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May 3rd, 2007 by babygirl
TALLAHASSEE · The Florida Legislature on Tuesday voted to change the state’s 34-year-old rental laws to allow landlords to impose thousands of dollars in new penalties on tenants who break their leases.
Legislators authorized landlords to draw up rental contracts with early termination fees of two months’ rent, plus additional penalties equal to another month to compensate owners for any concessions or discounts they made.
But in order to become law, the bill (HB 1277) must pass Gov. Charlie Crist, who rents a condo in St. Petersburg. After Tuesday’s vote, Crist said he’d be “sympathetic” to renters. Until last fall, he also rented an apartment in Tallahassee, but broke the lease to move into the governor’s mansion in January.
“And it was costly. It was like $900. I feel the people’s pain,” Crist said.
Crist’s spokeswoman, Erin Isaac, later said the governor was speaking generally and had not yet taken a position on the bill.
The early termination fee would apply not only to tenants who leave midway through a rental contract, but those who don’t give 60-day written notice they are not renewing their leases. Read more
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Posted in Housing, Legislation, Rent, Renting, Rental rates | No Comments »
April 23rd, 2007 by babygirl
Equity Residential, the largest U.S. apartment owner, and Apartment Investment & Management Co., the nation’s fourth largest, sold 53,000 apartments last year so that they could move their investments to faster growing parts of the country.
The companies sold in markets such as Dallas, Detroit, Houston, and Indianapolis and purchased or upgraded apartments in New York, Boston, Washington, D.C.,South Florida, Southern California, and the San Francisco Bay Area. Read the rest of this entry »
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Posted in Housing, Apartments, Real Estate in USA, Real Estate Investment, Rent, Renting, Rental rates | No Comments »
April 18th, 2007 by babygirl
People buying a co-op or condo think nothing of putting in a new kitchen, adding a bathroom or moving a wall. They know that the work will only increase the property’s value. Renters, on the other hand, will not spend a penny to improve an apartment because they know that someday they will leave it all behind. And unless they’re rent-regulated, they have no idea how long they can stay in one place. That, at least, is the conventional wisdom. But some renters have very clear ideas about how they want to live. And they will not let a lease or even market-rate rents get in the way. To them, sinking $5,000, $30,000, even $100,000 into their rental is money well spent. Read more
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Posted in Housing, Real Estate in USA, Rent, Renting, Rental rates | No Comments »
April 17th, 2007 by babygirl
People buying a co-op or condo think nothing of putting in a new kitchen, adding a bathroom or moving a wall. They know that the work will only increase the property’s value. Renters, on the other hand, will not spend a penny to improve an apartment because they know that someday they will leave it all behind. And unless they’re rent-regulated, they have no idea how long they can stay in one place. That, at least, is the conventional wisdom. But some renters have very clear ideas about how they want to live. And they will not let a lease or even market-rate rents get in the way. To them, sinking $5,000, $30,000, even $100,000 into their rental is money well spent. Read more
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Posted in Housing, Real Estate in USA, Rent, Renting, Rental rates | No Comments »
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