Iām not sure it is ādiscriminationā if the policy is uniformly applied. It does seem there are some process problems here and hopefully this woman is able to find a pro bono attorney to get her day in court.
Too bad sexual health education/birth control isn't more readily accessible to young women. This seems to be a case where she shouldn't have any kids, let alone 4.
@3, just a quick note that you can't control whether you end up with an autistic child or not. And behavior modification for any 2-year old, much less an autistic one, is very challenging. Of course, we could all stop having children so they don't bother the neighbors. Or maybe all autistic toddlers should be fortunate enough to live in single family homes far from neighbors? Or.... I mean, what do you suggest?
@10 āKarenā is a handy term you use to dismiss a bothersome woman. Folks āin the knowā are in on the joke. Iād be curious if an attorney actually did refer to the neighbor as a āKarenā or if that was some editorializing by the writer, those quotation marks are hard working!
How is it people having 4 kids think itās ok to get subsidized housing? I could see having one mistake or two, but if you canāt afford to take care of yourself you canāt afford a kid much less four. You could try closing your legs.
Honestly don't have much sympathy. It's not reasonable to ask the other tenants to endure what sounds like a horrendously obnoxious situation with a loud, out-of-control toddler and a mother who doesn't seem to take the complaints seriously. You have to draw a line somewhere. Of course the only point in this story where Hannah gives the other side a voice is when she paraphrases some of the noise complaint e-mails, so I don't think we're really supposed to "pick a side."
Unfortunately, this is again a very one sided slog report.
We sure as hell have the opinion of the author, but unfortunately very, very few facts.
Its very hard to evict tenants in King County... so if our courts uphold a just cause eviction, then we pretty much have our story. She and her children, would be evicted for just cause.
Just for the record, legal notices are presented in English. There are advocates, free of charge for tenants and there are Spanish interpreters.
Let's see what happens before we draw any conclusion on this author's "spin on the events" .
Iām not sure it is ādiscriminationā if the policy is uniformly applied. It does seem there are some process problems here and hopefully this woman is able to find a pro bono attorney to get her day in court.
Too bad sexual health education/birth control isn't more readily accessible to young women. This seems to be a case where she shouldn't have any kids, let alone 4.
Any chance the downstairs neighbor would be willing to swap units? Worth asking, at least.
Ah AmeriKKKa. Hell bent on forcing women to give birth, but once that child is alive who gives a fuck what happens to it or its mother.
@5 Why do you still read the Stranger, or the Slog if you hate it so?
@3, just a quick note that you can't control whether you end up with an autistic child or not. And behavior modification for any 2-year old, much less an autistic one, is very challenging. Of course, we could all stop having children so they don't bother the neighbors. Or maybe all autistic toddlers should be fortunate enough to live in single family homes far from neighbors? Or.... I mean, what do you suggest?
@10 āKarenā is a handy term you use to dismiss a bothersome woman. Folks āin the knowā are in on the joke. Iād be curious if an attorney actually did refer to the neighbor as a āKarenā or if that was some editorializing by the writer, those quotation marks are hard working!
Sorry, I was addressing #2, not #3
How is it people having 4 kids think itās ok to get subsidized housing? I could see having one mistake or two, but if you canāt afford to take care of yourself you canāt afford a kid much less four. You could try closing your legs.
Honestly don't have much sympathy. It's not reasonable to ask the other tenants to endure what sounds like a horrendously obnoxious situation with a loud, out-of-control toddler and a mother who doesn't seem to take the complaints seriously. You have to draw a line somewhere. Of course the only point in this story where Hannah gives the other side a voice is when she paraphrases some of the noise complaint e-mails, so I don't think we're really supposed to "pick a side."
Unfortunately, this is again a very one sided slog report.
We sure as hell have the opinion of the author, but unfortunately very, very few facts.
Its very hard to evict tenants in King County... so if our courts uphold a just cause eviction, then we pretty much have our story. She and her children, would be evicted for just cause.
Just for the record, legal notices are presented in English. There are advocates, free of charge for tenants and there are Spanish interpreters.
Let's see what happens before we draw any conclusion on this author's "spin on the events" .
@#4 Wait a minute, who "forced" this woman to give birth?