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Originally Posted by After Shock Media
You are being very weird.
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I'd call it a product of necessity and experience.
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Originally Posted by After Shock Media
For one nobody and I do repeat nobody gets to be in a tenets place when either I/wife/ or tenet is present the entire time. Only exception I suppose would be if the fire department or some other emergency responders had to enter.
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That might hold true for you and some other individual landlords, but management companies behave completely differently. Management companies allow all sorts of employees and contractors access to keys, plus complexes with on-site offices generally keep all the keys in a flimsy box in a poorly secured office.
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Originally Posted by After Shock Media
Your NDA's are your issue. You have 24 hours, it is not that hard to put away things laying about that you do not want others to see.
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24 hour notice is meaningless when others have the ability to let themselves in at will, even if a piece of paper states they are not to do so. If 24 hour notice is legally required, and the landlord would never break the law, then there is no reason why they would need a key to an internal room containing nothing that could create an emergency situation requiring their intervention instead of the fire department.
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Originally Posted by After Shock Media
Nobody is also going to just enter your dwelling without the full notice, unless it is an emergency situation.
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Nobody should, but they can, and it happens all the time. Aside from the burglary risk posed by shady complex employees or contractors, maintenance personnel don't always seek permission to take care of minor issues if they think they can do a quick in and out.
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Originally Posted by After Shock Media
If you decide to start banging your GF when you know your landlord has given you written notice that they will be coming by between noon and three. Then again that is your own damn issue.
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I mentioned that because it happened. Her complex's handyman was responding to a valid, noticed work order, but went to the wrong unit.
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Originally Posted by After Shock Media
This is not being nervous about keys either, this is about not living up to your signed agreement. End of story.
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It is a technical violation, but if the landlord could never discover that fact without committing a violation of his own, then I fail to see how it makes any tangible difference.