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I am a director of a Management Co........of 72 leaseholders/Flats.
Any ideas on how best to deal with unsociable residents please?
I have a few of my own but would welcome hearing from others on the subject with any experience.

2007-09-25 23:37:05 · 5 answers · asked by JJ 2 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

5 answers

i personally love the "unsociable ones"... (owned rental property for over 20 years)...

and that is what they want..........
just a "quiet enjoyment."......
they pay on time....and just want to sit at home..and watch a good tv show...........and be left alone..it is called "quiet enjoyment".. even the "by laws" have..a statement for that...and that is what they want..you can call it "unsociable" but they are in "quiet enjoyment"......

not everyone .. wants to be out partying all the time..
now as such I had an "unsociable"..and went into his suite after 2 years with a notice of an "imaginery problem" (said a leak)......because I was curious ......he lived for 10 years in the unit....and when I sold he stayed........
go watch that
old "Carrie Grant " movie "the Silent Man"........really explains things..........you don't need a "big mouth" to make a statement..

2007-09-25 23:46:43 · answer #1 · answered by m2 5 · 1 2

If it is in the UK and they are bothering other tenants, then the tenants have to call in the Anti Social Task Force to come out and monitor their behaviour - this works best for loud tenants who are disrupting other tenants.

They can be called out 24/7 and can be contacted through the local council. They usually advise the tenants to keep a diary of events that have happened. Unfortunately they cannot come out if there is any violence or threats from the neighbours, the tenants would have to call the police directly.

2007-09-25 23:49:36 · answer #2 · answered by Lady Claire - Hates Bigotry 6 · 0 1

Give an example to the leaseholders by giving the worst ten-tend a verbal warring then a written then a three month notice.

2007-09-25 23:51:49 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Tenants are under NO obligation to be "sociable." Thank God! You deal with them the same way you deal with all tenants: Professionally.

2007-09-26 01:52:28 · answer #4 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

Those are the best kind! They're quiet, they pay rent on time, they just want to be left alone. Respect that!

2007-09-26 01:26:38 · answer #5 · answered by Roland'sMommy 6 · 1 0

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