They should be since they have to ensure area is habitable. You should check local health authority for laws in your state. If this is multi-unit-they should have a service.
Yes! Your landlord is required to make sure the building is up to code, and a serious rodent problem is a violation. Talk to your landlord before going to the authorities, though. Some landlords might ask you to buy traps or get an exterminator, but they have to pay for it. Answer. Yes your landlord is very much responsible to that you can also sue him if he did nothing to get rid of those mice.
It would be difficult to make a guess without information about what the landlord and the mice are doing. Dreaming of a landlord chasing mice would have a different meaning from a dream of the landlord poisoning mice or of dressing mice up in little clothes.
If you do not have a specific written agreement that the landlord will pay, then you pay. The landlord will be responsible for pest control when the pests are a health issue..German roach infestation...rats/mice inside...brown recluse/ black widow spiders found inside. In general most spider infestation are just a nuisance, but even "benign" species can cause health issues to certain people so if a tenant is at risk from recurring spider bites that send them to the hospital I would think the landlord would be held liable to the extermination.
mouse flu
It depends on two things..which can vary from state to state 1.The landlord tenant laws in your state... 2. The lease agreement. Some States require that the landlord be responsible for all forms of pest control (ie) roaches,rats,mice,bees,bed bugs,ants,spiders,ect ect.. Some States only require the landlord to insure that a rental unit is free from all pests before renting the unit and then any further pest control is the responsibility of the tenant... Lease agreements can also have stipulations for pest control as well according to the laws of the state....(ie) A landlord may be responsible for the control of mice,rats and termites but may not be responsible for roaches,bed bugs and ants... So check your lease and the laws of your state....
This depends on if you're renting an apartment or a house (for this answer, the term "house" means either a duplex or triplex, a single-family house, or a mobile home). If the former is true you can break such lease if the conditions are deplorable as you described. If the latter is true ou landlord is not responsible for the problem unless it states so on the lease.
Shredded paper and plastic bags to make a nest is one sign. Mice droppings is another.
Shake them out well and launder them twice.
No, you probably do not have an infestation of mice. Your cat has probably decided to use his/her natural instincts, and bring you a mouse (a cat thinks that catching something and then presenting it to you is a gift) from somewhere near where you live. It could be from a neighbours property, or from a park or nature reserve somewhere near where your cat lives. There is, although a slight possibility that you do have a mouse infestation, though it doesn't seem very likely if you have not seen any mice or heard any around your home.
Well, it depends on the landlord/landlady, to be honest.
It seems it has closen down temporarily due to reports of mice and rat infestation.
if its on then they would probably freeze to death quit fast