? C'mon now.
A lot of people are taking advantage of the pandemic. Liars and cheaters are gonna lie and cheat, and I'm gonna expose the lies and cheats every single time. We worked hard to afford to buy the rental and it is part of our retirement plan. I have a responsibility to my family first and I'm not going to stand still and be robbed by someone who doesn't have a moral code.
+1. But you should have called the CO yesterday.
This is why I prefer my virginia rentals. 2 of no rent weeks and the sheriff is at your door with guns and it’s either you leave or you’re forcibly removed.
Nice... says a person who's been through a physical eviction confrontation with multiple sheriffs. Lessons learned, all good.
Next time pay your rent or move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s probably too late to advise you not to buy rental properties in DC becaus renter’s rights....
Give them 30 days notice to pay you the back rent or you’ll start the eviction process.
Can't start the process. In DC right now, because of COVID, you can't kick someone out. Quite frankly, you should be happy that you are getting the 80%. I know people who are renting at market and people are paying rent. We have a friend whose tenant is stiffing them on $3500 per month and they also have a job. They work for the state department and are using this as an opportunity to get over.
I would be reporting this to the state department,
+1 We have a military contractor pulling this crap. It took a little work but I have her CO's number now in my speed dial. If she is late or calls with a sob story one more time then I'm calling the CO. I don't care what happens to her clearance. She is paying for private school but she can't pay her rent? C'mon now.
A lot of people are taking advantage of the pandemic. Liars and cheaters are gonna lie and cheat, and I'm gonna expose the lies and cheats every single time. We worked hard to afford to buy the rental and it is part of our retirement plan. I have a responsibility to my family first and I'm not going to stand still and be robbed by someone who doesn't have a moral code.
+1. But you should have called the CO yesterday.
This is why I prefer my virginia rentals. 2 of no rent weeks and the sheriff is at your door with guns and it’s either you leave or you’re forcibly removed.
Nice... says a person who's been through a physical eviction confrontation with multiple sheriffs. Lessons learned, all good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"without any cause"? Lady/duuude, it's a pandemic out there. Folks are having trouble putting food on the table. If you're rich enough to have an investment property, why don't you sit on your hands a minute and see if you can squeeze out a little empathy for people who don't have a savings.
DCUM has a chronic empathy deficit.