More interested in the story here.
Please elaborate.
"Our evictions".....implies a lot.
Not wanting to be chained to a desk for life, the equity game is the most solid and reliable of all pursuits of a gainful source of non-fixed income that regularly appreciates directly related to the rise in consumer price indices. IE: if you really want to bear inflation, buy property. No matter how high consumer prices rise, rents normally equate.
As far as "our evictions" and
@Subway 's
at 'me' evicting people being in conflict with my personal beliefs, 'I'd' rather not deal with the eviction process ever again, remember I was a banker when I worked in the system and saw plenty of that side of things then. Thus, we hired a young lady who walks softly and carries a big Dick, her assistant aside from being a ninja mf, is also a private investigator. She comes in first, very nice and polite with all kinds of options to make up the back rent, and if after a certain more than graceful period the renters are unable or unwilling to reach a mutually agreeable arrangement, she comes with the Dick, then and only then do they get the boot.
Remember, regardless of my personal beliefs about how the current capitalist system works, I did not make the rules, nor establish the game. You all know the saying, 'don't hate the player, hate the game'.
In the society within which we were all born into, you have choices to make, and then live with. I'm perfectly fine with the choices that I've made along the line, both the good ones as well as the bad ones. I do have a conscience obviously, and regularly lose sleep when it comes to a legal process... they don't always turn out how you think they will going into them. But, what choice do you have, if you have chosen to go the rental property route as your preferred source of income?
I'll tell you, because I know...
A-) be mother Teresa, let your renters not pay rent, see where that gets you in the long run when the word gets out amongst them.
Or
B-) evict those who choose to not pay, regardless of reason and live with the guilt. But keep your source of income secure.
When it comes to my livelihood, being able to provide for my family and keep them happy? There really is no choice at all, is there?
Edit: if you want a really "juicy" (NTTIAWWT) story, later I can get into the gay realtor who said he couldn't rent our best apartment in the center of Madrid during the 4 months we had it contracted to his agency, and then when we get the keys back upon termination of the contract we discover the real reason for no renters is he was busy using the place as a personal "Fook pad".
We're going to court on that one any day now if the agencies owner doesn't pony up for the 4 months of rent, plus damages.