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Monthly Archives: August 2023
Boston-based Landlord Threatens This Writer

“I recently endured 72-hours straight of flashbacks from the gun violence I survived because of Winncompanies threats to my home.”
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For the first time in many many years, I do not feel safe in my own home. I live in an over-55 apartment building run by the Boston-based bully, Winncompanies. If they treat all their tenants like they do here, it is probable some of their other tenants’ lives are at being placed at risk.
They now threaten my ability to keep my home (after I’d filed a civil rights complaint against them with the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office) and, full disclosure, for the first time in my life I want to sue and if I can locate a Massachusetts-based attorney who knows this legal territory and will work pro bono, I will. I recently endured 72-hours straight of flashbacks from the gun violence I survived because of Winncompanies threats to my home.
A snapshot of an example. In order to get a disability parking placard or license plate one of more of the following has been determined to be true about you, but doctors, medical professionals. Moreover, given everyone who lives in this building is a senior, the risk of falls for seniors is well documented, as detailed by the NIH’s National Institute for Aging. To get a disability plate or placard, one or more of the following apply to you.
You:
• Cannot walk 200 feet without stopping to rest.
• Cannot walk without the assistance of another person, prosthetic aid, or other assistive device.
• Are restricted by lung disease.
• Use portable oxygen.
• Have a Class III cardiac condition.
• Have a Class IV cardiac condition. according to the standards set by the
• Have Class III or Class IV functional arthritis. according to the standards set by the American College of Rheumatology
• Have Stage III or Stage IV anatomic arthritis. according to the standards set by the American College of Rheumatology
• Have been declared legally blind.
• Have lost one or more limbs.
Winncompanies doesn’t care, as evidenced by the fact they demand all tenants, with or without disabilities, (many in their 70s, 80s and 90s) remove their cars from the parking lot and park out in the street illegally (there is no safe area) or else they will be towed!
I recently filed a civil rights complaint against Boston-based Winncompanies with the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office, citing two current Winn polices that endanger the lives of their tenants and, under one of the policies, the lives of those living in or traveling through the community. Winncompanies does not deny their policies endanger lives).
Now, Winncompanies is threatening to terminate (their word) my tenancy. On what grounds? (I am never late with my rent.) They recently asked me for a great deal of information, some of which strikes me as intrusive, and so I asked them to please identify for me specifically what law or regulation allows them to get this information, and, no surprise, they won’t tell me. Now, because they haven’t received the information, the have threatened my ability to keep my home.
Landlord Endangers Ludlow Tenants Lives

Winncompanies, a Boston-based property management company (and my landlord) does NOT deny two of its policies endanger the lives and violate the civil rights of the senior tenants, many with disabilities, who live in a 75-apartment building on State Street in Ludlow, Massachusetts.
The former mill-building opened for rentals in 2017. Having filed a complaint against them through the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office, management has already threatening my ability to live here.
But first, the two Winn policies that endanger tenants’ lives. One of them, the first listed, also endangers the lives of Ludlow community members. First, there are some facts you have a right to know. Some you may already know. I didn’t.
Deadly Winn Policy #1
“To obtain disability plates, a placard, or a disability veteran plate, you must be a Massachusetts resident. A Massachusetts registered and licensed physician, chiropractor, registered nurse, physician’s assistant, osteopath, optometrist (for legally blindness only) or podiatrist must certify that you meet one of the following conditions:
- Cannot walk 200 feet without stopping to rest.
- Cannot walk without the assistance of another person, prosthetic aid, or other assistive device.
- Are restricted by lung disease to such a degree that your forced (respiratory) expiratory volume (FEV) in 1 second, when measured by spirometry, is less than 1 liter.
- Use portable oxygen.
- Have a Class III cardiac condition according to the standards set by the American Heart Association
- Have a Class IV cardiac condition according to the standards set by the American Heart Association. A customer in this condition must surrender their license.
- Have Class III or Class IV functional arthritis according to the standards set by the American College of Rheumatology
- Have Stage III or Stage IV anatomic arthritis according to the standards set by the American College of Rheumatology
- Have been declared legally blind (please attach copy of certification). A customer in this classification must surrender their license.
- Have lost one or more limbs or permanently lost the use of one or more limbs.”
Winncompanies essentially tells all its senior tenants, including those with disability plates and placards: When we need to replace the mulch in our garden beds, repaint the lines in the parking lot, remove snow, or anything else we want to do in the parking lot, you are to park your cars out in the public street and leave your cars there until we say we are done. If you don’t do this, your cars will be towed at your expense.
In other words, tenants have to park their cars in an active driving lane on State Street, a two-way street with no parking spaces on either side, and endangering the lives of passing motorist and members of the community as well.
Deadly Winn Policy #2
Two periods of time each year, at the beginning and then again of the heating season in Massachusetts, defined as September 15 to June 15. Massachusetts regulations say the highest an indoor temperature can go in apartment buildings like the one in question is 78 degrees. Winn’s management appears devoted to holding off as long as possible before turning the building’s A/C on, and the turning the A/C off as soon as it possibly can. Keep in mind, the A/C is expensive, and Winn has to the A/C cost in the common areas, halls, offices, elevators, stairwells, and so on. With the A/C off, the indoor temperatures go up into the high 80s and 90s, way above the 78 degree cut off. When tenants ask for the A/C to be turned on because of the high temperatures, one member of Winn Management sent me an email saying it would be a couple of more weeks before the A/C would be turned on.to be turned off, Winn’s management will wait weeks.
As for the high temperatures, Winn management says it is not their problem because the heat is not heat produced by the building’s heating system. They do nothing to ease the conditions for tenants.
Now, they threaten my home.
I recently filed a civil rights complaint against Winncompanies et al, with the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office. Now, Winncompanies’ management is threatening to terminate (their word) my tenancy because, when they recently asked me for extensive information about my life (far more than the housing authority that oversees my Section 8 rental voucher, and far more than Social Security asks for) I asked them to show me what part(s) of what law or regulation allows them to ask for this information. They won’t tell me.
For the record, I pay my rent on time every month and have done so since I moved here in the fall of 2017.