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Author Message
25 new of 220 responses total.
aruba
response 52 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 20:13 UTC 1999

Re #50:  I hope you're right, Rane, that they need to give us 4 months notice 
of the new terms.  If Valerie doesn't get a satisfactory answer to a request
for terms, I think consulting a lawyer is the next step.

I'd like to see someone else take a crack at communicating with Susan Watrous
just in case there's some weird interference pattern between me and her that
causes her to go ballistic, or in case I severely misunderstood her attitude.
I don't think that's the case; I am fairly sure she was not being reasonable.
But I'd rather not have us move on just my say-so, and I know there must be
people who are better equipped to deal with her than I am.

I was surprised by her offer to let us meter our own electricity; that didn't
agree with what she said on the phone.  So maybe she is malleable, or maybe
she has a different idea of how that metering will work than I do.
mdw
response 53 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 22:20 UTC 1999

Re #50,52, I don't see how they are under any obligation to offer us new
lease terms when terminating the current lease.  The letter above looks
perfectly clear.  They've terminated the current lease.  If Flying
Dutchman was supposed to get the "ok" to do that from the VanFossens,
that's strictly their problem.  Unless the VanFossens are able to
compell Flying Dutchman to reverse this letter, or better yet, get rid
of Flying Dutchman (or at least Susan Watrous), it doesn't make any
difference to us.
richard
response 54 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 22:58 UTC 1999

If flying dutchman will not provide the terms of the new lease, grex
should consult a lawyer about its legal options.  perhaps then with
the force of law behind it, flying dutchman will be compelled to come
forth with the details of any new lease.  this could be a good case
for landlord/tenant court (or whatever they call the court that
handles landlord/tenant disputes locally in A2)

the very fact that flying dutchman will not provide new lease details
tells you loud and clear that they arent interested in keeping grex
as a tenant and will make any new lease offer so unreasonable that
grex would have no choice but to move.
mary
response 55 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 23:37 UTC 1999

I have a feeling this is more miscommunication than ill intent.
What if Susan just sent along that lease to show us the
type of lease they usually offer (as opposed to the one we
have used before)?  Maybe, just maybe if someone calmly
called back and said, "Great, we can work with that!  Now were
you looking at a 5% increase?", we'd have something we 
could work with.

I'd even offer to be the point person here if I could be the
only person doing the talking.

I'd really rather Grex not spend money on a move if we could
secure another year's lease with acceptable terms.
scg
response 56 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 00:40 UTC 1999

I don't think we should move either.

If Flying Dutchman doesn't have the authority to terminate the lease, they
don't have the authority to terminate the lease.  So far, we've had a couple
of bizarre run-ins with them, but for the most part they've left us alone.
We've also had nothing but pleasant dealings with the Van Fossen family, as
far as I know.

I like Mary's approach to this -- assuming the lease we got from Flying
Dutchman is just a standard lease with no giant problems, telling them that
we'd like to work out a deal and asking to get the terms negotiated fairly
quickly, so that if something does go wrong, we will have time to recover from
that.
mdw
response 57 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 01:56 UTC 1999

Flying Dutchman is the property owner's agent.  That means they have the
full authority to negociate contracts, sign and terminate leases, etc.
In the normal course of events, it would not matter who the real
property owner is; it is only a fluke of history that we happen to know
who the real owner is.  Yes, I'm sure this is only a matter of
"mis-communication", but wars have been started over less than that.
This isn't the first "mis-communication" either.  I don't think it's a
problem with Mark's verbal skills either; he strikes me as one of the
least confrontational people I know.  This problem isn't going to go
away by our wishing it away, and it certainly ain't going to go away by
our hiring lawyers.
valerie
response 58 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 04:29 UTC 1999

This response has been erased.

janc
response 59 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 05:43 UTC 1999

I generally think that things work better when Grex has just one person
talking to a given outside organization.  We function internally as a
disorganized mob of volunteers, but trying to handle our business
relationships in that way just makes a mess.  It's best to keep just one
or two point people (while keeping everyone else informed).

