Is the property uninhabitable without us? 



----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Jeremy" <jeremysmi...@gmail.com> 
To: af@afmug.com 
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2015 9:54:59 AM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Angry landlord over Roof mount antenna 


Well the landlord cannot prevent the tenant from getting water and power. We 
are a utility now, right? 


On Tue, Mar 17, 2015 at 7:48 AM, John Woodfield < john.woodfi...@jwcn.biz > 
wrote: 




I agree. Landlord/tenant/security deposit issue. 

Sent from my iPhone 

On Mar 17, 2015, at 9:41 AM, CARL PETERSON < cpeter...@portnetworks.com > 
wrote: 


<blockquote>




This issue isn’t about OTARD. It is an issue between the tenant and the 
landlord and you should make this very clear to the landlord. If the tenant 
called a painter to paint the living room, or Best Buy to mount a TV on the 
wall etc, I highly doubt the landlord would be going after the painter or Best 
Buy. This situation is no different. 


If you did crap work and damaged something, thats a different matter, but if 
you did exactly what the tenant requested and didn’t screw anything else up, 
then it is an issue between the tenant and the landlord. The Tenant is 
responsible for the property and has a right to utilize the property but that 
isn’t your fight, it is the tenants fight and I wouldn’t even get involved. 





On Mar 17, 2015, at 9:19 AM, Rory McCann < rmm.li...@gmail.com > wrote: 

<blockquote>


If the landlord owns the property, they should ultimately have the final say. 
If the tenant did indeed lie/withhold the information in this case, bye-bye 
deposit. 

I get the OTARD argument, but I can guarantee if I was renting a townhouse and 
a tenant didn't ask for permission to mount something to the roof and drill 
holes, not only would the antenna be coming down but they'd either be fixing it 
or out on their asses sans deposit. It would definitely be part of the lease 
agreement. 

Personally, I'm of the group that believes you catch more flies with honey than 
vinegar so I would work with the landlord to make it right. If you handle 
things properly, you may actually end up gaining business - especially if 
he/she has other properties and is satisfied with how you resolved the issue. 
I'm betting they are just pissed right now about it and will cool off to a more 
reasonable level in the next few days. 
Rory McCann
MKAP Technology Solutions
Web: www.mkap.net 
On 3/17/2015 5:56 AM, John Woodfield wrote: 



<blockquote>

I guess that still depends on the situation. If the landlord is getting 
kickbacks from the cable company for having service in an MDU I call BS. If the 
landlord allows a satellite for TV but not an antenna for Internet I call BS. 
It all depends on the situation. 



John Woodfield, President 
Delmarva WiFi Inc. 
410-870-WiFi 


-----Original Message----- 
From: "Adam Moffett" <dmmoff...@gmail.com> 
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2015 11:10pm 
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Angry landlord over Roof mount antenna 



Maybe all governments speak from both sides of their mouth. In this case I 
think there's a good reason for it, they say "Landlords, you cannot prohibit 
tenants from having an antenna." They're not saying, "Landlords, you must let 
John and Adam drill holes in your house", because they straight up can't make a 
mandate like that. 

If you *can* force the landlord to accept your antenna being on their building 
against their will, would you really want to? You gain $30-50/month, but also 
make a permanent enemy. IMO, better to just defuse the anger as best you can 
and fix the damage. 


<blockquote>

So like everything else they are talking out both sides of their mouth. The 
problem becomes, how much aggravation does the landlord want to go through as 
the burden of proof undisputedly lies with them. 



John Woodfield, President 
Delmarva WiFi Inc. 
410-870-WiFi 


-----Original Message----- 
From: "Adam Moffett" <dmmoff...@gmail.com> 
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2015 10:45pm 
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Angry landlord over Roof mount antenna 



I've been going by the FCC Q&A posted here: 
http://www.fcc.gov/guides/over-air-reception-devices-rule#QA 

Highlighting added by me 


Q: If I live in a condominium or an apartment building, does this rule apply to 
me? 
A: The rule applies to antenna users who live in a multiple dwelling unit 
building, such as a condominium or apartment building, if the antenna user has 
an exclusive use area in which to install the antenna. "Exclusive use" means an 
area of the property that only you, and persons you permit, may enter and use 
to the exclusion of other residents. For example, your condominium or apartment 
may include a balcony, terrace, deck or patio that only you can use, and the 
rule applies to these areas. The rule does not apply to common areas, such as 
the roof , the hallways, the walkways or the exterior walls of a condominium or 
apartment building. Restrictions on antennas installed in these common areas 
are not covered by the Commission's rule. For example, the rule would not apply 
to restrictions that prevent drilling through the exterior wall of a 
condominium or rental unit and thus restrictions may prohibit installation that 
requires such drilling. 


<blockquote>

Don't think so. The rules are clear that permitted restrictions have to be 
"reasonable" and if there is a "conflict" the burden of proof is on the 
landlord. 

Further, restrictions cannot violate the impairment clause in section 2.2 i.e. 
may not unreasonable delay or increase costs, or preclude reception or 
transmission of an acceptable quality signal. 

This article, written by an attorney, addresses most of the misconceptions that 
have been voiced here 

http://www.wba-law.com/Unique_Practice_Areas/Homeowners_Associations/ 

John 


-----Original Message----- 
From: "Adam Moffett" <dmmoff...@gmail.com> 
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2015 9:24pm 
To: af@afmug.com 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Angry landlord over Roof mount antenna 



OTARD says the landlord can't tell you not to put an antenna on the house. The 
landlord absolutely *can* tell you not to put holes in his property. The FCC 
website on the topic spells this out pretty clearly. 

I.E.: OTARD protects you if you can manage to install without any penetrations. 
This is why you'll see apartment complexes with dishes clamped on the deck 
railings and they make flat coax to go in through a window. 


<blockquote>
OTARD rules cover it. 
It's s town home so you can mount anywhere on their portion of the building 
including the roof. 
If he has an issue with the cable and holes he needs to talk to the renter. 
You could also let him know that quality internet service makes his property 
more rentable. 


On Monday, March 16, 2015, Darin Steffl < darin.ste...@mnwifi.com > wrote: 

<blockquote>

Hey all, 
So I got an angry call from a owner of a townhouse who rents it out to one of 
our new internet customers. We were never made aware the home was a rental in 
any way. Our techs always ask permission on where to mount the dish and bring 
in the wire and they were given approval to mount the dish on the roof and 
drill a hole for the wire. If it was a rental, we would have talked to the 
landlord. 
The home owner now wants us to remove the dish, cable, and holes and restore 
everything to original condition. He wants new siding, new shingles, the whole 
works. 

I don't exactly know how I should handle this situation. We won't be pulling 
the mount off the roof because it is sealed if we leave it there. We can't move 
the dish because the signal is only good there. Do we have any sort of 
protection from OTARD or anything that allows us to keep things in place since 
we were given permission from the tenant? 
Ideas or ways to handle this smoothly? We are not going to pay for new siding 
or roofing when we were given permission to install. If anything, the tenant 
would be responsible since we did the work on their behalf. -- 


Darin Steffl 
Minnesota WiFi 
www.mnwifi.com 
507-634-WiFi 
Like us on Facebook 


</blockquote>

</blockquote>

</blockquote>

</blockquote>


</blockquote>


</blockquote>

</blockquote>


Reply via email to