Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd tell her that it's got to be warmer in the house or your leaving. No way I'd be that uncomfortable, how was she in the summer with the AC?
Op here- I don't think we had any issues with the AC. I think we both agreed to have it on 70 during the day and 67 at night. It's just the heat that's causing issues.
Those are ridiculously cold temperatures for AC. I think 75-78 is a more common AC setting. Amazingly, you actually seem to have found a roommate who agrees to such cold settings year round.
In the end, you'll have to put your foot down and tell her the temp is going to come up a few degrees. The bigger problem is that she is changing roommates or moving somewhere else in June and she will never find another roommate to agree to those temperatures.
78 is a common AC setting?
Anonymous wrote:Most leases stipulate 65 minimum because of frozen pipes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So is it your condo? Or you're the primary on the lease?
Op here- I've lived here since June 2012. I had a roommate (good friend) until June 2014. Didn't end up getting another roommate until end of March 2015 as I was fine paying the rent and everything myself for 9 months but once I switched to working from home, my income went down a little bit so decided to get a new roommate. I'm currently the only one on the lease and she technically sublets the room from me.
Anonymous wrote:
1. She is crazy, and you should try to move her out because this will not be last problem you have with her.
2. You should offer to pay a bit more for January and February, since you work there during the day and need the heat turned to a more reasonable temp.
3. But for the long-term, see 1.!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell her she needs to move out and you will find a new roommate because she clearly can't afford to live where you are living if five or ten extra dollars a month for reasonable heat expenses is too much for her. You aren't talking about keeping temps at 75, 66-68 is very reasonable.
She's probably also a PITA on other expenses. Don't accommodate her ridiculousness.
+1. I had a roommate like this in college who would try to put duct tape over the thermostat in the winter. She complained about being soooo broke, habing student loans, etc. Then why was she living in a nice luxury student apartment with pool, etc.
If she can't pay basic utilities, she needs to move elsewhere. It's not like you're asking her to chip in on HBO or something optional. And I disagree you should pay more because you're hearing the house while working from home. It's so much more energy efficient to maintain a reasonable temp like 66-68 degrees than to have the temp drop every morning and then work over time to heat back up in the evenings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few things....
First, OP, you work from home every single day? What the hell kind of work do you do? You may need to job search if your income dropped that much.
Second, whomever said $250 for heat, you must be in a house. I am in a 900 sq ft apartment and never got anywhere near that. In addition, I don't run it much, and use blankets.
Third, a space heater could be against the lease? I seriously doubt it. Again, I am in an apartment and that is not against the lease at all. The drawback is your electric bill will go up using a space heater.
Op here- I'm not sure why my job matters but yes, I work from home every day. I was a nanny for 10 years and then started my own nanny agency. I was making $900/week (net) as a nanny 52 weeks a year and when I stopped doing that to start my own business, I took a pay cut at first as I got things started and wasn't netting $900 week with that. However now that I'm over a year into my business, I do make more. But again, not sure why it's so boggling to you that I work from home full time, a lot of people do that.
There are not many jobs out there that allow for working from home EVERY SINGLE DAY, but operating a nanny business certainly fits the bill.
I agree with OP. Lots of people work full-time from home. Don't know why that's so baffling to the PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few things....
First, OP, you work from home every single day? What the hell kind of work do you do? You may need to job search if your income dropped that much.
Second, whomever said $250 for heat, you must be in a house. I am in a 900 sq ft apartment and never got anywhere near that. In addition, I don't run it much, and use blankets.
Third, a space heater could be against the lease? I seriously doubt it. Again, I am in an apartment and that is not against the lease at all. The drawback is your electric bill will go up using a space heater.
Op here- I'm not sure why my job matters but yes, I work from home every day. I was a nanny for 10 years and then started my own nanny agency. I was making $900/week (net) as a nanny 52 weeks a year and when I stopped doing that to start my own business, I took a pay cut at first as I got things started and wasn't netting $900 week with that. However now that I'm over a year into my business, I do make more. But again, not sure why it's so boggling to you that I work from home full time, a lot of people do that.