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Should pet owners be charged additional fees if they live in an apartment?

Results so far:

Yes
34% 116 votes Total: 341 votes
No
66% 225 votes

by Annette Bromley

Created on: February 17, 2009

Should pet owners be charged additional fees if they live in an apartment?




BEING RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR PET






As much as it grieves me to have to say this, yes, an additional fee should be charged to pet owners who live in apartment buildings. It goes along with the responsibility as much as food, medical care, grooming and training and attention does. I'm a pet owner. I live in an apartment and I have paid a pet charge fee for each of my pets. I have two. I love my pets but they aren't always well behaved any more than children are.


We who own pets should be as responsible for the behavior of our pets as we are for the behavior of our children.
Pets can do a lot of damage unless they are well supervised and well trained. Unfortunately many pets are not and the owners take no responsibility for their behavior. Your landlord should not have to. It is not his pet and any damage caused by your pet should be, is, your responsibility even if you think they are just being a dog, just being a cat, a pig, a rabbit or whatever. As much as I wish this were not so and charging an extra fee was not necessary a few irresponsible tenants have spoiled it for everyone.

I am the manager of two large apartment buildings. I have to deal with this problem all the time. We allow pets, though we do not allow exotic pets. No snakes, not reptiles, that sort of thing.
We charge a "Pet Fee" for each and every pet you have and you can't have more than three, less depending on the size of your apartment. The pet fee is a one time charge that is paid at the same time you pay your deposit and your first months rent.

The deposit is 2/3 of one months rent with the additional pet fee of 100 dollars per pet you are moving into the apartment with you. The deposit and the pet fee are refundable when you vacate the property if there is no unreasonable damage done and you have left the apartment in decent order, what we call broom clean; you haven't trashed the place. We expect a reasonable amount of damage that comes from just general living to have to be done, cleaning, painting, minor repairs but I have seen damage that is way beyond reason when we have to replace carpeting, tile, woodwork, blinds, draperies, gnawed shelves and cabinet doors, shower stalls, bushes, shrubs and other plants because of animal behavior and owners who have been negligent in the care and training of their pets and the landlord not only has to pay for the materials to replace all this but he has to pay for the labor. It is


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