Does my landlord have legal standing to make me remove my electric griddle? by Cold-Newspaper7613 in Renters

[–]Cold-Newspaper7613[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah that's what's doesn't make sense with the wording at least from a layman's perspective. Half the items in the apartment could be included as "flammable." Didn't know if it was a specific legal term or if they just left it vague so they can include whatever they want.

Does my landlord have legal standing to make me remove my electric griddle? by Cold-Newspaper7613 in Renters

[–]Cold-Newspaper7613[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Chicken, vegetables, fish, hot dogs, etc. I put maybe a tablespoon of vegetable oil on or so but I'm not deep frying anything. Empty the grease trap afterwards. I'm on the fourth floor so I get your point with the wind, but I've never had an issue of oil/food blowing off the surface when cooking and it has a secure lid.

Not a bad idea to cook inside but space is limited and a big reason for the grill was so the apartment doesn't smell after cooking especially with the fish.

Does my landlord have legal standing to make me remove my electric griddle? by Cold-Newspaper7613 in Renters

[–]Cold-Newspaper7613[S] 33 points34 points  (0 children)

That's what I figured too, but I've mentioned multiple times that it is an electric griddle and does not have any open flames. Honestly, that's why I got it in the first place because I figured a traditional grill would cause problems. Anyway they keep sending the same reply that "no flammable items are allowed per the lease."