Q&A: Hoarding Problem

Q&A: Hoarding Problem

Q. Please help me. I live in a condo. My next door neighbor is a hoarder. She constantly leaves the front door open. I complained to the buildings department many times. The smell is awful; she has mice, roaches, and water bugs. What can I do?

                                           —Desperate Tenant

A. Says attorney David Savitt of law firm Kovitz Shifrin Nesbit, which has offices in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin: “As a general principle, owners are required under the governing documents of their association to keep their units in good, habitable condition. Because hoarding can put others’ health and safety at risk, boards have a myriad of options to address the hoarding. Residents should bring their concerns to their board as soon as possible so the board can determine how best to address the situation. Specifically, the board may, with the consent of the hoarding owner, access the unit to conduct an inspection and determine the extent of damage and work that may be required (i.e., electrical, plumbing, cleaning, extermination, etc.) to return the unit to a habitable condition. Depending on the severity of the hoarding, the board may elect to levy reasonable fines against the owner to encourage prompt cleaning of the unit. Additionally, the board should consult the governing documents of the association to determine whether costs incurred by the association to clean/repair the unit can be charged back to the hoarding owner. If the hoarding owner is cooperative, the board can handle this situation internally; however, circumstances may warrant obtaining a court order to compel access to the unit and compliance with the board’s demands.”

Related Articles

Home care services for elder people. Help of young female volunteer caregiver to old patient, disabled woman sitting in wheelchair flat vector illustration. Healthcare, retirement, disability concept

Supporting Aging Residents

Empathy, Strategy, & Care

Dealing With Conflict

Dealing With Conflict

Don’t Let Things Get Out of Hand

Speech Bubble Puzzle and Discussion

Dealing With Disruptive Residents

Empathy & Education vs. Enforcement & Eviction

Young woman trying to sleep but disturbed by noisy neighbors and covering ears with pillows. I can's sleep with all that noise! Sleep problems. Angry woman disturbed with a noise trying to sleep

Q&A: Disturbing, or Disturbed?

Q&A: Disturbing, or Disturbed?

Barricade police tape on the ground at a shooting crime scene

Atlanta Condo Manager Killed by ‘Disgruntled’ Resident

Building Engineer Wounded

Set Different Garbage and Old Things Plastic Cup, Tin Can, Banana Peel, Apple Stub. Fish Bone, Yoghurt Pack, Broken Glass Bottle, Egg Shell, Trash Closeup, Used Packages. Cartoon Vector Illustration

Multifamily Garbage Collection, Handling, & Disposal

Taking Out the Trash