My last renter texted me and told me the toilet wouldn't flush. She said she "took it apart" but couldn't fix it so it needed to be snaked out. I go there and a neighbor told me she set a can of cat food on the tank for her kitten to eat and it knocked the can into the bowl. She tried to flush it down. Her boyfriend shows up and tells me the same story. She only took the tank off (nowhere near where a clog would be) and she replaced it without replacing the gasket so it had been leaking water. Once I knew what the problem was I fixed it in 30 minutes. Her keeping the truth from me made it take a lot longer and cost more. I charged her $300 less rent than the property next door in a trendy neighborhood because I didn't want to be "part of the problem ". Long story short, not everyone is cut out to be a home owner.
I own a house. I work and I hire people if I can't fix something myself. So far I've only had to do that once in 4 years. Owning a house is not a job. Landlord literally has "LORD" in the name... kinda hard to defend, friend.
That's the strangest argument I've heard in a while. Owning a house isn't a job but maintaining one is. Plumbing, electrical, carpentry, roofing, HVAC are all jobs and if you don't think so you must be one of these Republicans that think a person who gets their hands dirty doesn't deserve a living wage.
A plumber or a sparky doesn't just maintain one house, and if they're just doing maintenance, probably work on hundreds of houses a year. Maintaining your own house takes a fraction of the time and effort of working a housing-related trade full time.
I challenge anyone to disconnect the water feed, remove the top part of the siphon, remove the likely rusted manky bolts holding the cistern, remove the bottom part of the siphon, clean the whole lot up where the foam ring has turned to mush, remove the old filler mechanism, replace it, plus the siphon, bolt the cistern back to the toilet, reconnect water supply, adjust fill height of both the siphon and the filler, then install the push button and test. Then clean up behind yourself
In ten minutes 😂
Bear in mind the guy you're speaking to is a yank and their plumbing makes the fucking Roman bathhouses look modern lmao
Your claim to be a worker because you did half an hour's work in a month for a landlord's income that's so large you can afford to discount it by £300 a month isn't the winning argument you think it is.
I'm pretty sure you mean that you'd like a world with no landlords and not a world where short term housing solutions don't exist. No rent would imply the latter. Unless you know of a way to do it without paying rent?
How did that work when it came to deciding who gets the more desirable housing versus the less desirable ones? Or those who are not from the area and don't pay taxes to cover the housing?
Let's work on getting people housed before faffing about with pointless nonsense like more or less desirable housing. When even the victorians has lower homelessness rates you don't get to worry about desirability.
Second point, who cares? If they're living there now they pay tax there now. It does not matter they didn't pay tax before they lived there, that's how all other services work. You don't pay for the roads in a town you just moved to until you're moved in.
It's not pointless. Depending on where you live, there's a good chance you do have an abundance of cheap housing available. They're just not in desirable locations, so many would opt to either pay extra for the privilege of living in more desirable homes or even living on the streets.
Regarding taxes, I'm talking about those who haven't previously paid taxes, are not currently paying taxes while living in the area, and have no plans to pay taxes after they leave the area.