This was submitted by Two Sentz reader and Insley tenant "hdg3xb" who, for obvious reasons, wishes to remain anonymous. Here's the full text of his e-mail:
A Few Thoughts Regarding 4-2
It appears to me that the 4-2 legislation that is the topic of much conversation was created out of two main beliefs:
1. Limit the number of rental units to boost property values of the surrounding areas.
2. Prevent “slum lords” from opening up shop.
WAKE UP SALISBURY!!! The exact opposite is happening. Salisbury is a growing city. Every year the University is growing, however its students have no place to go. Go ahead and say what I know you're thinking: "All college kids do is party and disturb the peace. Like hell they are going to live next to me." Let me just remind you though, not every college student is a drunken fraternity brother who parties 6 nights a week and sobers up in jail on the 7th. In fact most of the trouble makers you blindly form stereotypes around don’t make it very far here. Trust me, as a senior here at SU, most of the “students” the community has a problem with are gone in two, maybe three semesters. If mommy and daddy don’t pull the plug, the University will. Once they are out of here, all that is left is legitimate students who want to spend their time studying and not trying to figure out where to live next (more on that later).
4-2 is back firing for most involved. Keep in mind that the legislation does not limit the number of houses; it only limits the occupants of said house to 2 unrelated people. Given that the demand for rental housing is only growing, and that full occupancy is barred by law, the number of rental units is only increasing ever faster. And even worse, we are seeing homes being sliced up into sub-par “apartments.” Have any of you ever been inside of a home converted to apartments? All they do is throw up a piece of drywall and add a “kitchen” somewhere. There is no attempt at sound proofing or solid workmanship. I have been scared for my life walking up some of the back “entrance” stairs of the converted houses. In houses that have not been converted, tenants are forced to pay twice the rent. Even if the law says only two people can live here, land lords are still charging the same rent they did when it was occupied by four people.
So you know who is losing out on all of this? You and I are my friends. I am being forced to choose between sub-standard housing and impossibly high rents. You are seeing MORE rental units in your neighborhoods to accommodate this artificially created demand. Do you know who is not losing out? You guessed it; they would be Salisbury’s well established and “morally sound” rental agencies.
Let’s move on to belief number two. 4-2 is preventing “slum lords” from opening up shop. Guess what? All it's doing is giving them a golden key to the city. I have rented through two people here in Salisbury, and as I do not like to report on things I have not experienced firsthand, I will only be mentioning them. As for the rest, I will leave it up to you to uncover.
My first rental was a great experience and I still wish I was there now. I lived in nice house with my 3 roommates. There was plenty of space, off street parking, and a VERY reasonable rent. Everything in the house worked perfectly and if something did break, the land lord was there the next day to fix it. Now for the shocker ladies and gentlemen. This house was owned by a private landlord. In fact he lived in Virginia, which made the fact that he was here next day even all the more incredible. But do you know what happened here? He must have been one of those “slum lords” you all hate so much because the city made us move and drove him out of business. Now I live three times the distance to school, I am in a house half the size, and paying a more expensive rent. Any clue who owns this property? Richard Insley does.
Now once again I find myself about to move, but this time because I have had it with Insley and his practices. I currently live in one of those “exempt” houses that only the old land lords had time to apply for years ago. So even though there are more than two people living here, everyone seems to be fine about it…. except for the tenants. And here are just a few reasons why:
A. Turnaround time on repairs. When I first was looking to rent I asked about who makes repairs to the property. I was told that he has a staff of full time, plumbers, carpenters, etc. Later I found out exactly what this means. He has a staff of people who work full time at other jobs and get to his properties when they have spare time. I called once about a broken shower head that had corroded due to hard water and finally went up. It took his “full time staff” two weeks to come out and fix it. The whole time I had to shower at friends houses because mine was useless. Beginning to look like a slum lord?
B. And I quote, “it was broken when we bought the house so we are not going to fix it.” This one is pretty self explanatory. That is an actual answer I received from Mr. Insley’s office when I called to get a wall receptacle fixed. REALLY??? You own it, now FIX IT!
C. This one goes with A but I am making it its own topic because it happened to my neighbor who also rents from Insley. I feel that I can include it because I did witness the whole thing first hand. When winter rolled around this year and we had those couple of days in the 30’s, my neighbor realized his heat was broken. He called Insley to report it and just like my shower head, it was added to the queue of someone with a day job. After two days of 30 degree nights, and countless phone calls to Insley, he finally brought over some space heaters to use while he was still waiting on his guy to get around to fixing the problem. But guess what? The heaters he brought for the tenant to use were to large for the house's wiring, so they blew the circuit breakers even on low and were completely useless. Any clue how many cold days he had to endure because Insley was too cheap to pay the extra few dollars to hire a real professional who would have fixed it that day? 8 very cold days latter it was finally fixed. Try living in your house for 8 days with no heat and then tell us how great of people the land lords you allow to operate are.
Now keep all of this in mind when you go to the polls. It is obvious who these landlords are supporting and why. They are the ones who really want 4-2. It’s not for the protection of you and me; it is to drive out competition by legitimate private landlords, artificially create demand for an inferior product, and pad their pockets with the money they have robbed from their tenants. Use your brains people. Get the facts. Do your own research. See the truth.
