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Here I am again stuck with a horribly hot apartment. Im on the top floor in the southwest corner, with the western facing wall completely covered in single pane windows. No matter how much I cover my windows its insanely hot in there. Usually only around a 10-12 degree difference. Do I have any leg to stand on to get a bigger or newer unit that would properly keep my apartment cooler as far as the legal department goes?

Cause I know they will probably replace the unit i have now with the exact same kind and size expecting that to be a miracle cure(past experience), and in doing so they like to claim that they have done everything they could hence making them not at default.

Anyone have experience with this?

2007-06-07 15:31:22 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

I live in Fort Worth, Texas btw.

2007-06-07 15:31:47 · update #1

8 answers

Unless your lease specifically states that air conditioning to your liking will be provided, I think you are SOL. Do you have a health condition requiring a moderate temperature?

2007-06-07 15:35:46 · answer #1 · answered by Chris S 3 · 2 0

On the bright side, if they replace the unit with a new one, even if it is the same size and power it will undoubtably work better than an old one. It could just need a charge of freon, too.

As far as the legal side, check with the city health department. There might be some regulation about what temperature landlords have to be able to provide. I'm up North here and there are certainly requirements for landlords to provide a certain level of heat in the winter. You might have them for air conditioning.

2007-06-07 15:38:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

touch your city housing authority. In particular areas of the rustic, A/C isn't a necessity. In Las Vegas, Phoenix and different warm environments, it fairly is a well-being subject. you're allowed to hire somebody to repair the A/C and deduct the fee from the hire. yet you may notify them, in writing, first. returned, verify which contain your housing authority. From a information report: So, we asked Nevada legal centers that comparable question, and decrease than Nevada regulation, aircon is between the essential centers to be presented via the owner, regardless of while you're in the back of on hire. Nevada legal centers, Directing legal professional, Rhea Gertken says, "actual while you're residing some place and have the reason to stay there, then you definately've the skill to an inhabitable unit which you would be able to stay in." Tiffani Sargent asked, "so they don't have the the superb option to give up the a/c to shop money?" And Gertken replied, "No they do no longer."

2016-11-07 22:04:58 · answer #3 · answered by mcmillian 4 · 0 0

You do not have a right to air conditioning in TX, unless it was reasonably expected to exist at the time you rented the apartment. (If you had it then lost it, that's 'reasonably expected'.) You only have a right to heating. Yeah, sounds weird, but most states are like that. There may be a city ordinance in your favor. Look up "Warranty of Habitability".

2007-06-07 15:36:16 · answer #4 · answered by cyanne2ak 7 · 1 0

I went through the same problem. The best answer for you is to buy your own window unit. It may suck at first, but it sounds like you have a landlord (like mine was) with deaf ears. It was the best investment I ever made...

2007-06-07 15:40:34 · answer #5 · answered by Sara 3 · 0 0

I don't know of any law that requires a landlord to provide air conditioning at all.

I guess you'll just have to find a better apartment.

2007-06-07 15:36:38 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you were a electrician you wouldn't be here asking dumb questions. You'd climb on top of the roof and splice into the elec. cable above the meter and run the wire to the air conditioner. Be careful, don't run all the time, don't electrocute your self doing it. And when people start getting suspicous. Move out.

2007-06-07 15:40:37 · answer #7 · answered by Oleman 2 · 0 2

I so SO understand you.

Good luck and best wishes on a cooler climate.

Maybe you need to SOS

http://www.aceee.org/consumerguide/cac.pdf

2007-06-07 15:38:10 · answer #8 · answered by Æsir 2 · 0 0

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