So I'm perfectly comfortable with the condition Mary set in resp:55.  I
think she'd be a good contact person.

From what I've seen Susan say, I don't think she has a very good
understanding of what is going on here.  She has almost certainly never
seen the room and may have inaccurate ideas of what it is worth.  The
previous tenant used it as a place to pile trash.  We spent a few days
dragging stuff to the dumpster and cleaning the place up before we could
move in.  It's a rather large closet, windowless and cheerless.  It
could be used as a tiny office, but anyone who had to sit there eight
hours a day would probably succumb to depression and cut their throat
within a month.  I also don't think she understand how we are "metering"
electricity.  I think she is visualizing something like the meters on
normal buildings.  It is possible that we can set up something like
that, but even then she'd have to trust us to read the number and report
it right.  I'd normally consider it the landlords responsibility to set
up a meter if they want the electricity metered.
janc
response 60 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 05:44 UTC 1999

Actually, if they'd agree to a higher fixed rent that *includes*
electricity, I might consider it an acceptable deal.  Most of the leases
in the building include electricity, so it would put us in a more normal
basis.
remmers
response 61 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 12:32 UTC 1999

Considering the expense of moving, the difficulty of finding
suitable accommodations (remember what we've been through in
the past on that), and the various good points about our current
premises -- convenient location, 24-hour access, reasonable
security, low rent -- I'd really like to see if a liveable deal
can be worked out to stay where we are.

Mary's offer to be the point person with Susan works fine for
me. I agree that there should be one person doing the talking.
aruba
response 62 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 15:13 UTC 1999

It works for me, too.  I think Mary should get the sample lease and letter
from Valerie.

The issues we need clarified before we can sign anything are:

- What will be the rent
- If the electricity is to be paid separately, what kind of meter statement
  is she looking for (will a reading from our own meter do, or do we need
  something from the power comany?  Do we need to have our meter officially
  calibrated or something like that?)
- Do we need to pay the $33 they say we owe from last August and September?
dpc
response 63 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 20:12 UTC 1999

I *hope* something can be worked out.  But as a lawyer, my opinion is
that we presently have *no* rights to any kind of lease.  We are starting
from nothing.  Legally, what happens (assuming Flying Dutchman wants
to go that far) is that after the May deadline FD sends us a 30-day
notice that our tenancy has been terminated, using an official State
Court Administrative Office form.  Then, once the 30 days pass, they
sue us for possession.  We have *no* defense, since our previous
lease has been terminated.
        Good luck, Mary!   8-)
janc
response 64 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 20:18 UTC 1999

We may not have a right to a lease, but if you think it is easy for them
to find someone who wants to rent that room, think again.  Whatever they
say, they'd prefer to keep us rather than have to find a new tenant or
leave the room vacant.  To a degree, this is just an attempt to see how
much they can bully out of us without actually driving us away.  I think
its an instinctual response - here's someone sending us a puny little
check each month.  Surely we can squeeze a bit more out of them.
steve
response 65 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 21:04 UTC 1999

We might not have any rights per se Dave, but it is not clear that FD 
can get rid of us without the consent of the buildings de facto owner, 
who in fact likes us.
mary
response 66 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 01:30 UTC 1999

What are we currently paying per month for electricity and when did we
last meter our use?  What are the dimensions of the pumpkin,
approximately?  Mark, can I get a copy of the IRS letter stating we are a
501(c)3 organization?  What is that disputed $33 about? 

I'm going to try to set up an appointment, with Susan, at our
earliest convenience.  I will make it clear I'm not empowered to
make any decisions or negotiate terms.  I'll simply be there to
get answers to some of our questions, make sure she knows 
a little about our organization, and answer (or get answers to) 
any questions she might have.
steve
response 67 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 02:02 UTC 1999

   The Pumpkin is about 11 x 11 or maybe 11 x 10.5.