We also received a comment from someone who appears to be a non-student resident and I feel it is worthy of a post so here it is:
If Ireton is elected mayor, he will create a landlord/tenant board that will be there for renters to make complaints like you folks have here--you DO have legal rights and Insley and his pals are trampling all over them. They count on the idea that renters don't know their rights.
As for 4-2 (which actually was changed to 4-3, and really 4-4 since Insley is head of the board that decides whether you are in compliance),the SAPOA landlords were the ones who successfully conned students into thinking it was an anti-student ordinance. I'm sure some proponents of 4-2 don't like students, but the vast majority of us chose to live by the college because we like being in a lively place. The difference, though, is that we don't want 8 people living next to us in a house, driveway, and yard designed for far fewer.
Let's be realistic--4 people renting often means 8 people living there once boyfriends and girlfriends move in. The hard thing about it is that you might be an awesome neighbor, but you (or one of your roommates) will likely leave in 6 months or less. Then it is a real crap shoot as to whether the next person will be as good a neighbor. I know homeowners can also be terrible neighbors, too, it is just that they have more incentive to get along with people they might live next to for 20 years.
Finally, renters and owners both need to keep the eye on the ball: the real blame here belongs to slumlords, not students or other renters. Insley and the majority of SAPOA have been exploiting students for too long--they are terrified that if Ireton gets elected, the rules will finally be enforced and the terrible living conditions, unfair security deposits, and BS "fees" will come to an end. Our interests are aligned, no matter what Insley wants to tell you--I live near the college and have had awesome experiences with student rentals (and some not-so-awesome). My fight is with the bad landlords (not all of them are bad by any means) and the city administration that refuses to enforce laws that are there not only to protect neighborhoods, but to protect the renters from exploitation. My fight is not against renters. A vote for Comegys is a vote for Insley to remain on the housing board. Don't ever forget that.
I disagree. The ONLY way to staunch the rentification that was occuring in residential neighborhoods around SU was the 4-2. Keep this in mind, the zoning in these neighborhoods WAS ALWAYS for single family only, for decades. No enforcement coupled with the ability for slumlords to recoup what had previously been too expensive for rental prices (by packing in students) was creating a frenzy of conversions to rentals. This wasn't some new phenomenon, it has played out in hundreds of college towns, and the most effective and immediate solution , in ALL of these cities and towns in similar circumstances was to limit the number of unrelated people. Single-family means just what it says, and too stinking bad that the homeowners won't lay down and be doormats for the slumlords and students. Plenty of students have been willing to lie to everyone when they are asked who and how many live with them. It is effective in preserving THE ONLY stable neighborhoods left in the city of Salisbury . Boo figgin hoo to slumlords and students that can't see beyond their immediate gratification.
ReplyDeleteIf the other SAPOA members were honest they would admit that Insley has been the slimiest of creatures FOREVER and that they have alot of disdain for him as well. He is devoid of a conscience, he would do ANYTHING to make a buck. The author does make some good points, No all students are not bad but unfortunatley the bad apples spoil it for the good ones. It is a sham farce and travesty that Insley chairs the board that essentially grants exceptions to the 4-2 rules, what a crap sandwich that situation is!!And yes matt Creamer, we DO KNOW that you get to slop from the government trough THREE times over!!!
ReplyDeleteA lot this matters to Gary Comgegys. He may live in the city, but it's in a protected neighborhood near the mayor's house. No rentals are allowed.
ReplyDeleteAs a former SU student and current landlord (I had to move due to the economy) this is 100% TRUE.
ReplyDeleteMike Dunn came into my classroom during my senior year and tried to explain to us 'drunken students' how 4-2 would work in favor of SU and Salisbury students.
I remember raising my hand and stating "since you passed 4-2, three of my friends parents bought houses in the affected areas, didn’t register through the city and are now rentals; now tell me how 4-2 fixes the problem" he was speechless, he created a bigger problem. He had no idea that people who live outside of Salisbury that have 400k houses could easily buy a 120k house, rent it out, break even on rent, thus saving them money and then flipping it four years later.
Mike Dunn is an absolute moron. When he left the room, one student went “that guy runs the city? Holy crap!”. He defiantly made those in that classroom fell like they had a good chance in the real world.
SAPOA has some responsible members who meet a true need of providing rental housing in our community without gouging tenants and ruining our city's neighborhoods. Those fair minded owners would serve themselves well by not allowing scumbags like Insley, Donnie Williams and a few others to do their public bidding.
ReplyDeleteAfter making a bundle each day from increasing urban blight, Insley and Williams run home at night to hide in their secluded riverfront homes.
Anyone who has been around the rodeo awhile in this area knows not to trust either of them. 10:39 is exactly right about Insley, but unfortunately, those of us who know his true stripes can't vote in city elections.
10:28
ReplyDeleteHow is Camden or other neighborhoods deemed 'stable or worthy of saving'? If you would kindly notice: the neighborhoods around the school are still infiltrated with students (4-2 areas) and they are building more student housing further away from the school in neighborhoods closer to other residents. Give the students Camden (the houses are old) keep them close to the school and they will stay out of other neighborhoods.
