EDITOR:
I am writing this letter in regard to Vindicator articles over the last month or so pertaining to rental properties in Youngstown. I agree with Gary M. Crim’s statement that most “landlords are an asset to the city” and “are victims of crime, not the cause of it.”
My husband and I are also landlords of some property in Youngstown. We have been for about 10 years. Many of our units are unoccupied because it is hard to find good tenants who want to live in those neighborhoods. Some of the units sit empty because the previous tenants have made them unlivable and it takes a lot of time and money to fix them. You can’t turn the damage into your insurance because the insurance companies will drop you, and it’s hard to find an insurance company that even wants to insure them. In these tough times, money is tight, and so we try to do as much as we can with the money available. Currently, our own home sits unfinished so that our dream of becoming successful landlords can be realized.
Aside from the expense from the vandalism we incur by some of our tenants, we also face problems with the people in the neighborhoods who are unwilling to call the police or get involved in any way when an empty unit is being vandalized by others.
Another problem we face is a lawful practice carried out by the Youngstown Water Department. If you have a tenant who pays their own water, meaning the water account is in their name, and the tenant does not pay their bill for months, then moves out, that water bill comes back on the landlord. Naturally, having good credit, the landlord pays the bill, which allows the now ex-tenant the freedom to rent somewhere else and open a new account. You can take them to small claims and win, but since they don’t own anything, there is no way to collect. Maybe it is unconstitutional to be forced to pay a debt incurred by someone else, so you could probably fight that in court. But then again is the issue of no way to collect and also the issue of more time and money that just isn’t there.
Four or five years ago, we bought a building for a good price that needed a lot of work. We installed some new frames and 12 brand new steel doors. Within a couple months time, someone had busted in the basement doors, apparently to dig through the walls looking for copper piping. Shortly after, someone walked off with two of the steel doors. The police told my husband that from time to time they actually see people walking with steel doors but that they are not allowed to stop them because the police would be violating their civil liberties. What about my rights? Do they think these people walked from Home Depot or Lowes with brand new steel doors over their heads? It is simply ridiculous and infuriating.
To make matters worse, my husband then boarded up the doors and windows to keep vandals from further damaging the property; shortly after we received a demolition notice on that property. Did the person who put it on the demo list not realize there was new security lights around the were or that work was being done with the porches and downspouts? We also had new gas lines put in which couldn’t be seen because they’re under ground.
I saw Mayor Jay Williams speak on the community channel briefly and before he was mayor. I was motivated by what I heard in his Youngstown 2010 speech. I wanted to be a part of the solution not a part of the problem. I have never met Mayor Williams but I believe he is doing a great job and have seen many positive changes. I have to believe that these positive changes will continue and that more people will start to take pride in where they live and perhaps we will get to a place where everyone involved — landlords, tenants, and homeowners — will be proud to say they are a part of Youngstown.
G.M. WHITFIELD
Youngstown
Comments
God Bless you and just keep doing what we can to change the city.
As to the water bill, if the utility bill is in the name of the tenant you should not be liable and i dont believe you are. The utility itself should go after the tenant, their "customer"If it is a electric bill or phone bill that is what they do!
Just don't know what to tell you about the police not stopping someone with a steel door, that is just a blatant excuse if i ever heard one.
Hope is on the way. I just wanted to say to you that I am a Landlord with multiple properties in the Youngstown Area who is working with Mayor Williams to resolve the Landlord-Tenant relationship that is in shambles in theYoungstown area, an area which desperately needs investment money. I spoke to city council last May as well with the Housing Committee, and at the request of Mayor Williams, I will be meeting with him again to advance my idea of instituting a "Landlord Bill of Rights". One of the ideas I proposed is to finally end this "third party billing" instituted by the Youngstown Water Dept. Property damage and having a tenant watch list will be just 2 of many other ideas that will be on the agenda when we meet.
Here's my perspective on the Landlord-Tenant relationship if you will. People need shelter in order to survive in this world; the early cavemen figured that out long ago. A person today basically has 4 choices when it comes to shelter: 1-Buy their own home, condo, etc. 2-Live with family or friends, 3-rent a home, condo, etc., or 4-have no shelter at all. Renting may not be a persons favorite option, but if they are unable to buy their own place, and choose not to live with family or friends, and being without shelter simply points out the obvious, then renting may be a persons' only best option. If having shelter is important to a person, as I think we can all agree that it is, doesn't it make sense that a person should want to have a good relationship with their landlord, rather than resenting them?
I will do my part to advance a more professional landlord-tenant relationship in the Youngstown Area and would like you that hope is on the way.
B. Gaylord
Here is my perspective.
Before the era of crack cocaine the tenants smoked pot and still paid their rent. After the crack cocaine epidemic hit they would stiff you on rent and carry off what they could from the house. To add insult to injury you had to allow them to stay and pay for an eviction notice that took plenty of time. They will never penalize the tenants because they can get money from landlords and stick them with the blame. What chance would they ever have in getting money from the tenants?
Tenants should not waste their money on rent. Buy a tent and there is plenty of space in the brownfields by the river. Spend the money you save on crack cocaine which is most endearing in your life.
JAY HAS A PLAN
http://i33.tinypic.com/2m6vdhz.jpg
I am also a landlord, I am amazed at what rights tenants have! It's unbeleivable. They can destroy your home, not pay rent for months. Then I have to pay an attorney, pay to fix everything, lose money while making repairs, then try to rent it again and hope you don't get screwed again! What about my rights, all the money lost? I am the good person, and I get screwed!!!! Laws not on my side.