I think the answer is - because they’re lazy and want you to do their dirty work for them. I quite frankly, am not going to call the police over noise complaints because I think management should do something about that. Police should only be called when violence or tenants who get aggressive.

Not because of noise, I just think it’s management dumping responsibility onto you when they’re the ones with the power to evict people.

  • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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    4 hours ago

    What do you expect a building manager to do and why do you think boise complaints are their responsibility?

    • RIotingPacifist@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago
      • Installing noise dampening
      • Giving other tenants warnings (if it’s something in their contract)
      • Contacting the police
      • Some other way

      Ultimately OPs problem isn’t other tenants, it’s the noise.

      • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Wow, that’s uhhhh, an interesting take. If one tenant is too noisy, you want the building manager to install noise dampening somethings? And who determines if it’s too noisy, the landlord who’d have to pay for the renovations?

        Edit: Is this actually a standard procedure where you live? Can I ask where that is? That’d just be such a wild way of doing things, I can’t even imagine how that would scale in a modern apartment.

        • RIotingPacifist@lemmy.world
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          18 minutes ago

          That’s the law in pretty much anywhere that derived their tenancy agreements from English law.

          Sadly it is not common practice anywhere as your landlord violating your lease in such a way, it is difficult to get anything done about it, because ultimately you still need somewhere to live and getting out of your contract isn’t a win, in the way that your landlord getting out of his and rendering you homeless if you don’t agree to his terms is.

          I can’t even imagine how that would scale in a modern apartment.

          You can’t imagine, the guy taking 1/2 your paycheck having to actually earn that money?

      • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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        3 hours ago

        Building manager isn’t your parents. If you have a problem with the building, that’s their issue, if you have a problem with your neighbour, you’re expected to deal with it like any other adult; talk to the person, if that doesn’t work, police.

      • MyBrainHurts@piefed.ca
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        3 hours ago

        To be slightly more polite, as this seems like one of your first places… You absolutely want to keep a neutral third party involved.

        In my building, some of us are paying half or a third what new tenants do, the manager has a clear financial incentive to remove as many old timers as possible (and has tried her best.) If the norm was that building managers patrol for noise etc, you could much more easily get into a “he said/she said” with someone who has the means and motivation to remove you. Having the norm be police means that the complaint has to be somewhat valid, not just “enough that the building manager can increase their income stream.”

      • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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        3 hours ago

        While the details depend on the jurisdiction, in most of the saner places landlords can’t evict over something like noise. Your anger is misplaced.

        Have you tried being an adult and camly talking to your neighbour? Let them know what you hear, how its impacting you and some respectful suggestions on how things can be made better.

        Also what kind of noise are we talking about and when? Life makes noise, and you chose to live in an appt with thin walls. Some noise is to be expected.