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My apartments kicked me out.
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<blockquote data-quote="witzend" data-source="post: 576884" data-attributes="member: 99"><p>I'm sorry to hear about the apartment. When M was young and we moved out of one neighborhood, we were able to keep him in the same elementary/middle school due to before and after school care being in that school's neighborhood. When we moved from one HS district - not just one neighborhood - we were able to keep him in the same school for continued continuity in his education. Before you freak out about your difficult child, see what you can do to keep him where he's at. It might not be as difficult as you think.</p><p></p><p>As to the manager, there's probably not a lot of help you're going to get from her. But it does seem unfair to not know why. Bearing in mind that people don't get evicted for no reason whatsoever, are you able to put your feelings aside and ask her for more information so that you can avoid the situation that got you evicted in your next home? It sounds as though this may be a problem that you or your difficult child had with another tenant, and while that stinks, there's nothing to stop a complex manager from taking sides. You should also be aware that many of these complexes are owned by the same companies, so you don't want to burn your bridges. The one thing that the manager <em>must</em> do is give an accurate reference for you, and they can't lie. You should ask her what type of reference you will get from her. If you weren't there long and you are going to get a bad reference, you should tell your next landlord that you were living with a family member or friend to save up money and leave the current manager out of it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="witzend, post: 576884, member: 99"] I'm sorry to hear about the apartment. When M was young and we moved out of one neighborhood, we were able to keep him in the same elementary/middle school due to before and after school care being in that school's neighborhood. When we moved from one HS district - not just one neighborhood - we were able to keep him in the same school for continued continuity in his education. Before you freak out about your difficult child, see what you can do to keep him where he's at. It might not be as difficult as you think. As to the manager, there's probably not a lot of help you're going to get from her. But it does seem unfair to not know why. Bearing in mind that people don't get evicted for no reason whatsoever, are you able to put your feelings aside and ask her for more information so that you can avoid the situation that got you evicted in your next home? It sounds as though this may be a problem that you or your difficult child had with another tenant, and while that stinks, there's nothing to stop a complex manager from taking sides. You should also be aware that many of these complexes are owned by the same companies, so you don't want to burn your bridges. The one thing that the manager [I]must[/I] do is give an accurate reference for you, and they can't lie. You should ask her what type of reference you will get from her. If you weren't there long and you are going to get a bad reference, you should tell your next landlord that you were living with a family member or friend to save up money and leave the current manager out of it. [/QUOTE]
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