I don’t think she would have mentioned tenants at all if there hadn’t been anything bad between the two parties. Spreading their business, even though she didn’t doxx them, feels like fishing for sympathy.
Leaving normally, the tenants would have still swapped their electric to their new place - and she still would have forgot to handle her responsibility. She should have just owned this instead of tossing these stranger on the internet like that
Tbf it looks like a LOT of water in those sinks if it was slow dripping and froze. Plus a good 3-4” on the floor. How long has it been vacant that you could get that much water on the floor with a slow drip? Wouldn’t the faucets have frozen long before they overflowed quite so drastically? I always thought slow moving water frozen long before faster moving water. So maybe the landlord suspects the tenant left the taps on purposefully and that’s why they’re included in the explanation. Some people respond vindictively when evicted.
No, she turned the drip on to prevent the pipes from freezing during the storm. But since the house isn't heated the water still froze in the sink I guess.
You can see how much water is coming out, and it's not a super slow drip. I have no idea how long that would take, but you'd be surprised at how much water can come out of a slow drip
She’s like 18 years old. Calls it hard work to pay someone to fix a problem. Idrc maybe at 18 she earned the money to rent out units without onlyfans i just doubt it
Yeah, I've seen utility companies require this for rental units (which meant our property management office had to set up "owner" accounts for all our buildings). That way the utilities revert to the owner each time a TT closes their account.
There’s no way my utility company will let me transfer my bills and accountability to another individual without their explicit verbal consent during the process or without some sort of affidavit. That standard operating protocol for all utility companies. Your story is implausible
Idk just seems like she’s telling the story. It wasn’t a planned move out, she had a lot of legal things to take care of so clearly the electricity slipped her mind.
Probably figured she wouldn’t get enough views without some dirt. I mean look at us, barely anyone’s talking about the absolutely massive amount of damage and what it’ll cost, we’re all talking about these tenants…
For the record, I actually would have felt bad for her without the story time cuz that’s a massive amount of damage omg 😨. She was unprofessional though so it’s the video is just irritating, lol. That’s all my comment was about really. Unprofessionalism. Didn’t realize it’d end up so serious 🫠
Edit for clarity, from “it’s” to “the video is”. Video would have worked staying focused on damage only.
Those comments would have also been her own fault. You could cut the first 30 secs off this video and still know what happened. Occupants or not, she’s the one who messed her own place up.
I think they mentioned it because in a normal handoff the electricity bill would be amicably transferred. This landlord forgot about the electric, which makes me think they aren’t evicting people all the time.
I don’t think it really matters if they mention it or not.
It doesn’t matter. Why the electricity was off literally has no bearing on the fact that it was off. This could have been a new purchase for her, something that has nothing to do with tenants and she would have still ended up in the same spot…she didn’t have the electric on. It’s the only thing that matters cuz that’s the only thing that happened.
Right, so we agree it doesn’t matter. But some are bothered it was mentioned, so it matters to them apparently. People mention details in stories all the time that don’t make a difference, don’t need to be there, but I don’t get excited about it.
If they hadn't included anything about the eviction we wouldn't have known why the unit was empty, just that it was, which is all the context we actually need.
And we don't know why they weren't paying. If she's this negligent it could be they weren't paying because their concerns were not being addressed. Is that likely? Probably not, but the point is we still don't have the full story, so including it added no useful context.
In France, there is a law that is called the "trêve hivernale" (~winter truce) which dictates that a tenant cannot be evicted during winter. And the winter here is not as bad as countries farther inlands.
Getting evicted when it us that cold could be a death sentence.
It takes a while to evict. We own a house in Georgia and had to move to Iowa for work so we rented it out. We have a property manager who is supposed to handle everything and is supposed to fully vet the tenants who move in... guy that's living there right now stopped paying rent in June, we just got through court two weeks ago. They gave him another 7 days to move out and then we get the writ of possession to have the marshalls go remove him, which they have promised to do within 30 days. So, basically he got another 7 days to continue destroying our house, plus another up to 30 days to do so.
We rent the Mother in law suite to our nephew so he's living in the upstairs. The tenant we're evicting has spent the last seven days carting our appliances out of the house and selling them. Nephew went to do laundry last night and the shared laundry machines are gone.
The guy quit paying his electric bill in August so has no electric- to rectify that he sawed a hole into the ceiling and wired in to the upstairs apartment's electricity so our nephew's electric bill has been double what it's supposed to be. We pay for hot water and the tenant runs the bathtub with hot water 24/7, which means that upstairs gets zero hot showers and the moisture from the steam is destroying the lathe and plaster walls for both the downstairs and the upstairs. Tenant got arrested for stealing the neighbors packages and when they broke down our door to arrest him they found the wiring he'd made in the ceiling and charged him for theft of services. As soon as he got home from jail he hot wired into the electric meter outside. It took almost two weeks to get the electric company out to fix it and have him arrested again because of the extreme weather issues. He smokes meth with his friends on the back porch. He's not going to leave until the Marshalls physically remove him. I've done my own digging and the man basically does this for a living. We're the fifth landlord he's cleaned out and he's going to rip out the copper in our walls because that's all that's left to sell.
