Yes, of course he can. It all depends on the pad rental contract that YOU agree to and sign when you take occupancy. Most pad rental includes water and sewage, but it doesn't have to.
This all depends on the laws of your state and the terms of the lease. The larger the apartment complex is, the likelier the landlord will have to pay for water, garbage, and sewer.
Normally, the landlord does not charge for water. In most states it is illegal for landlords to charge their tenants separate utilities. However, the landlord can have utilities in its own name, the bills of which can be passed over to the tenant for payment. Also the tenant is not allowed to charge for water and sewer to tenant of multi family attached units (such as apartments).
Water, sewer, and garbage are paid by the landlord.
The sewer charge on your water bill is a fee for the removal and treatment of wastewater from your property. It covers the cost of maintaining and operating the sewer system that transports and processes the wastewater.
The sewer charge on your water bill is a fee for the removal and treatment of wastewater from your property. It is typically calculated based on the amount of water you use, as this is a common indicator of the volume of wastewater generated. The sewer charge helps cover the costs of maintaining and operating the sewer system in your area.
Howdy! The tenant does because the are the ones who have been pooing. x
No and if they did your entitled to a 2% per month compounded interest refund check
Many states vary with this kind of rule: your rent may or may not include water and sewer. If it does this means the landlord pays your water and sewer for you. Depending on the laws of your state, your landlord may opt to have a water meter installed for your apartment so that you would pay such utilities.
The parks department placed a metal grid over the hole that lead to the sewer system.
A Sewer Service is both a physical connection from a sewage source (home or business) to a sewer system, and the use of that sewage system to handle sewage. Typically a local utility will charge a fee for Sewer Service; it may be based on the volume of water used by that customer.
YES, in most civilized areas
The normal monthly rental amount, minus trash, sewer and water.