Iirc a number of the large apartment groups and condo landlords require tenants to have insurance. (Pretty sure that's the only reason I had it as a renter back in the day)
Iirc a number of the large apartment groups and condo landlords require tenants to have insurance. (Pretty sure that's the only reason I had it as a renter back in the day)
Renters should be paying for renter’s insurance.
Most of that stuff doesn't have to be changed immediately though, unless the house is a serious fixer upper.
Is it really going to matter? The DNC will make sure they put up someone that won't make them uncomfortable.
Who the fuck is giving 7% raises yearly for anyone but Sr leadership?
And in a lot of areas, renting costs more than a mortgage for less home.
I've worked a lot of places where 30% profit on an item is like winning the lottery. Surprising to see the margin is that high on a pizza.
I suppose the second. The revenues have to cover all the expenses, regardless of where those revenues come from.
Income from doordash isn't any different than income from in house food. You can't separate out costs just because the order came from an app.
Young folks looking to get the brand caché with their new job as an entry level manager who MB hopes to keep loyal to the brand as they progress up the professional ladder and buy more expensive automobiles.
If they’re living rent free and enjoying the benefits of family life, they’re not just lodgers. They need to respect their parents’ rules or go find an apartment.
You can’t just considering cost of food. Payroll, utilities, rent/mortgage, insurance, etc. All are part of the balance sheet. If delivery apps aren’t bringing in enough per dish to cover them, it’s a loss for the owner.
“restaurant operators feel forced to accept that business which is not really profitable, but helps pay bills.”
Have you tried navigating to your house using GM? At the end the app sometimes asks for a "did we get you there?" Type of feeding. Might be able to fix the issue.
In my mind, the super/hyper cars aren’t really luxury cars. More of their own special category.
She could get a lanyard and wear them around her neck. Or clip them on to a belt loop. The issue is her personal choice to carry the keys in her hand and apparently being absent-minded about keeping them available.
I generally agree call centers should do better with attendance policies, especially sick time. Having said that, even with the tough policies, most call centers have issues with too many people calling off.
Spot on. I've been at several organizations where they were happy to work around anything that was a family related type of issue, but the single folks on the staff got the shaft on all their requests.
Its not necessarily that I don't want to talk about the kid, but if I'm using my PTO, it's none of works business what I'm doing.
“I will never understand why people like keyless entry. You can’t check if your car is locked (because proximity key), it opens the possibility of losing your key or driving off without your key”