The maintenance staff are friendly and knowledgeable, as well. The office staff is very friendly and have responded to and fixed any maintenance repairs that I've requested within 24 hours without fail. I've been happy here, and have lived in several other apartments for comparison. But if you like management who sucks, appliances that suck, noisy neighbors, your car getting broken into and watching homeless people search for food in your dumpster then be my guest. I searched all of Albuquerque to find another apartment perfect for me. Just sucks when your bathroom cabinets are like sunken in to the floor, only 2 of my stove burners work, my oven can't cook for anything, and the way they design closets is an absolute joke plus no ceiling fan in my living room also sucks. you CANNOT decide when you want it on and off ( at least in my apartment anyway) Its about 75 outside and I walk in to my apartment and its 85. Plus you get the regular view of homeless people digging through their dumpsters on a regular basis. cars have been vandalized and broken into here. Oh and don't get me started on the CRIME!!! The gates hardly ever work. I live on the top floor so you'd think oh okay no noise, wrong! The tenants diagonally below me are so incredibly noisy I can hear them ALL the time. They never give a 24 hour notice for maintenance its more like 9-12 hour. They have lost my rent check on MULTIPLE occasions and charged me a late fee ( mind you I've never been late on paying.). At first it was pretty decent but that changed. One of the most annoying things that they do is go around the parking lot and if your tags are expired they will put a massive orange sticker on your window that is nearly impossible to take off. Direct tv sales people walk around like 3 times a month knocking on your door trying to sell you stuff. The police are called out at least once a week because of domestic violence situations. The management will lose your rent checks. The fire alarm goes off at least once a month in the middle of the night for no reason. There are unsupervised children literally running in the streets and all around the complex. Came home after a long night of work and could not get into the gate because management changed the codes and did not inform any of the residents. Because that is the total opposite of the experience I have had. “We call on the Chinese and Hong Kong authorities to cease prosecutions and intimidation of trade unionists and advocates for fundamental freedoms, to release those who have been imprisoned, and repeal the so-called ‘national security’ law.The review left by "a google user" either got paid to write that, or it is a person that works at Candlelight. The desire of the people to have a voice and be heard will not be extinguished. “The authorities in Beijing behind this repression need to realise that the light of democracy in Hong Kong will not go out. “The international trade union movement stands with everyone there fighting for democracy and demanding respect for their most basic human rights. ITUC General Secretary Sharan Burrow said: “We must keep the memory of these events alive and show our solidarity to help keep the light of democracy burning in Hong Kong. In 2021, union leader Lee Cheuk Yan, along with seven others, was sentenced to 14 months in prison for “inciting, organising and participating” in the candlelight vigil on the 4th of June 2020. Since then, a candlelight vigil has been held in Hong Kong to remember the victims, but the authorities banned the event in 2020. Countless numbers of people were killed and arrested. The main demonstration in Tiananmen Square was violently ended by the Chinese army. Between 15 April and 4 June 1989, peaceful protestors took to the streets in Beijing and other cities to demand political and democratic reforms.
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