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Education: must pass 30-hour Salespersons Pre-License course approved by the Kansas Real Estate Commission. Exam: must pass general and state portions of the Kansas licensing examination within 12 months of the course completion date. Application: must be filed within 6 months of passing the exam.
Kansas law does not limit how much your rent can be raised or how often. Because a rent raise is similar to an eviction, there is one rule. If you have a month-to-month lease, your landlord must inform you, IN WRIT- ING, of a rent raise at least 30 days before the rent date when it is supposed to go into effect.
Make sure you give your landlord a written notice and that you keep a copy for your records. Once your landlord receives that notice, they have 14 days to begin repairs, otherwise the lease terminates on the date you specified.
Generally speaking, as a landlord, pest and vermin control (termites, mice, and rats) are your responsibility. The only exception is if the pest problem was caused by your tenants lack of cleanliness or poor housekeeping. If caused by the landlords violation of the agreement.
The landlord can evict the tenant for a lease violation in Kansas. Even if the tenant has just violated one term, they can still be evicted. The landlord must give the tenant a Kansas eviction notice called a 30-Day Notice to Comply, which provides the tenant with 14 days to fix the issue.
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To evict you, the landlord must provide a notice to you that you have 14 days to correct the problem, otherwise you will have to vacate 30 days after you get the notice. In other words, the lease will terminate 30 days after the notice date, unless you can correct the problem in 14 days.
Specifically, you are required to: Keep your rental unit in compliance with city or county building or housing codes. Maintain areas of the building and the grounds outside which are open to all tenants. Common areas such as hallways, parking lots, stairways, sidewalks, and laundry rooms are a few examples.
The Rental Licensing and Inspection program began in 1996 requiring all landlords of residential rental property to maintain a valid rental license in compliance with City Ordinance 66057 (Sec 19-25 through 249 of Code of Ordinances).
In Kansas, a landlord cannot legally evict a tenant without cause. Legal grounds to evict include not paying rent on time, staying after the lease ends, violating lease terms or not upholding responsibilities under Kansas law. Even so, proper notice must first be given before ending the tenancy.
Before beginning legal eviction proceedings, your landlord must provide you 3 days notice to leave the residence. This means your landlord must wait at least 72 hours after providing you this notice before filing papers to start the eviction lawsuit.

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