charging utilities to tenants when there is no meter
Posted: Fri Mar 31, 2006 11:53 pm
I don't know if anyone else on this forum rents, based on all the posts I have seen on home ownership, but anyway I have a non-internet friend who rents an apartment on Edgewater. The entire building is rentals, with no condos. She received a notice from the landlord that they will begin charging her for utilities (electric and natural gas), once her lease is up. (The current lease was inclusive of utilities.) She would not necessarily mind paying utilities, except there are no individual meters. The notice states that she will be charged her "fair share," based on the square footage of her apartment. So, if her apartment is 500 square feet, and the total square footage of all the apartments in the building is 50,000 square feet, she will be charged 1% of the total utilities. I have heard many times over the years that landlords cannot technically charge utilities if there is no individual metering, but perhaps this is an urban legend. Does anyone have an idea of what the law is in this area? I told her she would be crazy to pay proportionate utilities like that, when there are some people in the building who likely use utilities excessively and who have a lot of people crammed into their apartments. I don't want to name the building, but I have noticed its quality of tenants going downhill, as well. Maybe this is a sign that it is time for her to move on. I feel bad for some of the elderly in the building who have lived there a long time who may get pushed out.
Doug
Doug