Tag Archives: landlords

A Must-Have Item for Your Move-In Checklist

by David Lowe

Most tenants as with many homeowners don’t pay attention to the amount of energy they are using.

 
Tenants who are not responsible for paying the utility bills are traditionally least aware of their energy abuses because there is no feedback mechanism, i.e. a utility bill, to keep them honest.

Education can play a large part in changing tenant behavior. I believe if a tenant was given some simple energy saving ideas they would use them:

For instance, the placement of furniture can have a large impact on air flow in the home thus impacting how hot or cold it feels. Tenants should be told to be sure to avoid placing furniture in front of or on top of registers or return vents.

 
Give your tenants a tour of the appliances in the unit.  Point out how to adjust the settings for energy efficiency.  Explain how to use the programmable thermostat, how to lower the water temperature.
 
Another large energy waster is lighting.  Many tenants are in the habit of keeping the lights on most of the day and night — even when they are not home. Encourage the use of timers and other energy saving devices.
In vacation homes and short-term rentals, including student housing,  the easiest way to control costs is through the use of a tamper proof thermostat. Limiting how high or low a guest can set the temperature will have a large impact on saving energy usage in a vacation home.  
 
It is also important to monitor the energy use on the property.  You can start by assessing the current energy use of your building(s) to establish a reference using EPA’s national energy performance rating system, a free online tool that provides many types of facilities with a score on a simple 1-to-100 scale, 1 being the least efficient and 100 being the most)

Also Microsoft just launched a new website site “Hohm” to help homeowners baseline and track their energy usage.
 
As a long term strategy that involved capital investment, consider variable speed technology to better control fans and pumps.

 
David Lowe is a property manager and co-founder of ControlTemp Thermostats, providing tamper-proof programmable thermostats. Check out ControlTempThermostats.com for more information.
 
 

See our Green Forum for more energy savings tips.

American Apartment Owners Association

New Law Will Stick it to Landlords

 

So much for property rights.

A councilman in Prince George’s County, Maryland has come up with a way to stick it to landlords, by making them responsible for law enforcement against their tenants. 
 
The proposed law is part of the county’s new crime reduction program.  Under the rules, landlords, not police, are responsible for dispensing justice on unruly tenants. 
 
Forced Evictions
 
The new proposal requires that landlords evict tenants who have been ticketed for noise violations.  This includes any sort of noise that can be heard a short distance outside the rental property.  The evictions are at the landlords’ expense, in a county where the backlog can take several months to complete. 
 
Landlords who fail to comply will lose their rights to rent in the county.
 
 
Blacklist 
 
Once a tenant has been evicted under this new law, they are to be blacklisted from any rentals in the county, possibly for as long as a year.  It is not clear whether the tenant actually has to be convicted of the noise ordinance violations before they are blacklisted. 
 
Landlords who rent to these black sheep may face penalties, increasing the already difficult burden of screening tenants, and creating possible liability for discrimination.
 
Opponents to the measure point out that law enforcement is not a landlord’s job, nor their responsibility.  But it appears many local residents feel that it is unruly tenants who are ruining their otherwise tranquil neighborhoods. 
 
This law is not unlike other measures proposed in small college towns around the country, where council members are experimenting with zoning restrictions that prohibit unrelated roommates, restrict the number of residents per property, limit parking rights, impose curfews, or beef up police patrols around rental properties.  In a neighborhood adjacent to the University of Colorado, a school that rates high on the party meter, the city attempted to discourage the barrage of raucous keggers and outdoor couch fires by prohibiting all residents of the neighborhood from setting any upholstered furniture on their porches, decks or lawns.
 
If the Maryland law does take effect, there is some controversy over whether it is constitutional to single out rental property owners. 
 
After all, the homeowner with the chronically barking dog is not being threatened with seizure of their property. 
 
See AAOA”s feature,  Landlord Too Lax on Noise Enforcement.
 
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