A little complaining
I have signed a lease on an apartment with an August 10th move-in date, so I think that pretty much commits me to school this year. Well, that and the $1000 that I sent to the law school for the tuition deposit.
While ultimately I am happy with the apartment choice that I made, it wasn’t without some drama. Searching for an apartment when you are 3000 miles away is difficult but searching for an apartment when you are 3000 miles away and you have two Siberian Huskies is doubly difficult. There is one apartment complex that is basically across the street from the law school (I’ll call it Complex A). It’s very popular with law student because of the convenient location. Back in December, when I was accepted, I started looking for apartments and Complex A was mentioned. Their website said that they allowed two dogs per apartment, 50 pounds max each, and if they were over 25 pounds, only in ground floor apartments. All that sounded reasonable to me, so I called to make sure there were no breed restrictions. When I talked to Complex A’s manager, she first said that Siberian Huskies were way too big, but I then explained that one of them is 45 pounds and the other is 48, so I didn’t think they would break the rules. After that, she said it would be no problem. Because the complex is so popular, they begin accepting applications at midnight on January 1st and start a waitlist for apartments for the next school year. I submitted my application at 12:08AM and was given a spot of #9 on the waitlist. I felt like I was in good shape.
When we visited the school in January, we visited multiple apartment complexes, just in case, although I did not really think too much about them since I was so sure that Complex A was going to come through for me.
Fast forward to last week. I called Complex A to check on how things were going with the waitlist. The manager told me that she was going to meet with #8 on the waitlist the next day, then they would have 48 hours to pick their apartment, and then I would get to make my selection. When I spoke with her, we talked about the dogs and she said she would have 5-6 apartments to offer me as choices, depending on what #8 selected. On Friday, she emailed me that she had one apartment for me, but there was already another dog on the shared hallway, so she didn’t think it would work out for me to live there. I emailed her back and basically called her out on what I considered to be false information she had been giving me: we had spoken a few times about the dogs, I listed them on my application clearly, and yet, just a few days before, she said there would be 5-6 apartments as options for me and now she is saying only one and it wouldn’t be a good fit. I asked her to explain what was going on. She called me the next day and told me that those other apartments were not being offered to me because they had been remodeled and she could not allow dogs in them. I asked her why she had failed to mention that to me before. I explained to her that my dogs are always crated when I am not home and they are not destructive and I would even be willing to pay a higher refundable deposit because I was confident they wouldn’t damage the apartment. Finally she offered me a semi-remodeled apartment that she said she had planned to replace the carpet in, but she wouldn’t replace the carpet and I could have it. I told her to send me pictures.
The whole thing rubbed me the wrong way. I completely understand if a property manager does not want dogs in the rental units, so if an apartment says no pets or only pets under 25 pounds or whatever, I respect that and move on. What I bothered me is that I had been repeatedly told that the dogs would be fine, there had been no previous mention that some apartments would be off-limits, and I felt like she was basically lying to me. It made me feel really uncomfortable to move into a complex where I didn’t trust the property manager before I even moved in.
So while I was waiting on the pictures from Complex A, I called Complex B, another complex that we had visited in January. They allow two dogs per apartment, no weight limit and no restrictions on Siberian Huskies. Complex B is a little under 2 miles from the law school, so not as easy as walking across the street, but not horrible either. It’s a little more expensive, but the units are recently remodeled, have all wood flooring, washer/dryers, and the best part, fully-fenced, private patios. It just happened that they had a unit with an August 10th move-in date. I expressed interest and had the apartment secured by Monday. I didn’t want to let go of the other apartment in Complex A until I at least had something else because all of the other complexes that we visited were either much further away from campus or not nearly as nice.
Monday night I emailed Complex A’s manager and told her that because I was completely uncomfortable with how the situation was playing out, I was pulling my application. I then suggested that she revise her pet policy if she doesn’t actually intend to rent to people who fall within the policy. I’m sure she ignored everything I said and was glad to not have to deal with me, but it made me feel better to at least mention it. There is a huge waitlist for Complex A, so she could say No Pets and still fill the complex completely. It seems like that’s what she should do so others in my situation don’t waste their time on it.
In the long run, Complex B is probably going to be better. It’s in a residential area, mostly houses and not apartments, with a nice park across the street. When we were there in January, kids were sledding down the hill in the park. It will probably be easier to walk the dogs in that type of environment versus the more commercial area where Complex A was located. Plus with the fenced patio/garden, when the dogs want out in the middle of the night, I can just let them out in that area instead of taking them out on leash. I’ll still have to walk them a lot, but not in the middle of the night. I was stuck on Complex A because it would have been like living on-campus and I could have gone home between classes, but ultimately I decided it wasn’t worth it.
Whew! What a long-winded story. Thanks for bearing with me.