bikerboy
06-12-2007, 12:40 AM
I have a question.
I am moving to some state, not sure yet in a matter of a few days. Not sure where I am going yet as of this time... But need to know which risk you take and has this ever happened to you?
My question is this.
The scenario....
-------------
-You have a job and started paying on a rental place as you just moved into town.
-You have a 1yr lease. You rent it for 1 yr and renew. You renew for one more year.
-You've been working this job your at and then something comes up.
- You get a phone call stating, " Sir/ma'am we are willing to take a chance and would like fo ryou to come aboard with our comapany in " Bling Bling" Position.
-You are caught in a bind. what do you do?
-You can leave and take the higher paying job with better benefits, etc. Or you can stay in the lower paying job and wait until your lease gets close to an end. why?
- You decide to move for the higher paying job but you are slapped with a new situation at your present housing facility. The agency states that you must pay a fee to break the lease, you must pay the rent up even though you do not live there, and they leave a HORRID glitch on your credit report stating how you broke a contract and didn't abide by it.
so how do you mother fukkers do it?
If you leave for the better job, you are faced with severe penalties, on top of that it wrecks your credit. Not only that, when you move to the new place, your credit is still wrecked and your chances of getting a nicer place is worse than what you had. So now you make more but live next to a bunch of meth addicts and crackheads.
How is this better?
How does this work?
where is the catch?
I am moving in a few days, I have a few prospects but not 100% sure.
If I move, sign a new lease. then all of a sudden 2mo later I get the call.
is it worth it to take the risk of fukkin my credit up, screwing my lease up making it harder to move or?????
Is there a catch somewhere I don't know about? So far it seems moving to get more money to screw up your rental histroy and credit doesn't seem worth it. The only entity that can break a contract is the Military.
Other than them what's the deal?
have you in your career history encountered this?
I am moving to some state, not sure yet in a matter of a few days. Not sure where I am going yet as of this time... But need to know which risk you take and has this ever happened to you?
My question is this.
The scenario....
-------------
-You have a job and started paying on a rental place as you just moved into town.
-You have a 1yr lease. You rent it for 1 yr and renew. You renew for one more year.
-You've been working this job your at and then something comes up.
- You get a phone call stating, " Sir/ma'am we are willing to take a chance and would like fo ryou to come aboard with our comapany in " Bling Bling" Position.
-You are caught in a bind. what do you do?
-You can leave and take the higher paying job with better benefits, etc. Or you can stay in the lower paying job and wait until your lease gets close to an end. why?
- You decide to move for the higher paying job but you are slapped with a new situation at your present housing facility. The agency states that you must pay a fee to break the lease, you must pay the rent up even though you do not live there, and they leave a HORRID glitch on your credit report stating how you broke a contract and didn't abide by it.
so how do you mother fukkers do it?
If you leave for the better job, you are faced with severe penalties, on top of that it wrecks your credit. Not only that, when you move to the new place, your credit is still wrecked and your chances of getting a nicer place is worse than what you had. So now you make more but live next to a bunch of meth addicts and crackheads.
How is this better?
How does this work?
where is the catch?
I am moving in a few days, I have a few prospects but not 100% sure.
If I move, sign a new lease. then all of a sudden 2mo later I get the call.
is it worth it to take the risk of fukkin my credit up, screwing my lease up making it harder to move or?????
Is there a catch somewhere I don't know about? So far it seems moving to get more money to screw up your rental histroy and credit doesn't seem worth it. The only entity that can break a contract is the Military.
Other than them what's the deal?
have you in your career history encountered this?