justalayman
Senior Member
if there was more, try again but don't preview your post
if there wasn't more, there needs to be
if there wasn't more, there needs to be
Have you informed the landlord in WRITING of the issue? Not email but by mail, return receipt requested?I don't know why my post didn't show up, I have recreated it to the best of my recollection:
I live in a so called gated community in St. Petersburg FL. There is a security gate at the entrance which has not worked properly in the 2 years I have lived here (not at all in the first year and a half). Over the past 6 months or so they have been trying to fix the gate without any real success.
On a couple of occasions, I have returned home to find the gate closed and unresponsive to my keycard. This causes no small amount of inconvenience, as I have to wait by the street until someone comes out, then race thru the exit gate before it closes. I have voiced my concerns to the property management, and they are unhelpful. They say the gate works, which it clearly does not, and that I am doing something which causes me to be "locked out of the system", which is patently ridiculous.
I have several months left on my lease, and do not necessarily wish to move (actually, I would move in a heartbeat, but my wife likes it here). All I want is to be able to access the property I pay rent for, at the times I wish to access it.
Does the landlord have the responsibility to insure access to a legal tenant? What recourse do I have if this continues?
I would be happy to, if it would be of any help. What impact would such a step have?Have you informed the landlord in WRITING of the issue? Not email but by mail, return receipt requested?
That is not what you posted in your opening post.then I would think empathy would be a more appropriate response, especially if it happened twice in 2 weeks, as is my case
Thank you.Just because I'm feeling a tiny little bit sympathetic...
Put your repair request in writing with a traceable method of delivery. That way you can prove that you made the request. It makes it much harder for management to ignore.
Sorry I was not more specific. As I stated my original post did not appear, and I was reconstructing it from memory; in any event, I fail to see how the timeline of the incidents has any impact on the responsibility of the property management to insure that legal, rent paying residents be able to enter the residence they have leased.That is not what you posted in your opening post.
I unfortunately do not have the time or resources to poll the several hundred residents of this complex to find out their experiences with the gate.did you ever stop to think you might actually be the problem like they suggested?
Does anybody else have this problem? If not, look at what you are doing to cause the problem.
If others are having the problem; how many and how often?
it can be an excellent resourceSorry I was not more specific. As I stated my original post did not appear, and I was reconstructing it from memory; in any event, I fail to see how the timeline of the incidents has any impact on the responsibility of the property management to insure that legal, rent paying residents be able to enter the residence they have leased.
I was apparently mistaken in thinking that this could be a helpful resource.
Let me rephrase.That is why I categorized it as ridiculous that I am somehow at fault.