10 Life Hacks to make Apartment Life Less Painful

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Living in a small rented space can be really annoying, especially if you have to share it with roommates. To help make things a little easier, here are some of my favorite pointers that I picked up from observing renters over the years that you might find useful in your own apartment.

1. Put glow in the dark tape on the corners of your dishwasher and oven door so you don't bark your shins on them if you leave them open in the middle of the night.

Continue reading 10 Life Hacks to make Apartment Life Less Painful

Published by

Kay Cleaves

10 Ways That Chicago Renters Can Get Involved in the Community

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Renters have a bad reputation that causes local homeowners to push back against building new apartments in their neighborhoods. They're accused of being transient residents who take from a community's resources without giving anything back. They're only in the area for a short while and don't feel it's necessary to get involved in local events. They may not have money to donate to local causes.

This sort of attitude is detrimental to all renters. When owners see renters as unwelcome second class citizens it makes it harder for all renters to find housing. It fosters segregation and discrimination. Renters need to make an effort to get involved in the neighborhood activities around them.

Most renters are in town for a least a year and have some spare time on their hands. Here are some inexpensive, short-term ways that renters can fight back against the bad reputation that follows them around.

1. Attend CAPS meetings

The Chicago police have a system called CAPS (Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy) which allows civilians to assist with the policing of their neighborhood. Each beat has an open meeting with police officers from their local department present on a regular basis. Continue reading 10 Ways That Chicago Renters Can Get Involved in the Community

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Kay Cleaves

City Renter University: The Best Fictional Choice in Renter Education (Part III)

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We're back! Welcome, students, to another chapter from the course handbook of City Renter University: the best choice for those who wish to take their renting skills to the next level. CRU has many different departments. We've previously covered the course offerings in the Department of Apartment Hunting and the Department of Moving and Disagreement.

But perhaps you would like to specialize in another field. After all, apartment hunting and moving are some of the toughest parts of being a renter. So for those of you who would like a different sort of career, today we have the courses offered in the Department of Neighbor Anthropology.

The Department of Neighbor Anthropology (NEA)

Neighbor anthropology is the study of human beings living in close quarters in urban environments. By studying the behavior of neighbors in high density living arrangements we can obtain special expertise that has applications in fields ranging from human biology and ecology to community development and public policy. The department's programs offer the student one of the best introductions possible to the cultural history of rental populations and inner workings of the contemporary world. Continue reading City Renter University: The Best Fictional Choice in Renter Education (Part III)

Published by

Kay Cleaves

Don’t Love Thy Neighbor Part IV: 10 different ways of complaining about your neighbors

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Emailing your landlord to get something fixed is never a pleasant task. You're probably dealing with a problem that has bothered you for days, weeks or even months. It's usually a problem that's made you really angry or at least annoyed. When you're writing to complain about your noisy, scary or obnoxious neighbors, there's usually also an unspoken request - you want your landlord to evict them, or at least cause them severe financial distress in exchange for the emotional distress they've brought upon you.

There's a lot of different ways you can phrase a complaint. You can be sweet or vicious. You can threaten or beg. You can state your case and try to make it seem like your peace and quiet is more important than your neighbor's social life.

When I worked in property management I was not someone who could do anything to fix tenants' problems - I was in the leasing department, not maintenance or legal. However, my email address was sometimes the only contact info that a tenant still had on hand, so many of them sent their complaints to me. I was on the receiving end of hundreds of angry emails. There was nothing I could do about it but read them, and then hit the "Forward" button to send them on to the right place.

Today I've combed through my old email archive to find some excerpts to share with you. I'm not going to say much in the way of judgment. The authors of these emails were angry, frightened or dealing with other extremes of emotion. I'll leave it up to you to decide which tenants got it just right, which ones were brown-nosing and which just took their complaints into the realm of verbal abuse. Just bear in mind that these were among the 50 to 100 emails I would receive and respond to each day.

By the way, if you have issues with high blood pressure you might want to give this one a pass.

Please! Think of the children!

I wanted to issue a complaint about my next door neighbors. They have been in the building since the end of October, and it has been a problem ever since. They are constantly loud in the halls (screaming, cursing) and play their music loudly. The final straw for me was being awakened at 3:30 a.m. last night to a loud, screaming argument right out in the courtyard. It went on for about 15 minutes and other tenants in the building were yelling out their windows for these people to be quiet and to tell them that the police had been called. [...] As long as I have lived here (3 1/2 years) I have never seen or heard anything that bad. There are children in this building and I really don't think that anyone wants their children exposed to loud, foul-mouthed, drunken behavior on a constant basis. This used to be a very quiet building, but there has been no peace since they moved in here.

Please! Think of the kitties!

I'm writing to complain about our upstairs neighbors in 3W. A while back we had asked them if they could be a little quieter with their feet and they acted like they had no idea what we were talking about and ignored us when we knocked on their door, so we called in and someone sent them a letter from your office notifying them of our complaint. They came down and we talked about it. They said they would try to be a little quieter and we said we'd try to have a little grace for them.
The catfight continues this way...

Published by

Kay Cleaves

The 2016 Chicago Urban Derby

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This weekend brings the return of the annual Kentucky Derby in Louisville, KY. RentConfident isn't serving Louisville (yet!) but we like to join in on the excitement and are sure some of you do as well. Here in the city were aren't known for our horses, but we do have some other unique modes of transportation. So in honor of the big race, here's what we think would make a great starting lineup for the first annual Chicago Urban Derby.

busStop Requested (Odds: 10:1)
Jockey: Toni, CTA Bus Driver
Trainer: Chicago Transit Authority
Colors: Navy blue, dark gray, navy blue cap
Earnings: $30 an hour.

Outlook: Amazingly agile at sneaking around other competitors and maintaining a constantly fast pace despite its imposing size and need to stop every quarter mile. Should be able to finish without any challenges unless the race begins at rush hour.

Continue reading The 2016 Chicago Urban Derby

Published by

Kay Cleaves

Jon Hoferle