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Thursday, 18 April 2019

Landlord giving me 30 days to remove my house plants

Washington State, renting a house. Only plant related verbiage in lease states to ensure all plants have drip trays (they do).

I have 3 locations where there is a remotely high volume of plants - even then, it is a line of 6" plants along the windows in 3 different rooms. The bathroom, my office, and our bedroom. All three have windows open, bathroom has a fan on almost 24/7, office does have a fan on 24/7, and bedroom does at night.

I received an email stating that I because of the humidity plants emit, it is a mold risk and i have 30 days to remove my plants.

I work in the plant industry, specifically interior plants, I know that the way I'm keeping my plants and airflow I am providing my plants cannot create the humidity they are referencing.

Is it legal for them to require me to remove my plants? I feel like they are phishing for a way to evict us. -background- we moved in 4 months ago, when we moved in it seemed like nobody lived here for some time. There was a massive leak in the upstairs toilet, took weeks to fix, the glass stove top exploded and we went a month without a stove, and when I asked if we could have some leeway on our rent for not having been able to cook dinners at home, they did not answer (later they denied it) and told us it was time for the annual inspection. This is where they saw the plants and here we are now.



Written By: Cherriethefox
Source: http://bit.ly/2UlALII

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