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Singled Out

Landlord sells part of house to students

Published: Monday, May 2, 2005

Updated: Monday, December 29, 2008 18:12

Image: Singled Out

KENNETH WILKS / The Daily Reveille

Weldon Frommeyer [left], a business senior and his sister Ashley Frommeyer, a general studies sophomore, live in the University Hills neighborhood on Highland Road. Athough the neighborhood usually tries to keep students out, some parents are buying house

Image: Singled Out

KENNETH WILKS / The Daily Reveille

Four University students rent this house on the corner of Delgado Drive and Highland Road. The students are in violation of single-family zoning laws, and the city is in the process of evicting them.


With its freshly painted walls, pristine wood floors and beautifully decorated living room, kitchen and dining room, Ashley and Weldon Frommeyer’s University Hills abode looks like a page torn from a Restoration Hardware catalogue.

And with Ashley’s luxury SUV parked out front and a black-and-tan dog barking through the door, the Frommeyers look more like a stereotypical recently married, thirty-something couple than college students.

On the other side of campus, just blocks from the University Lakes, three students rent a quaint, white house with a neatly kept lawn on Morning Glory Street. They park three cars on the side of the house and have a few LSU lawn chairs with cigarette butts in a can on the porch — just about the only signs that students live there.

Back in University Hills, a little more than half a mile from campus, three students live behind an green mini-jungle that doubles as a front yard. Sometimes the men park their trucks in the front yard, which angers the neighbors across the street.

The similarity: In all three houses, students have found ways to live legally in neighborhoods despite laws for single-family zoning that try to keep them out.

Single-family zoning means no more than two unrelated people can live in the same house. A University Hills resident and former University professor wrote the law with Metro Councilmen in the 1960s to prevent students from piling into small houses, throwing wild parties and disturbing the neighborhood.

But these students who have found ways to comply with the carefully worded zoning laws are not alone.

In many neighborhoods around campus, parents are buying houses in their children’s names, landlords are selling portions of the houses to students and renters are doubling-up with cousins or siblings — all to legally stay in houses.

The Frommeyers are an example of the increasing number of parents who are buying their children homes to live in while in college.

The three student renters on Morning Glory Street are an example of what many renters plan with landlords; two of the residents are cousins, so they fulfill the related requirement.

For the unkept male students in University Hills, senior Ashton LaBorde owns the house, and the law says as long as the owner of the house lives in it, he can have up to three additional unrelated renters.

For these cases, and many more like them, no matter how much older neighborhood homeowners may want students out of their neighborhoods, there is nothing they can do.

 

The Beef

The feud between homeowners and students is simple and nothing new: homeowners don’t want loud parties, sloppy lawns and speeding drivers.

The students want a comfortable, affordable place to live with a little privacy and space.

But they just keep butting heads.

Homeowners typically have the law on their side.

Most neighborhoods near the University are zoned single-family. If three friends, for example, rent a three-bedroom house in a single-family zoned area and the neighbors can prove three unrelated people live in the house, the upset neighbors can hand over the evidence to the assistant parish attorney, who will take the landlord to court and get the renters evicted immediately.

In many cases, this is still happening.

In February, Lea Ann Batson, EBR assistant parish-attorney, took a local landlord to court for a zoning violation and forced his four student renters to move out in the middle of the semester. To prove the case, Batson said neighbors took photos of four cars parked in the driveway over about five months.

Batson told The Daily Reveille she is simply enforcing the law and that she has been doing so since the law was passed.

“It just has more publicity now,” said Batson about claims from landlords that her office has just recently started to enforce the law.

Instead of just complaining to each other about it, neighbors are realizing that if they document the violations enough, they can get their way.

But even Clyde Day, the retired professor and 43-year University Hills resident who co-wrote the law, realizes that with certain loopholes in the zoning rules, he is up against a wall.

Day insists he is not against students, but that he just does not want people breaking the law.

“But we have another problem now,” Day said after the University Hills Civic Association meeting Sunday. “It’s parents buying houses for students.”

Day said the ideal situation for student owners would be for them to take some ownership in the property and show the neighbors that they are a part of the neighborhood, too. He even suggested the students come to the annual Easter egg hunt that he and his wife host.

 

“Rosa Parks of Zoning”

Although not necessarily in the same way Day suggested, Steve Myers is giving some renters a chance to have some that ownership. Myers is a Baton Rouge landlord who makes thousands of dollars off rental property on several rent houses in University Hills, Southdowns and other subdivisions around campus.

He said in his bigger houses with three or four bedrooms, he sells a portion of the house to one of the tenants, making it legal for four unrelated renters to live there.

“Oh, he’s a lost cause,” Day said of Myers. “He sells the houses to the students.”

But Myers said he thinks the law is discriminatory against students and selectively enforced in neighborhoods on Highland Road and in Southdowns. In areas north of campus off Nicholson Drive, he said, the zoning laws are rarely enforced.

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