Residents of an apartment building on Cleveland鈥檚 East Side are calling for help from the city in getting the property鈥檚 owner to fix their apartments.
鈥淲e need a place a stay and we call our councilmen, everything, and they came through and everything but we need somebody to help us,鈥 said Larry Wilkins, a tenant at 2910 Hampton Road. 鈥淲e need water. We need lights. In the hallways, the lights are off.鈥
The problems started about a year ago, according to Wilkins, when ownership stopped 鈥渄oing what they should.鈥
Wilkins鈥 building is currently owned by a company called Aliarse Holdings, LLC, which owns 14 properties in Cuyahoga County.
鈥淭he owners here have disappeared,鈥 said former Cleveland City Councilmember Jay Westbrook.
Westbrook is part of the Morelands Group, which advocates for and works to protect Shaker Square鈥檚 residential apartment corridor.
Westbrook and the organization were involved in a campaign last year to force fixes at other apartment buildings near Shaker Square, which led to the passage of legislation, called Residents First, aimed at combatting absentee landlords in Cleveland.
Westbrook says he鈥檚 been working with the tenants on Hampton Road for six months to get something done.
鈥淎ll that builds up are trash, taxes and unpaid bills and it鈥檚 all on the backs of the tenants,鈥 Westbrook said.
Water at the building was shut off Friday, electricity has been off for longer, according to Westbrook.
Tenants have filed numerous complaints with the city, including for heating issues, inoperable toilets, lack of running water, piles of debris and trash lying around, unresponsive ownership and other interior & exterior maintenance issues, city spokesperson Tyler Sinclair said.
Despite the city issuing code violations in response, landlords have not addressed the issues.
"The property owner is an out-of-state and out-of-touch LLC who clearly has no intention of making repairs," Sinclair said. "The jig is up now as they鈥檒l have to answer to their neglect in court."
The property has changed hands five times since 2017, according to records on the county property tax website. The most recent sale, for $2.1 million, came in June 2023, which tenants say is about the time when conditions at the building began to deteriorate.
The ward鈥檚 current Councilmember, Deborah Gray is among those pressuring the owner to make repairs.
鈥淭he city is involved,鈥 Gray said. 鈥淭hey have been out here. But it鈥檚 the property owner and the owner鈥檚 responsibility to take care of the needs of the building and the needs of the tenants.鈥
According to Gray, inspectors from the city visited the property Tuesday and tenants may end up needing to be relocated.
The city has also filed a 54-count criminal complaint against the ownership group, said Sinclair.
"The City will be contracting with a plumber to attempt to restore water service and will continue to offer as much help as we can to assist the tenants temporarily as they figure out their immediate next steps 鈥 which likely will be relocating to more stable housing, as the owner鈥檚 lack of ongoing maintenance has created a hazardous and unsustainable living situation for tenants," Sinclair said. "We have also asked the Red Cross for assistance."