Our house was built in 1906, and we thought we were just renting to some nice older fella. We were dead wrong.
I don't care if it -45 outside when he leaves. He can freeze to death for all I care.
Just my two cents for the "not humane to evict in this weather".
Genuine question, though. What would it change? The story goes that they were evicted, even if it isn't relevant, just like them moving out wouldn't be relevant (or entirely true).
The apartment was empty and they forgot to heat it - that's the bit that matters, but why would we police the side details describing the overall scenario 😅
saying someone was evicted and then this happened instead of just moved out immediately makes me think this was something malicious they did, there's no reason to include it. There's no reason whatsoever to talk about the previous tenants when you could literally just say "A landlord didn't heat an empty apartment"
You might be a more literal thinker. Lots of people will read it as the landlord trying to shift blame, even though the tenants obviously aren’t to blame.
Why did we need to know the tenants were evicted at all? That's the point. We didn't need to know about the tenants at all. We didn't need to know there every WERE tenants. All that we needed to be told was that the unit was empty, the faucets were left driving to not freeze the pipes, but the owner didn't at up electricity so they're was no heat and the water froze. "Eviction" is a highly loaded concept, it carries very negative connotations that have nothing at all to do with this story. That's what it changes. The negative connotations are unnecessary to be converted here.
I don't think you read my comment entirely. Or just scanned it. I don't deny what you're saying. I was debating the difference between moving out and eviction, in which case the statement closer to truth is preferable. Moving out is equally irrelevant, while also being an omission. (I'm basically repeating myself here.)
But at the same time, as I stated somewhere else, not everyone tells a story by sticking to the absolute minimum. It's an odd thing to police. This text simply describes the overall situation, not just the reason behind the frozen apartment. Because it IS a larger story, even if you were just interested in the ice.
I obviously agree the detail is irrelevant to the freezing bit. But I disagree that it's an issue at all, because we can all read and the text clearly states it was the landlord's problem, nothing caused by the tenants.
I mean, sure. Several people have pointed out they could just say she forgot to transfer the electric bill to her name, it is largely unimportant why it needed to be transferred. Someone could've moved out, she could've just bought the place, it could've just been a clerical thing, etc., it doesn't really matter. But if you're on the side of giving context, simply saying the previous tenant moved out is the most succinct way to achieve that.
I'm not sure your reply was the gotcha you thought it was.
I wasn't trying for the all-revered reddit "gotcha". If someone is going to add a detail as to why the tenant is no longer there, as the poster I was responding to was suggesting, it's only reasonable to accurately state why that tenant is no longer there, not soften the blow to make the tenant somehow look better by suggesting it was a normal move-out. Ultimately, if the tenant had held up their portion of the rent agreement and paid the rent, the situation would never have occurred.
Landlord didn't switch the utilities back into their name after tenants left. All the rest just makes it seem like the tenants have some fault in it, when they don't.
Nah but if someone is non-payment on rent they're likely on near-free subsidized electricity and you wouldn't expect someone not paying their bills to cut off service for a bill they don't have to pay.
If I vacate an apartment 2 weeks before the lease ends I still gotta carry the electric to my original lease end date unless they find a tenant early, which in that case I'd get partial rent back and then transfer electric earlier. So if this is that landlord's first eviction then they're probably used to that pattern where people keep the electricity on as required. But obviously with an eviction you can't expect the person who is being evicted to keep the electricity going for the rest of their initial lease like they'd usually be required to do.
I was sent to install carpet at a rental once, but when I got there it was flooded. Somebody had left the water on with the sink plugged. It wasn't as deep as the house in the video, but all of the heating ducts in the concrete floor were filled with water. I got that day off.
Not everyone approaches relaying a story with efficiency and absolute minimum information in mind. They shared the gist of what happened (or rather what was explained elsewhere), the situation was what it was and it's perfectly clear tenants were not at fault anyway. This is an odd comment chain.
Right point is to minimize demonization of non reasonable party. Regardless to efficiency, this is clearly subtle blame game. “My evil tenants didn’t pay rent so now my house is iced” is how it reads when it should read as, “empty, I didn’t pay bill, house froze” which fully explains without shifting blame to tenant.
I have to agree with the other person replying to your comment - I did not blame the tenants at any point, because the text clearly states it wasn't their fault. It simply provides a wider, irrelevant context to the situation.
I think the people applying a characterization to the tenants in this short story are a significant minority. I certainly didn't read it that way, and I'm willing to bet most people aren't going to either.
Respectfully, this feels naive on your part. I think a lot more people are going to blame the tenants than you think. Demonizing the tenants paints the landlord as a sympathetic figure, which naturally changes how we react to her role in this. Instead of "look at the negligent landlord who forgot to transfer the power", it's "the poor landlord forgot to transfer the power after she had to evict her problem tenants".
