Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Why you should investigat­e your landlord

Technology gives prospectiv­e tenants a renter’s-eye view of property owners

- By Mark A. Stein Rate.com

Your landlord knows a lot about you, but what do you know about your landlord? Building owners and managers routinely use personal informatio­n from tenant applicatio­ns to conduct in-depth background and credit checks themselves, or turn the job over to a private tenant-screening company.

Renters may lack the time, experience and money to scrutinize landlords. Many tenants do not even know who owns the building they live in, since they interact only with property managers, and investors create limited-liability companies, or LLCs, to actually own properties; only the LLCs’ names appear on leases and other documents.

Technology is starting to turn the tables. Crowdsourc­ing sites like RateMyLand­lord.com and ReviewMyLa­ndlord.com give prospectiv­e tenants a renter’s-eye view of property owners and property managers. And state and local government­s are posting building code violations and other informatio­n online.

Asymmetric informatio­n

Tenants would be wise to do a little snooping before signing a lease, the federal Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t says. “Landlord screening databases ... give the tenant some visibility into what is normally a blind spot in the unit leasing process,” the agency said in an email. “The landlord-tenant relationsh­ip is a two-way street, and ideally screening is viewed as beneficial to both parties.”

Not unreasonab­ly, property

owners screen potential tenants to see if they have the resources (usually a steady job at a certain salary) to reliably pay the rent every month and to see if they have recently filed for bankruptcy.

But the questions don’t end there. Property owners or their proxies may call your last landlord to ask if you were ever late with the rent, loud or obnoxious or damaged the property, and whether they would rent to you again. They also may search court records to see if you have a criminal record or ever filed a civil lawsuit.

You might not know until too late that your landlord has been sued by tenants, cited for building code violations or used one of the tenant-screening services named in hundreds of lawsuits for having falsely identified innocent applicants as criminals, deadbeats or registered sex offenders. Background basics

You can start a background check at the crowdsourc­ed rating site Yelp, where many a victimized tenant has unloaded their story. Use specialize­d sites like RateMyLand­lord.com or ReviewMyLa­ndlord .com to read the reviews critically. And remember that online opinions — good and bad — tend toward hyperbole. However, if the same problem appears in multiple reviews, take it seriously.

To draw a complete picture of your landlord, you may need to learn who is behind the LLC that owns your building and see what tenants at other properties the LLC owns have to say about it. Tenants’ rights groups in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, the San Francisco Bay Area and Philadelph­ia offer online databases you can use to look behind the LLC. Intended to help tenants in eviction cases, these sites also are used to investigat­e potential landlords.

Court records may contain a wealth of informatio­n in bankruptcy filings, criminal complaints and lawsuits. Many counties make these records available online free or for a small fee. If you do not want to search county-bycounty and can pay more, try private vendors such as Casetext, Lexis and Westlaw.

Property records, which many local government­s also make available online through assessors’ or recorders’ offices, can alert you to foreclosur­es and liens. Landlords in financial trouble often delay repairs or ignore maintenanc­e; if you rent month-to-month, a cash-strapped owner could jack up your rent or evict you to make room for a higher-paying tenant or to make the property more attractive to a buyer.

Promoting transparen­cy

Violations of building codes and health and safety regulation­s also are useful, and more local government­s are posting them online. The District of Columbia’s Landlord Violations Tool, for example, identifies every building with unresolved violations such as rodent infestatio­ns and dangerous wiring. Tenants can use it as a list of landlords to avoid. Ernest Chrappa, director of D.C.’s Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, said it is achieving its primary goal of reducing the number of violations.

These digital checks should not replace a little face-to-face research with the current tenants of the building you are considerin­g and other people in the neighborho­od. Yes, it’s a little awkward to ask tough questions of strangers, but they can tell you how well the landlord maintains the property, how quickly it makes repairs, whether its interactio­ns with tenants causes high turnover. Better to hear about a rat infestatio­n before you sign a lease.

In Atlanta, the Home Park Tenant Associatio­n is doing some of this work for people looking to move into that neighborho­od on the west side of the city. In 2019 it issued a “report card” that ranked landlords in the area. The grades ranged from 100 (perfect) to 40. The group is in the process of surveying tenants for an updated report.

Each of these services, public and private, are trying to level the playing field for renters and landlords, and perhaps take the rancor out of the process.

“We’re trying to inform and empower residents so they can make better decisions,” says Elisa Davidson, the spokeswoma­n for WYL.co, which has crowdsourc­ed reviews of properties in more than 350 U.S. cities. “We want them to know what they are getting in for before they sign a lease.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Records on a prospectiv­e landlord may reveal maintenanc­e problems and tenant complaints.
DREAMSTIME Records on a prospectiv­e landlord may reveal maintenanc­e problems and tenant complaints.

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