Residents at Lilac Court Apartments in Bellefontaine Neighbors say they went three days this week without running water after service to the building was shut off, even though tenants say water is supposed to be covered in their rent. Young children and elderly neighbors were among those hit by the outage, which residents called a serious health risk. Many scrambled for bottled water, hauled laundry to off-site laundromats and tried in vain to reach anyone in charge as the crisis dragged on.
Utility crews restored service after outage
Missouri American Water said in a statement to FOX2 that it sent a crew to Lilac Court, and that workers arrived shortly afterward to get water flowing again. The company added that it plans to keep working with the property management company to sort out the underlying problem rather than just patch it up.
Tenants say landlord’s nonpayment caused the shutoff
Residents told FOX2 that the water was cut off even though it is advertised as included in the rent, and that phone numbers listed for management either rang without answer or led to people tied to previous owners. “I would probably have to get a hotel room if water was not restored,” tenant Gerri Jones said, adding that the outage created “a serious health risk” for children and older residents in the complex.
Owner flagged on municipal delinquent list
Public property records identify Lilac Court’s owner as a company listed as Mazal in Saint Louis II, and an October municipal report named that company among the district’s top delinquent account holders. Tenants say contact information for the management company has changed or been inconsistent, leaving them unsure who is actually responsible for addressing what they describe as recurring problems at the property…