- 11 Apr 2021 23:14
#15166093
I assume so, since the landlord was never forced to do anything.
Maybe the experiences of people poor enough to need public housing are different from yours. For example, my landlord was confident that I, like all of her other tenants, was too poor to take her to court.
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I will now assume that you concede the discussion about public versus private housing.
There is a crack in everything,
That's how the light gets in...
wat0n wrote:Was it legal for him to do so? What problems did you have?
I assume so, since the landlord was never forced to do anything.
At least here in Chicago it's illegal for your landlord to neglect the unit to a point where the heating doesn't work on winter. I know this because my heating went out on winter once and my landlord got scared shitless about it to the point that he fixed within 24 hrs.
Maybe the experiences of people poor enough to need public housing are different from yours. For example, my landlord was confident that I, like all of her other tenants, was too poor to take her to court.
——————-
I will now assume that you concede the discussion about public versus private housing.
There is a crack in everything,
That's how the light gets in...