   I think we ought to have a meeting before you talk with this
person, Mary.
aruba
response 68 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 04:09 UTC 1999

We currently pay $66.36 per month for electricity.  I can't find the record of
when Scott actually measured our usage, but maybe he can.  I believe it was in
July, becasue that fits with what I did about it:  I informed the landlords
at the beginning of September that as of August, our electricity payment was
changing.  The $33 is the difference between our old payment and our new one
times 2, because they charged us the old rate for August and September, and
we paid the new rate.
janc
response 69 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 04:47 UTC 1999

General note on how usage is measured (I'm probably not the best person
to be writing this):  We have a meter that we hook up to each of our
machines in terms.  It tells us how much electricity that gadget uses
per hour.  We add that up over all gadgets, and multiply by the length
of a month to estimate our power usage.   This only works because
basically each gadget is either always on or always off.  We are turning
things on and off much.  We can only measure one gadget at a time.  We
don't have any way of leaving something hooked up that totals up usage
over the whole month, like traditional electric meters do.  We might be
able to develop something like that.  It would cost us time and money to
do so.
krj
response 70 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 05:29 UTC 1999

Possible question for FD:  What arrangement with respect to the 
electricity would make them happy?
 
If we are measuring $66 and FD says they want $80, it's probably 
not worth a move costing a kilobuck.  Just to pick some example numbers.
rcurl
response 71 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 05:32 UTC 1999

If that room is otherwise unrentable - we should ask for a rent reduction
(after lining up an alternative location......).
mary
response 72 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 10:45 UTC 1999

I'm not really interested in making a big deal about this meeting, with
briefing sessions and such.  I'm not going in with an aggressive attitude,
a list of demands, or posturing on how we don't need their puny space.  I
plan to be friendly and open, asking necessary questions, and sharing some
about what Grex is about and our simple needs.  If this sounds scary to
anyone then I'm not the person to send in. 

Thanks for the info on how our electric usage is metered - that was my
understanding.  Does the amount we pay monthly take into consideration
utility taxes and the frequently changing rates? 

I'm offering to do this because I *really* don't want to see us have to
move.  I would have no problem whatsoever backing off on my offer to do
some fact-finding if the feeling is someone else should step in.  Really,
I'd understand. 
mdw
response 73 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 11:15 UTC 1999

The thing I would worry about is making some sort of commitment (like staying
there a year), then discovering that our method of measuring electricity
doesn't satisfy them, or the air conditioning breaks, or something.  The thing
that is essential to making any good business relationship work is "good will";
the willingness to make things work to the benefit of the other party.  Without
that, no amount of effort to "communicate", legalese in the contract, or
lawyers, is going to make things work. From Mark's description, above, as well
as various rumours I'm starting to hear, I'm not at all convinced "good will"
exists here.  In fact, I've heard there may be some "interesting" articles
about Flying Dutchman in the Observer or other local newspaper, which we ought
to do some research to find, before making any decisions or commitments
relative to Flying Dutchman.
davel
response 74 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 12:37 UTC 1999

I've never actually seen the Pumpkin, but from everything that's been said
it would be rentable for storage.  We should not be assuming that they
couldn't find someone to rent it.  However, if *they're* assuming that it
could be rented as office space or something like that, they need to learn
the facts.  There's a fairly good difference in rental rates between the two.
steve
response 75 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 12:58 UTC 1999

   Mary, what you are saying doesn't sound scary at all.  I like it.
I only think that it would be a good idea to meet, first.
remmers
response 76 of 220: Mark Unseen   Feb 3 14:03 UTC 1999

It doesn't sound scary to me either. I'd point out that Mary has done 
this kind of thing for Grex before and has an excellent track record at 
it. So I'm inclined to trust her judgement and good sense. STeve, if 
there are specific concerns you have, perhaps you could share them in 
email, rather than see us go to a full-blown meeting?
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