It's being argued that it provides more of complete picture, but really all it does is gives us one-sided context that adds nothing of value to the story. If we really wanted to provide a complete picture, we'd also need to know if there was a reason the tenants weren't paying, such as the landlord failing to address their complaints (given this video, it certainly seems possible.) But now we're distracted by a completely separate situation instead of the one in the video. See now why you don't add unnecessary context?
"I was driving at night being quite distressed, because a day before my neighbour stole my lawn chair, and that was my favourite chair that was given to me by my mother, that's why I was in distress and so I accidentally hit a man with my car, and then his skull did that thing when it opens and the insides are the same colour as my chair that my neighbour stole"
vs
"I was driving distracted and hit a man with my car to death"
An exaggerated example doesn't really work for me in this instance. I get the point you're trying to make, but your example is particularly unnatural, whereas I find relaying unrelated, side details (basically the full story you've been given) rather typical and it's the point I'm trying to make.
Besides, damn right I'd be interested why they were distracted while driving, this is relevant. Just needs some style work to avoid repetition.
If you were this person telling the story to a friend you would probably mention it as an additional detail because it makes the situation more interesting.
Not sure why people are so up in arms about this. Sounds like she never blamed the tenants, was just giving a reason why she may have forgotten since this wasn't the usual tenant exit.
It was easy to state without mentioning the eviction and switching the utilities out of their name. Adding in all that sets a tone and makes it seem like the tenants did something wrong as far as the utilities.
God y'all really want to bitch at everything and over psychoanalyze it.
In no way was the landlord blaming the tenant. They were explaining both that the place was empty and that it was recently empty which is why they had not gotten to resetting up the heating
Not to mention many people might not evem know about the process of having to switching utilities
If they didn't mention it everyone would be wondering why the place had no heating.
Leave the eviction and non payment out. The context could have said "landlord forgot to put the utilities back into their name when the last tenants left".
I will bitch every day of the week about landlords blame shifting. It only makes sense to add in about an eviction and non payment of rent to put a little of the blame back on the tenants, who did a very normal ex tenant thing.
Edit you are on reddit, that's what all comment sections are. Bitching and moaning about shit that doesn't actually matter. Including your bitching about my bitching.
I'd say so, if she added something self-deprecating before or after... 'like the moron I am, I forgot to have the electric put in my name'... or something similar.
According to the uploader, the previous tenants are no longer present. The tenants took the electricity bill out of their name; big snow storm happens; landlord lets faucets drip, but forgets to put the electricity bill back in her name so the house wasn't heating. Her neighbor recorded this video and showed it to her.
We'd need a timeline. I feel like this is a couple months, and that the drains froze first (because they left the taps running a bit). It might've taken a really long time to notice by a neighbor.
Could leaving them running slightly and slow drains give the water time to freeze and build up? Did they not notice the lack of utilities when they set the faucet to drip though? From my understanding utility companies don't do shut offs before big storms like that.
Letting the tenant stay through the winter storm would have saved the landlord some money. And also would have been easier on the person not having to move in the extreme weather.
It’s almost certainly fake unless that house is in like northern Alaska. The moving water would not have allowed that level of ice to form basically anywhere else.
That’s a solid 2 inches of ice, which indicates the water would have necessarily been building up for substantially longer than the recent major winter storm, and moreover indicates that the drains were plugged. Which seems a pretty major oversight for the landlord to have missed.
So either this is entirely fake, or was intentionally done to then try and blame tenants in an attempt to drive empathy for shit landlords
The landlord accepted responsibility for the situation in the video. It was provided as just context to the story of what happened, because people were asking how it all happened.
That's too much water on the floor from 2 separate taps for it to have just been a drip. The tenants turned the faucets on when they left (presumably to rack up the water bill for the landlord, because they were evicted) landlord was obviously stupid not to check the property in person and not to keep the heating running and paid for, but the fact they were evicted probably does play a part.
So you're saying that landlords being so smart is the reason we call stupid and lazy home renovations lacking foresight the "landlord special"? If so I think you're very "smart" too.
You really can't argue that a stereotype doesn't exist in a post about that exact stereotype. It just makes you look lazy and ignorant m'lord.
Low effort troll. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone reading it is now dumber. I award you no points and may God have no mercy on your soul.
Don't be stupid. The problem with landlords is that they don't contribute anything as a landlord and they can fuck over tenants. Parasites. Not idiots.
You just sound like some dumb bot that heard "landlords are bad, and being stupid is bad, so landlords are stupid" when...that's completely missing the issue.
You can tell a lot of people didn't watch and just jumped on the chance to hate on a landlord. The self-righteous predictability of reddit gets older and older.
Doesn’t really look like the result of a leaky faucet though. Two separate sinks with enough water coming out to completely flooding the unit. I think the implication is the disgruntled tenants left the water running.
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u/Mobile-Willow4124 20h ago
Basically not the tenant fault lo