Remember to eat your vegetables, and read your contracts

Author: CD  /  Category: Uncategorized, drink, know things

Realtors show you that magic apartment, and your eyes put on their jogging glasses and sprint across the lease contract until that final signature and date input line, where the most jagged, incomprehensible blurb of name is etched onto parchment.

Then you and your roommate(s) move in, and start, or end up, to hate one another.

These are some tips/legal things you skipped/need to know:

TIP: Never put your name under the utilities/electric bill. Cable is okay because you can cancel at any time and leave the place a reasonable environment (step 1: take modem, step 2: turn it in). The other is far more complicated to cancel or switch names for, and you don’t want a bill under your name eroding into some bad credit on your wonderful colleagues’ behalf.

LEGAL FACTS:

  • Make sure to distinguish between an “application fee” and an “application deposit.” The fee is non-refundable, so better make sure you got the place secured before you throw away that money.
  • Landlords are not required by law to fix minor repairs, as in repairs that don’t endanger health or safety. Inspect, inspect, inspect.
  • If the landlord does not repair a major problem after a second written notice, there are a few choices:
    • have it repaired and let it be deducted from your rent.
    • sue (many Texas lawyers are dying to meet you).
    • move on out.
  • The landlord can only lock a tenant out or change the locks after notification and if rent is past due.
  • Subleasing behind the landlord’s back is cause for eviction and legal action.
  • The security deposit cannot be kept for simple “wear and tear;” in other words, a carpet that has an imprint from furniture, or carpet that is slightly worn cannot be considered damage.

Happy moving, and choose roomies wisely.

Tales from the summer job front #1

Author: Mully  /  Category: know things, money

While job opportunities abound on university sites like hirealonghorn.org and accessUT, this dummie decided to hit up the Austin job market old school style and took the hunt to the streets.

Some revelations/awkward highlights:

1. Group Interviewing. Thoughts: weird; There is nothing like a group of five girls bying to answer the same questions better than each other…. especially in the middle of a store….. during operational hours…. yeah…

2. Cover letters. Thoughts: good requirement for career oriented jobs; bad requirement for coffee shops, unless you feel called to all things caffeinated.

The job hunt resumes tomorrow. Tips welcomed. Encouragement needed.

So what’s the deal with East Austin?

Author: thenaughtychair  /  Category: know things

If to you, East Austin means riding the Disch-Falk bus, then there’s definitely a part of this fine city that you need to explore more.  The old businesses and diverse groups of people on the east side are a refreshing change from the on-campus lifestyle.

There are also a lot of social and cultural changes going on over there, including gentrification.  East Becomes Central is a website worth checking out to…you know… learn stuff.