-
22 votes
-
Opinion: The Kids Online Safety Act would harm LGBTQ+ youth, restrict access to information and community
38 votes -
Elon Musk’s X sues California over content moderation law, claiming it violates free speech
25 votes -
A miracle in Missouri? The nun who put her abbey on the map
7 votes -
What’s going on with these viral, right-wing country music hits?
48 votes -
G20 leaders must hold Indian government to account for its human rights violations and political persecution
20 votes -
The IRS plans to crack down on 1,600 US millionaires to collect millions of dollars in back taxes
48 votes -
Obituary: Remembering Doug Lenat (1950–2023) and his quest to capture the world with logic
12 votes -
US and Vietnam ink historic partnership in Joe Biden visit
15 votes -
Analyst Hubert Horan on Uber's first reported profit
5 votes -
In a first, NASA's Perseverance rover makes breathable oxygen on Mars
18 votes -
Hollywood’s latest pirate site blocking injunction covers ‘future content’
15 votes -
Petition: Bring back KFC potato wedges
29 votes -
Disney’s wildest ride: Iger, Chapek and the making of an epic succession mess
23 votes -
The San Francisco Bay Area is in a ‘losing battle’ with exotic fruit smugglers - fruit flies threaten California crops
15 votes -
Ozempic cuts alcohol cravings. Liquor companies aren’t ready.
30 votes -
Tempest over Texas: The crash of Braniff International Airways flight 352
6 votes -
Is this really what renting is like now? (Pennsylvania, USA)
Just coming back into the rental market after owning a home for a short time. I found a place that would be great. Then, I got the lease. This thing is a nightmare. Here are a few of the greatest...
Just coming back into the rental market after owning a home for a short time. I found a place that would be great. Then, I got the lease.
This thing is a nightmare. Here are a few of the greatest hits:
- The lease lists my rent and then says they can charge "additional rent" which is "all added charges, costs, and fees for the duration of this lease." So, sounds like they can just make up a number and add it to the rent and I have to pay it?
- The landlord will make a "good faith effort" to make the apartment available to me when my lease starts. Shouldn't the landlord actually do that, not just make any sort of "effort" to do it, "good faith" or otherwise?
- If the unit is damaged such that I cannot live there while repairs are being made, the landlord "may" issue me a credit for the days I can't live there. What criteria will the landlord use? If they decide not to, that means I'll be paying rent for an apartment I cannot occupy?
This is a short lease — I've seen much longer in my time renting — but even so, I could come up with a dozen more examples like this. What is going on here? I've read the law in the area, and I suspect some of the clauses in here are actually unenforceable. For example, the lease allows for automatic rent increases at lease renewal without notification while the law requires 60 days notification, and it requires me to notify 14 days after notification of a rent increase if I do not accept where the law says I have 30 days to do so.
But how did we get here? I just want to pay a specified amount every month in order to be able to live in a space someone else owns. This should be relatively simple, but it's turned into this weird whack-a-mole game where every lease is a document of all that landlord's past tenant grievances they are trying to now avoid in the future, along with any other unreasonable terms they think they can get away with. Regardless of what the law is, the lease can say anything. If I read it and decline to sign, the next person will probably just sign it and hope for the best.
For those of you who are renting, how do you deal with this sort of stuff? Are there reasonable landlords still out there? Is the right way to buy a home just to escape from unreasonable lease terms, even if you don't really want to own?
Update: Possibly important context- This property is in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
47 votes -
Chaos, comedy, and ‘crying rooms’: Inside Jimmy Fallon’s ‘Tonight Show’
25 votes -
What’s behind all the box office flops this year - and what lessons can Hollywood learn?
30 votes -
Danny Masterson sentenced to thirty years in prison after rape conviction
47 votes -
The Ezra Klein Show: Interview with Jennifer Pahlka about where government policy implementation goes wrong (and why government doesn't always work well)
7 votes -
Tech billionaires launch California ‘utopia’ website
55 votes -
US political journalists need to focus on the stakes, not the odds
23 votes -
US Supreme Court accepts case challenging Donald Trump's eligibility to run for president based on the 14th amendment and the January 6 capitol riot
60 votes -
Fajitas, a Mexican dish that was really born in Texas
16 votes -
'Project 2025' and the 'Mandate for Leadership'; the conservative plan for America
56 votes -
Coast Guard arrests a man trying to run a giant hamster wheel across the ocean
46 votes -
The NFL season opener is also the kickoff for the biggest gambling season ever
12 votes -
Mike Huckabee: 2024 will be last US election ‘decided by ballots rather than bullets’ if Donald Trump loses over legal cases
43 votes -
The decomposition of Rotten Tomatoes: The most overrated metric in movies is erratic, reductive, and easily hacked — and yet has Hollywood in its grip
41 votes -
The QueensLink is back from the dead to bring relief to Queens’s transit deserts
7 votes -
What’s missing from America’s EV charging strategy
15 votes -
How dollar stores quietly consumed America
14 votes -
Some small towns in America are disbanding police forces, citing hiring woes
23 votes -
The misogyny myth
30 votes -
What happened to Washington, DC food trucks?
15 votes -
The GDP gap between Europe and the United States is now 80%
37 votes -
Electric vehicle owners are fed up with charging stations that lack a single amenity — I had to pee in a bush
50 votes -
Taylor Swift box office: Theater owners predict record $100M opening for Eras Tour concert pic
13 votes -
Hit in DNA database exonerates man forty-seven years after wrongful rape conviction
30 votes -
Molly Holzschlag, known as 'the fairy godmother of the web,' dead at 60
18 votes -
NarxCare score may influence who can get or prescribe pain medication
16 votes -
As employers expand artificial intelligence in hiring, few states in the USA have rules
12 votes -
Ex-leader of Proud Boys sentenced to twenty-two years in Jan. 6 US sedition case
39 votes -
Burning Man attendees advised to 'shelter in place,' conserve food and water due to heavy rain
61 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of September 4
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate...
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate topic, but almost all should be posted in here.
This is an inherently political thread; please try to avoid antagonistic arguments and bickering matches. Comment threads that devolve into unproductive arguments may be removed so that the overall topic is able to continue.
10 votes -
Two men exonerated thirty years after wrongful conviction thanks to retrocomputing enthusiasts and The Bloop Museum extracting data from a damaged floppy disc
60 votes -
Why are adverts so loud?
17 votes -
A huge threat to the US budget has receded. No one is sure why (A decade of Medicare spending growth and projections)
18 votes