28 April 2016 | 121 replies
@Andrey Y.There was more than one female that talked about this.
22 April 2016 | 37 replies
Not only to keep them from being aggressive, but to keep dogs away from the property if a female is in heat, or have one that's not neutered run off and get somebody's poodle preggers.I'd also require renter's insurance with a rider for the dog, if there is such a thing.Ironically, the only breed that has ever attacked dogs of mine, all different types of terriers of around 20 pounds, have been german shepherds.
8 March 2020 | 20 replies
For me, I would never put a male roommate with 3 female roommates, where the 3 female roommates did not give their approval and do not know the guy.
24 June 2016 | 10 replies
From our perspective, this is not about controlling rent," says Faith Lumsden, the director of code compliance in the Seattle Department of Construction and Inspections.
11 September 2018 | 42 replies
Haha ;) In our larger properties, 2+ bedrooms, the long-term tenant is sometimes comfortable with staying in a shared AirBnB bedroom (shared female or male only rooms).
17 July 2016 | 35 replies
She will never stay in law school, and so she'll lose her funding.And once the BF/fiance moves in, he's a tenant who also has to be kicked out.I had a female law student whose "fiance" moved in, and he just sat round in the apartment playing videos all day long.
30 June 2016 | 25 replies
My tenants are both female, and they are friends.
20 July 2016 | 19 replies
The mom's credit score is almost 700, and she talks very sincerely and looks eager to move in.3.A group of 4 college senior female students and a co-signer who is the father of one tenant.
23 June 2016 | 31 replies
When I asked about her (we thought she was over 18), because male tenant said "we are thinking of having her stay with us for the summer" (violation of lease which says visitors can stay 7 days), the female tenant replied "he misled you, sister visits for help with homework, she spends the night sometimes".
23 March 2015 | 17 replies
In fact, go talk to the housing director for all the law schools in your area, and ask them if you can advertise your rentals to their students.