Dear RentConfident: Renting in the Digital Age

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Every once in a while we get questions from our readers about the finer details of renting. Some are from tenants, others from landlords, and still others from parents, attorneys and agents. Today we’re back with more questions from the mailbag!

Dear RentConfident: My mom is a landlord with a few buildings on the West Side. She still goes door to door every month to collect rent payments. She tracks repairs with post-its and does her accounting in Excel. Her "office" is a crammed with old leases and papers, a firetrap waiting for a match. I worry about her safety every month. How can I convince her to join us in the 21st century? - Paperless in Portage Park

Dear PPP: You may not be able to convince her. It all depends on her business model and portfolio. Continue reading Dear RentConfident: Renting in the Digital Age

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Kay Cleaves

Friday, the 1st of September: A Horror Story

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The title of this article has probably confused some readers that rent, but to any Chicago landlords who might be reading it will seem redundant. This weekend is going to be an absolute disaster for a huge chunk of the renting industry. Let me stick a flashlight under my chin and tell you what's going down over this Labor Day weekend.

Many Movers

The golden rule of Chicago property management is to minimize your October 1 vacancies. At any other time of year landlords can be a little more relaxed about letting apartments sit empty for a month in order to clean and flip them, but September and October have no margins of error. If an apartment has to sit empty for the month of September, that's another vacancy that must be filled for October 1. If a vacancy has not been filled by October 1, the chances are very high that it will sit empty until at least March 1. Continue reading Friday, the 1st of September: A Horror Story

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Kay Cleaves

Renters, Here are the Emergency Supplies That Nobody Mentions

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What would you as a renter consider to be an emergency? Natural disasters, certainly. Fires, floods and terrorist attacks are all probably on the list. Some of you may have even thought about what you would do during a zombie attack. But what about more personal emergencies such as illnesses and overdoses? What about maintenance emergencies in your apartment that you cannot repair on your own?

There's plenty of sites that will give you guides on what to keep in assorted kits for use in case of emergency. The Department of Homeland Security has a good one at Ready.gov but it lists items for a bare minimum kit to use in a true weather or war-related disaster. Government emergency preparedness sites focus on major disasters that would affect huge swaths of the population. It doesn't necessarily address the all of the real life needs of urban renters nor does it consider less serious personal emergencies that may still be life-threatening or at least hazardous.

Our list today will focus on the things that the government sites leave out. This is not to discount the lists that they provide - by all means keep those plastic sheets and bottles of water on hand if you want to. Rather, it provides things that renters should add to their list of emergency supplies on top of the more well-known lists.

1. Three months of rent in a separate bank account.

There are so many people who remain in dangerous housing because they can't afford to move. You should always be ready with three months of rent on hand - enough to cover a new security deposit, first month's rent, moving and utility setup costs. You never know when you're going to have to move in a hurry or come up with extra cash. Your roommate might get arrested. You might break up with your partner. Your landlord might sell the building to the Trump Organization. No matter the cause, always have the cash on hand to get out in a hurry. It's best to set this aside in a separate bank account and a separate bank from the one you normally use and limit your access to it. Get an ATM card only, or ideally no card at all. Continue reading Renters, Here are the Emergency Supplies That Nobody Mentions

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Kay Cleaves

Apartment Hunting for Homeowners

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Many of you may be looking at this article's title with some amount of doubt. The unprotected minorities series has thus far focused for the most part on renters who are at a disadvantage due to their unique traits - pet owners, overweight individuals, night owls, introverts. By contrast, former owners are actually in a great position when it comes to getting approved for apartments. After all, if a mortgage lender has already vetted someone, chances are they will pass any apartment community's criteria for income and behavior with flying colors. However, they are still a minority that is frequently overlooked in marketing of rental housing, and they definitely have certain quirks and concerns that can make the return to renting a challenge.

The well-worn trope of the "American dream" would have us believe that home ownership is the main goal, and that those who buy a house will never go back to renting. The reality is far different. According to the most recent American Housing Survey run by the US Census Bureau in 2013, 23.4% of those who moved to renter-occupied housing within the past year in the Chicago metro area came from owner-occupied housing. However, only 10.5% of those who made the shift back to renting from owning cited "change from owner to renter" as their primary reason for making the move.

Off the top of my head I can think of a lot of reasons why a homeowner might become a renter again. Temporary job changes and divorce both come to mind. Seniors who can no longer handle maintenance of their homes might consider moving to a setting where a landlord handles such chores. In addition those who are looking for themselves, there are also homeowner parents who are assisting their children with an apartment search. No matter the reason, returning to the rental market after years of homeowner life takes some adjustment. We're here to help you structure your search by pointing out common pitfalls faced by owners turned renters, and by providing some workarounds. Continue reading Apartment Hunting for Homeowners

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Kay Cleaves

The Lease Signing Takeaway List

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There are a few situations in adult life where you are confronted by an authority figure with a stack of legal documents in a closed-off and usually stuffy room. Most of them involve an exchange of a whole lot of cash. There's the car purchase, the home sale closing and, most pertinent to this blog, the lease signing. Regardless of what they're buying, consumers in these situations often find that they draw a blank on the questions they meant to ask before signing their lives away.

Here at RentConfident we believe that a lease signing should be a two-way conversation, and that neither you nor your landlord holds any greater or lesser authority until the papers are signed by both sides. To that end, we've got a list of questions that you can copy to your phone and bring with you. Make it a worksheet, and fill in the answers to each question in language you can understand. Do not walk out of your lease signing until you have filled in every blank.

A few notes are in order before we begin. Some of these questions might not apply to you or to the building you're moving into. Adjust the list as needed. Questions that are likely to get a bluffed or false answer from the landlord are marked with a star. This list is specific to Chicago, so it skips over common things found elsewhere such as wells, septic systems and radon abatement equipment. Mandatory disclosures that are required by law in Chicago such as lead paint, bedbug policies and security deposit procedures are not included in this list. This list is by no means exhaustive but it's a pretty good start!

Dates

  • When does the lease start? Date and time.
  • When does the lease end? Date and time.
  • When do you have to provide notice if you are moving out?
  • What day of the month is rent due?
  • What day of the month is rent considered past due?
  • Does this lease renew automatically or will there be a new lease when this one expires?

Continue reading The Lease Signing Takeaway List

Published by

Kay Cleaves