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DeKalb renters review new housing laws

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Starting in May, landlords also must register with the city annually and pay a fee. The fee is $50 a building, with buildings having three or more units paying an additional $15.24 a unit. These fees will help fund a new city housing bureau to enforce the ordinances.

Clesceri said she thinks the external inspections the city’s new inspectors will do will help save the landlords money and make tenants feel safer.

But Rodriguez, who studies Spanish and English at NIU, said he would feel awkward having to sign a separate agreement stating that he will not commit illegal activities in his home.

“It seems weird to agree to not do something in my own home,” Rodriguez said. “The fact that something is illegal – it’s already implied that you’re not going to do that in your home.”

Mixed tenant reviews

The handful of renters the Daily Chronicle interviewed this week generally had a good impression of DeKalb’s rental properties, but described struggles with specific landlords or with renting in general.

“I think my apartment’s really nice, especially for a place intended for college students,” said Caitlin Safiran, an NIU communications major. “And my friends’ apartments are pretty decent, too.”

But she’s found renting to be a sometimes-expensive learning experience after living in the dormitories.

“A lot of expenses sort of creep up that I hadn’t dealt with my first three years in the dorms,” she said.

David Lloyd moved out to DeKalb to enroll in NIU’s art program after getting his associate degree at Elgin Community College. He described bad experiences with two landlords, including one who gave him and his roommates “noise fees all the time, even if we weren’t home.”

When they disputed the fees, the landlord backed off, Lloyd said. Lloyd now lives in a boarding house on the east side of campus with nine other people. Lloyd said he enjoys the “mom-and-pop” feel his landlords have.

Despite bad experiences with previous landlords, Lloyd said rental housing in DeKalb is pretty good for students.

“For students it’s great because it’s so much cheaper than living in the suburbs or Chicago,” Lloyd said. “There are a lot of people you can find to live with that aren’t crazy.”


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