I can not understand why you don’t get this! As long as SU exist there will be a demand for housing closer to SU. Sell your house to landlord for a good price and move to Pemberton. That will solve your problem.
How does BPT justify her appointment of Insley to head this board? Even as big a liar as she is must have had a problem explaining why he should be in charge of it.
ReplyDeleteSpeak for yourself brother. I'm one of those "drunken fraternity brother who parties 6 nights a week and sobers up in jail on the 7th." and I'm proud of it...
ReplyDeleteWhen I rent a house the only question I ask is carpet, tile, or hardwood? Simple reason: puke is hard as hell to clean out of carpet, less so from hardwood & tile though.
To the former student landlord,
ReplyDeleteWith all due respect, if the city had an unbiased housing department that actually enforced existing laws, the illegal rentals would be stopped. If you don't like the laws, get them changed. Until then, breaking the law is breaking the law, and we should not look the other way.
10:39 - Amen, but What's Matt Creamer's third time at the public trough? Last two times have been as county council's go-to guy. What else?
ReplyDeleteTo all you Salisbury Residents in OWNER OCUPIED homes:
ReplyDeleteYou are the real joke! yes you!!!
why... $25 rental licenses (are you freaking kidding me?)
They should be $500 per house...with rent capped at 1% of the home's appraised value
This is how you dry up rentals in Salisbury and better serve renters
Signed,
Someone who once cared, then realized the exorbatant profits I could make owning 10+ non-registered rental properties with an annual cash flow of $120,000...
Reply from an owner occupied city resident--WE WERE FOOLED BY LOUISE SMITH. Most of us believed Louise Smith when she said there would be transparency in city government, there would no longer be secrecy or cronyism, the budget would be scrutinized with a "fine tooth comb" etc. We believed that finally some progress was possible in enforcing the laws already on the books to protect our neighborhoods. The same laws that protect you in your Nithsdales, and Kensington Woods. ZONING LAWS. Why are YOU entitled to have the law enforced but not residents in the city? We won't be fooled again.
ReplyDeleteWhen if ever will any of you annon 1/2 men going to have the guts to sign what you so readily spout out.
ReplyDeleteJoe, glad the student renter sees the duping, but he's got the facts on 4 to 2 wrong.
ReplyDeleteMaybe you could get this student to contact someone like Terry Cohen. She talks about 4 to 2 without all the wild emotion and fudged numbers. I voted for her because she was a voice of common sense and is not threatening to students.
Matt Creamer's third dip into local government is being the beneficiary of one of those after the deadline but no matter Matt you are a FOB 4-4 exemptions courtesy of Richard Insley.
ReplyDelete12:41 - Creamer also got the county retiree pension and medical benefits upped before he retired under Phil Tilghman's council. Is this 4 dips on the cone?
ReplyDeleteas a graduate of salisbury univ i lived on hazel ave for 4 years. It was a frat house. We had parties, we drank beer, and ocasionaly the cops came to tell us to be quiet.
ReplyDeleteThe first thing we did when we moved in was to meet our neighbors and give them our phone numbers. We let them know that they could call us at any hour for anything. If we were to loud they would call us first, before the police. If they had something heavy they needed moved or a favor to be done, they knew they had for young man to help.
In the 4 years i lived there our house was robbed twice, i was jumped on the street, and my roomate was held up at gun point one street over. I know it was college kids committing these crimes.
With 4 to 2 in effect you do have less college kids in the area. CONGRATS. You now have related families living there. CONGRATS. Unfortunatly these families are usualy 8+ people including brothers, sisters, kids and babies daddies. Not to mention how many large latino families have cramed 10 to 20 related people into a house.
GREAT JOB 4to2 YOU GOT THE COLLEGE KIDS OUT!!!!!!!!
what part of single family willed property dont you understand ? The entire sub division of property lots in lincoln heights was willed this way yet slummers repeatedly infringe on some old death bed cry for the right to keep a neighborhood a neighborhood.
ReplyDeleteIn all fairness, not all combined families that rent together have "baby daddies" or are illegals. When my younger sister was still in college she lived with us and paid her share of the rent.It was great because we were all able to comfortably afford the rent and at the time my husband and I had a new baby and it was an added benefit to have her aunt with us to help.And we were good quiet neighbors too.
ReplyDeleteBlutoJ, your "combined" family is fine with 4 to 2 -- you're related.
ReplyDeleteA blended family -- fine with 4 to 2.
Even more than 2 unrelateds operating as a family unit can pass muster.
There are a LOT of misconceptions about 4 to 2.
I understand it now because I heard Terry Cohen speak about it a few years ago and asked her about it. That's why I suggested Joe steer this student to her.
3:04 p.m., you're another one who should talk to Terry Cohen. No matter how much you want to think 4 to 2 is about students, it's not.
ReplyDeleteAnd nice smear about the Latinos since one of THEM was MURDERED in the neighborhood you lived in.
Bad people come in all colors and ages. Just ask the folks in Worcester County who buried their son beaten to death by white, young people.