Eight Safety Conscious Gifts for City Renters

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Last Friday Jon posted a great list of fun and fancy gifts for the renters on your list. However, as a safety-conscious company, we'd be out of line if we didn't also offer some ideas that were focused on keeping renters and small-space dwellers safe and sound over the coming year.

If Black Friday and Small Business Saturday didn't complete your shopping list (and you've already picked up a few RentConfident Gift Certificates), here are some additional, practical ideas that may be of use.

Adjustable Security Bar ($15)

Image via wdrake.com
Image via wdrake.com

It may seem unglamorous to give someone a pole for the holidays, but when that pole could prevent a break in it becomes more interesting. Many Chicago apartments have back doors that open directly to an unguarded outside area. These metal bars fit under the doorknob and brace against the floor behind to offer additional security against forced entry. Almost any major hardware store should have them in stock, or you can find them on Amazon. Continue reading Eight Safety Conscious Gifts for City Renters

Published by

Kay Cleaves

A Screen is Only as Strong as its Largest Hole.

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There's been a lot of talk about background checks lately. The topic tends to come up every time people are scared by recent violence and want some way of ensuring that Bad Things continue to happen only in far away places.

Over the course of my real estate career I had to run lots and lots of background checks on renters. I saw the background check output from 20-30 different tenant screening companies. They ranged in thoroughness from just a yes-no decision to 60 pages of detailed, computerized data. Only a handful of them provided a real, accurate picture of the tenants. The process that RentConfident uses to check on landlords in Chicago was designed in part as a response to the problems I found with modern tenant screening methods.

Civilian rental screening is far removed from the intensive processes used to monitor emigrés who are following legal entry channels. However, there are many others who get into the country through other means, both legal (student and worker visas) and not. It has been repeatedly proven by comparing prison populations and census data that foreign born residents of the US commit far fewer serious crimes than their US-born counterparts. Given the uneven treatment of immigrants and the high number of domestic criminals, those who are concerned about screening would do well to focus not only on the treatment of newcomers but also the vetting processes that are used to restrict who has access to our homes and offices on a daily basis.

Fortunately, landlords have options to screen their renters. Many landlords will even use their "thorough screening" of renters as an advertising hook, implying that their buildings are safer than the rest. This, my friends, is a load of baloney.
Continue reading A Screen is Only as Strong as its Largest Hole.

Published by

Kay Cleaves

Reclaiming Reality

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There was going to be another "top 10" list here today. It's all written up and ready to go. But things change and priorities shift. We need to have a little talk.

Bad Things happened on last Friday. They happened last Thursday, Wednesday and Tuesday, too. If they didn't happen in real life, they happened in the TV shows you watched, or in the things that your friends and favorite celebrities posted to Facebook, Twitter and the like.

Bad Things and Big Things will continue to happen. They will be packaged up to be entertaining or newsworthy based on marketing formulas and the opinions of focus groups. You will see passionate people living at extremes. You will hear of people who go too far in indulging their faith, their jobs, their kids, or their possessions. Continue reading Reclaiming Reality

Published by

Kay Cleaves

10 Situations Where Rental Agents Can Make Apartment Hunting Worse

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When I worked as a Realtor the "pro-agency" party line was very clearly imposed as a restriction on my writing. While I was able to blog about a lot of different real estate-related topics, I was never able to expressly say to any client that they would be better off searching without an agent's help.

There were many times when I wished that particular restriction was not in place. Now that I'm no longer an agent, it isn't there anymore, so I'm gonna say it: sometimes agents are going to do more harm than good in your rental search. Continue reading 10 Situations Where Rental Agents Can Make Apartment Hunting Worse

Published by

Kay Cleaves

Why and How we Obtained our Chicago Business License

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According to the city of Chicago's Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection, "every business operating in the City of Chicago requires a City of Chicago business license." There are 66147 active business licenses in the city's online database. However, at the time of the the most recent economic census from 2007, there were 255,502 firms in Chicago. While the recent recession certainly caused many of those to end, we can still consider it a reasonable assumption that a large percentage of Chicago businesses are operating without licenses.

The need to obtain a business license was broached to us in our very first discussions with our mentor in the fall of 2014. I hadn't really considered it to be a necessity at the time. Right up until we opened I was on the fence about it. Some of our advisors said we needed one. Others said we could try and go without. It became clear that it was really our call and a matter of personal ethics if we decided to pay for the city license. Continue reading Why and How we Obtained our Chicago Business License

Published by

Kay Cleaves