Contact your local county government office they'll be able to put you in touch with the right department that handles this sort of thing
Contact the landlord or a rental agency in the area where you wish to move.
If you are the Landlord you send the Tenant a certified letter stating the terms they are breaking and if you are another Tenant you should contact the Landlord or management office.
It would depend on the requirements of your new landlord. Since rents are ussually paid in advance it is not like the landlord is issuing credit. The landlord may want to validate the renter ablility to pay and payment history to insure the landlord is renting to someone he will not have to evict in 30 days. Contact the landlord and let hime/her understand your situation.
a real-estate attorney or an attorney who specializes in landlord-tenant laws
It depends on what your lease says, but generally, the landlord is responsible for keeping all appliances that were supplied with the property in good working order. If you contact your landlord and the landlord refuses to fix the dishwasher, I recommend you contact your city hall to determine the department that issues renal licenses for your area. They might be able to point you in the right direction for your area.
It is in violation of the landlord tenant act for a landlord or potential landlord to contact your employer and ask them to discuss their wages.
Certainly.
Management or landlord. If no action - contact your local Health Department.
If you pay the landlord for your electricity and it is an agreement in the rental contract and you are in the rears of your payment, it may be legal for the landlord to do so. To be sure, contact a lawyer.
Visit the apartment or contact the landlord.
Just like you would any other meeting: contact the landlord and tell them you want to talk with them about an issue.
Contact your landlord and have the landlord taken a look. Go from there tell him or her you want professionals to check it out.
If someone wants to get landlord liability insurance then they can contact their normal house insurance company. Large companies such as Aviva and Cornell will do landlord policies and it is a good idea for any landlord to be fully insured.
Real-estate attorney
Contact your local Housing and Urban Development.
Yeah. It's called you being a dumbarsh.
Contact the landlord or a rental agency in the area where you wish to move.