18 July 2016 | 2 replies
Obviously you'd want to do a real in depth inspection of the property, and make sure that the property isnt so out of touch with code, health, and just overall standards of living.
3 June 2018 | 28 replies
Unless someone in the house will have their health seriously affected (maybe asthma?
2 January 2023 | 11 replies
You should also require this information is updated annually.You can still place reasonable restrictions on the animal, such as: Requiring a current (and annually updated) Veterinarian report on the health of the animal, including vaccine status; current appropriate local licensing of the animal if required in your jurisdiction; require the animal be spayed or neutered unless contraindicated by the Veterinarian; require the animal to be in a carrier or on a leash when in common areas of Multi-Family properties, particularly elevators or hallways and stairwells; require tenants to clean up after the animal in common areas and/or within their unit, and prevent offensive odors from emanating from their unit; aggressive or nuisance animals (includes frequent barking that is NOT an alert by the animal) can be cause for removal of the animal and/or eviction of the tenants.
26 October 2022 | 6 replies
Largely they are a disappointing extension of our already problematic health care system.
20 February 2014 | 4 replies
We have a typical comprehensive health care insurance plan, through my employer that covers both of us.
14 August 2014 | 34 replies
Someone with the avoidance issues you describe probably has some mental health issues.
14 September 2014 | 26 replies
I currently have a comfortable job making about $60K a year and have decent health insurance, but it is not related to real estate in any way.
12 December 2014 | 8 replies
I come from a mental health background and my knowledge of real-estate investing is limited to owning my own home.
28 May 2015 | 14 replies
He can do anything for you on flood/auto/home/rentals/life/health, he is who I go through with all of my stuff so I can personally vouch for him.
9 May 2015 | 5 replies
I worked with a property management company for a while they leased plenty of properties for capital companies, the standard was:-$250. to $300 extra on the security deposit per pet, -total of 3 pets, no more-no large fish tanks -no large breed dogs or vicious/dangerous breeds (double check this)-size of the unit definitely matters-always ask for shot record/vet paper-but, if they don't have them don't make a big deal about it-always do a pet addendum, if there is damage to the property or health/safety for the community-this will violate the lease agreement.