A Snellville mother says her home’s heater was quietly pumping fecal matter through the vents, forcing her and her four children into a hotel after a year‑long fight with the property’s manager. Contractors later told her sewage had contaminated the HVAC system, and a Gwinnett magistrate judge ordered the landlord to pay damages that the family says still have not been satisfied. The dispute has become a vivid example of recurring maintenance and habitability complaints involving large single‑family rental operators in metro Atlanta.
As reported by Atlanta News First, tenant Tiarra Logan first noticed a sewage smell in June 2024 and began filing repeated maintenance requests after contractors initially failed to realize the house was on a septic tank. The station reviewed work‑order notes that showed canceled requests and a later inspection that found a septic backup outside the home. Logan says her children were frequently sick before she moved them into temporary housing in late 2025.
Contractor Findings And Health Risks
Contractor notes reviewed by Atlanta News First describe a “toilet overflowed category 3 water” that dripped “directly into the H‑VAC unit,” which Logan says explains both the persistent odor and the health issues in the home. Restoration standards classify Category 3, or “black” water, as grossly contaminated sewage or floodwater that can carry dangerous pathogens and typically requires removal of porous materials and professional cleanup. Natural Resources Canada summarizes those protocols for flood and sewage contamination responses.
Invitation Homes And The Federal Case
The Snellville property is managed through Invitation Homes, a national single‑family rental company that faced a Federal Trade Commission enforcement action in 2024. The Federal Trade Commission says the settlement required Invitation Homes to provide $48 million for consumer redress, and the agency announced it began sending more than $47.2 million in checks to eligible renters in March 2026. The complaint included allegations involving undisclosed fees and maintenance problems, including reports of sewage backing up in homes. That federal action has sharpened local attention on how large landlords handle repairs and tenant complaints.
Why Georgia’s Law Leaves Tenants With Fewer Tools
Georgia’s 2024 Safe at Home law requires landlords to keep dwellings “fit for human habitation,” but it stops short of spelling out a clear checklist of what that means. Tenant advocates say that gap leaves many renters shouldering the burden of proving habitability problems in court, even in cases involving sewage or serious mechanical failures. Some local governments have tried to close that gap: the City of Mableton adopted a Safe and Healthy Housing Ordinance in 2025 that defines minimum habitability standards and gives municipal code officials new enforcement powers, including authority to order remediation and place liens on properties that do not comply.
Legal Options And Where To Get Help
Tenants in situations like Logan’s can file claims in magistrate court seeking repairs and damages. If a judge awards money that is not paid, renters may pursue enforcement tools such as a writ of fieri facias, which allows a sheriff to levy assets or place a lien under Georgia law. Nonprofit providers such as the Georgia Legal Services Program and the Atlanta Legal Aid Society offer intake, eviction‑defense and housing assistance for income‑eligible renters and can help organize documentation and pursue those enforcement remedies…