Living in an apartment building offers a lot of benefits over residing in a house.
Thereās no lawn to cut, for one thing, and itās generally more affordable.
The only problem is you have to live so close to other human beings. Thatās not always an easy thing to do.
It doesnāt matter if you are in a rental building or a strata, itās hard for residents to get along.
Why? Itās simple ā rules. Some people donāt follow the rules and other people are excessive when it comes to enacting and imposing those rules.
Rules are important, but some are overbearing and impractical. Other rules are smart, but some people refuse to abide by them.
That leads to some insane conflicts, include those that end up in court.
There is a building in Burnaby that could be heading in that direction. Iām not going to name the building because Iām not trying to publicly embarrass anyone. Iām also not going to name the person who emailed me a long list of grievances and examples of āevidenceā confirming rules infractions.
What kind of evidence? How about a Dropbox full of audio files āprovingā the excessive noise of this personās next-door neighbour. Yes, this person is being forced to stay up late recording the noise.
No, I donāt want to embarrass anyone. Iām simply sharing some details to show how crazy these rules fights get (and the type of emails I receive from stressed-out readers looking for me to solve their petty fights, which I can't always do).
Aside from the excessive āpartyingā of this personās neighbour, there is the issue of smoking.
Now that is a rule I can get behind. Nobody likes smoking. Smokers are smelly and sometimes dangerous with how they handle their butts. They put an entire building in danger every time they light up. I often wonder if a smoker in my building is going to fall asleep with a lit cigarette and torch the whole place.
The person who wrote me signed a lease that said the building was a no-smoking residence. That, of course, was baloney and this resident has been fighting with neighbours and management ever since.
This person isnāt the only one. An actual petition was started to get management to take this matter more seriously.
There was one section of this email that particularly resonated with me. This tenant caught the neighbours blatantly violating the rules, but got this reaction:
āAs recently as today, the tenants in the unit directly below me were on their balcony smoking. I spoke with them and stated, āIsnāt this a non-smoking building?ā to which one of the residents, a woman, replied stating, (Building management) said itās part of my lease that I am allowed to smoke since Iāve lived here a long time, so you need to fucking relax.ā
How often have you caught somebody doing something and they donāt even show a hint of guilt?
Thatās some sociopathic behaviour.
As you can see from the attached photos, this tenant has been creeping on the neighbours in order gather evidence. Things have really gone off the rails when you have to spend your leisure time doing this.
The tenant also has a conspiracy theory.
āI am actually beginning to wonder if this tenant isnāt friends with the property manager, as she has gotten away with so much that most people probably wouldnāt,ā the tenant wrote. āThey seem to have no problem evicting other tenants, as Iāve seen eviction notices posted on peopleās doors.ā
How often have you wondered about the potentially crooked motives of your property manager? It's maddening.
Up next is a possible complaint to the Residential Tenancy Branch.
Good luck with that.
Follow Chris Campbell on Twitter @shinebox44.