You can pick your friends, but not your family -- or your neighbors. Here's what you need to know.
By Geoff Williams, FrontDoor.com |
Published: 9/22/2008
Communication is the key to dealing with neighbors who fail to maintain their homes.
The Home DevaluersWho they are:
They're friendly enough. They just never seem to mow their lawn more
than once or twice a year, and they have a 1978 Buick rusting in their
front yard. Granted, if they're bad enough, you may have noticed this
before moving in, but even a stopped clock is right twice a day: They
may have looked presentable when you gave them the once-over.How to handle them: Communicate, communicate, communicate, suggests Jodi R. R. Smith, author and etiquette consultant in Marblehead, Mass.
She knew a group of neighbors who were upset that a house on their block wasn't taking care of the lawn. The neighbors assigned a delegate to knock on the door to discuss the yard, and when the owner came out of the house and the problem was explained, she broke into tears. It had turned out that she was in the midst of a divorce and an aggressive chemo treatment. The neighbors then organized a rotating schedule of lawn care for the ill neighbor.
"Things are not always what they seem," says Smith.
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