Just yurt-pricing...
Friday, 2 August 2013 01:21 pmThe neighbors have officially moved out. A new guy showed up to mow the lawn and clear out the crap left behind in the apartment and basement.
The landlord's 'guy' is usually a tenant who can't make rent, and does odd jobs for the landlord to make up the difference. It's also usually a shady fucker, from the guy who brought his crackhead girlfriend to the empty upstairs apartment to hang out and shower (I mean 'crackhead' in the sense that she smoked crack), to the crackhead who came in to assess a needed repair (and case the place) and returned to the landlord with a whole list of things he planned to do in my apartment--a list that would have had him here for months, and which had nothing to do with the one repair he was supposed to make (but never did, because it seems he sold the gear he was given to make the repairs).
But anyway.
This guy doesn't look like a crackhead, and he's actually working instead of trying to drag things out for several months, so he might be an actual handyman. He certainly seems to think of himself that way: he talked about having to change the locks since the neighbors didn't return their keys, and how he intended to just change the locks for the whole building and make copies so that the landlord would have a set and he would have a set.
lol, no.
Guess what I ain't doing?
Sure, if this were an apartment complex, the landlord and maintenance and security would have keys. But in apartment complexes, the latter two are employees, not broke crackheads.
The landlord's 'guy' is usually a tenant who can't make rent, and does odd jobs for the landlord to make up the difference. It's also usually a shady fucker, from the guy who brought his crackhead girlfriend to the empty upstairs apartment to hang out and shower (I mean 'crackhead' in the sense that she smoked crack), to the crackhead who came in to assess a needed repair (and case the place) and returned to the landlord with a whole list of things he planned to do in my apartment--a list that would have had him here for months, and which had nothing to do with the one repair he was supposed to make (but never did, because it seems he sold the gear he was given to make the repairs).
But anyway.
This guy doesn't look like a crackhead, and he's actually working instead of trying to drag things out for several months, so he might be an actual handyman. He certainly seems to think of himself that way: he talked about having to change the locks since the neighbors didn't return their keys, and how he intended to just change the locks for the whole building and make copies so that the landlord would have a set and he would have a set.
lol, no.
Guess what I ain't doing?
Sure, if this were an apartment complex, the landlord and maintenance and security would have keys. But in apartment complexes, the latter two are employees, not broke crackheads.