• @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      111 months ago

      Probably because, with the cost of housing nowadays, a baby can grow up and stay with their parents in that apartment until they’re 40 years old. That would mean there’s an additional adult in that unit.
      Then the question would be, at what age a child should be considered an additional occupant?

      • @TheDoctorDonna
        link
        111 months ago

        When they are done school and working full time, they are an occupant.

      • @Voyajer
        link
        2211 months ago

        The space is already paid for and utilities already scale with usage.

      • @TheDoctorDonna
        link
        511 months ago

        And how exactly does that justify charging extra rent on a space that is already paid for?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          -411 months ago

          Its to prevent a family of say 2, moving in 6 more people with same rent amount. a large amount of residents does increase wear on a unit. The baby needing to be accounted for is just bullshit though.

          • @TheDoctorDonna
            link
            311 months ago

            Even the excuse behind the rule is bullshit. I can see how more people can equate to more utilities, but not additional rent on the unit. If people are clean and respectful, who gives a shit how many people are living there? Wear and tear is just a lame excuse to make a money grab when the unit isn’t being brought up to new standard in between each tenant.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              -311 months ago

              It happens though, carpet wears out faster, more people means more potential wall damage, appliances are doing double or triple duty cycles…and will fail sooner… Have you ever been to a single uni dorm vs multiple tennanted? The more people the less everyone takes onus of the place and it gets trashed. The law ahould have a cap, so it is not extortion, and landlord should consider how low or high risk the temnants are. For example there are affordable rent housing, city owned buildings, in some cities. The tennants for whatever reason (drugs, mental health) tear off moldings, pull sections of drywall off, remove fixture items. The more people in a unit like that the more chance it will get destroyed. I don’t think everyone is like that ( i remted for 10 years and treated it as my own home) but it does happen.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        111 months ago

        I like how you simply give an answer to the question and get downvoted. It’s not like you’re defending it. This website is full of idiots.