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How to Prevent Bell Installing Satellite Dishes on my Building?

Ina.Gefter

New Forum Member
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May 25, 2015
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I have a few abandoned dishes on my 3 storey apartment building, they are attached to the flashing and to the brick walls at the top. After a creative tenant attempted to climb the roof and to set up one dish for his own free of charge use, I have called Bell and asked to remove their equipment from my property. Here is what I found:
- Bell does not remove it, as the satellite dish is a property of the tenant who ordered the service.
- When the tenant moves out, he is supposed to dismount a dish from the roof or the wall and to take it with him ( "If he takes his furniture and belongings, why not to take the dish"- suggested Bell representative ) . I imagine, an old lady who just moved to a nursing home could have climbed the exterior ladder 3 stories up to the roof and hanging head down from the edge could have unscrewed the 10kg equipment and then had it taken down using the same ladder...
- Bell does not need any contract with the property owner which allows to install equipment (Rogers does have a contract from my experience). Any tenant can call Bell and tell that the owner has allowed to install a dish. Bell gladly believes anyone wishing to sign up and to pay for the service, and never checks the written lease. If tenant lied, it becomes a responsibility of a landlord to climb the roof and get the equipment removed.
- Bell refuses to provide with a fax number or e-mail where I can send a complain. They do not have a fax.

Abandoned dishes is a liability issue, as they can fell. Unauthorized access to the roof is another issue, as technicians do not care what they carry and drop on a roof membrane.

I would appreciate any suggestions how to deal with this bullet proof technique which allows a respectable provider to do what they want on someone's property.

Thank you,
Ina Gefter
Sales Representative, Commercial Focus Realty Brokerage
www.cfrealty.ca
[email protected]
 
Dismount them. Tenants need permission to install anything on your property, which you may or may not grant them. Tell folks that it is destruction of property, if you prefer them not to have any dishes, or allow them, perhaps with a $200 refundable deposit once properly dismounted.
 
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