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II have a concern as I am lodging a complaint alleging retaliation and response to my repeated reports of unsafe and uninhabitable housing conditions within my residence. 4 months I have reported the following issues a stove with only one working burner being left without heat for 3 weeks and ongoing drug activity in criminal behavior within the building and additional actions that I believe your punitive and response to my complaints. I have contacted building management the regional manager the dauphin county housing authority HUD fair housing my state representative and medical professionals and no corrective action was taken. Most concerning the regional manager told me directly that I could complain to any agency and no one is going to do anything not even the president and this statement reflects disregard for accountability and tenant protections. Shortly after continuing to raise concerns adult protective services initiated and investigation into me instead of addressing the documented building issues. I was not provided with the complaint against me nor was the purpose of the investigation clearly explained. The timing and sequence of these events Ray serious concerns at protective services may have been used as a retaliatory measure. I stayed clearly that I am mentally competent that I am physically capable that I am independently managing my affairs and I am capable of caring for myself despite having a physical disability. My disability does not equal incapacity it does not justify presumption intrusion or investigative pressure without clear cause and transparent explanation which I was not given. Instead of my safety concerns about the building and the people in it being addressed adult protective service appeared at my door to question me. I am 54 years old and will soon be 55 the abuse that I endured occurred between the ages of 1 and 13 I ran away from home at 13 years old and have been self-supporting and independent ever since. I feel that what happened to me over 40 years ago has no relevance to my present day mental competence or ability to manage my life bringing forward childhood trauma in this context through the aps agent was unnecessary and re-traumatizing I was also asked whether I maintain contact with my parents or family members individuals who were directly involved in the abuse I survived and I felt like this line of questioning was deeply inappropriate and insensitive. The representative engaged me in a conversation in a manner that felt misleading when I asked whether he was there to help address the ongoing issues I had reported about the building and the people in it that question appeared to be redirected rather than answered and I was left confused about the true purpose of the visit. Given the timing of this investigation after I have repeatedly reported serious building safety issues and the people that are conducting criminal activities I am deeply concerned that this action may be retaliatory does anyone have any help for me or any direction I feel like I need to get me a lawyer at this point. My financials and my medical record was already exposed and this representative already had information on me without even me having to answer those questions which I felt was very intrusive at this point. I need help has anyone ever experienced this and what do I do at this point thank you

I'm sorry for your situation. I worked in the homecare field for a very long time so I'll be honest with you here. APS did not come to talk to you because you made compaints about the living conditions in your building or the criminal activity going on within it. Of course it's possible that someone called them as a form of retaliation towards you, but that person is taking a chance at getting into trouble themselves if that's the reason why. Gone are the days where scumbags wanting to cause trouble could just call APS and CPS on people for revenge. That's serious now.

Why don't you talk to APS and take advantage of that resource. Tell them what's going on and more importantly, show them. If you are disabled and they come to your home, show them the broken stove and invite them to have a look around and see for themselves. Ask them to speak to the housing manager and the police andevery other entity you spoke to about everything going on in your building.
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Dowagerqueen7 Feb 16, 2026
From what I understand even if somebody called APS on me in retaliation they do not prosecute the person who calls nor do they allow me to know who called them on me... So they pretty much get away with ruining another person's life and causing problems where there is none... Which mostly affects me in a very negative way
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Are you in PA?

Are you in subsidized housing? What exactly is your living situation?

If you are paying rent (and not in govt housing) you can put your rent payments into a escrow account (to show intent of payment). But you need to have a paper trail of your complaint and their response (or lack thereof).

Is there a family member or someone in your complex that may be concerned about your situation and that's who possibly alerted them to your situation? We are a forum of mostly unpaid family caregivers (and receivers). This forum is for education and support. I think you need to contact pro-bono legal firms that deal with tenants rights.

More details from you would be helpful.
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Dowagerqueen7 Feb 16, 2026
The only persons that see me on an everyday basis are the people that live in this building. The same people who I have outed out for their use of illicit drugs, overdosing and criminal activity within the building amongst each other. Again I do not have a lot of family members because I got away from that situation at the age of 13 and I do not have any contact with those people who have hurt me in the past. I talked to my insurance company about this as well so maybe it came from them either way this was the wrong entity to call for me or in my name to try to help me for this. A lot of agencies I called and they failed to help me in this regard
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Someone may have thought that calling APS would help you because the heat is something your landlord has to provide. You had no heat for weeks. That doesn't automatically mean that you are unable to help yourself or take care of yourself. It does mean that someone has noticed that you had no heat for 3 weeks. APS might be exactly the service that would help you get the heat back. If they now go to question your landlord you have proof that something is going on in the apartment that you had no control over. Same with the stove. These are things the landlord is supposed to either provide for or make sure can happen in the apartment. They can match you up with services that may help you to get the problems with your landlord resolved. I am not a lawyer but it does seem as if you needed help and someone may have been trying to help you.
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Dowagerqueen7 Feb 16, 2026
The stove has been that way since I moved in 2 years ago June 2023 I asked for a new stove because only one burner worked the maintenance man Jason came back and told me that his manager told me as long as I have one burner that works then I will not be getting a new stove. Here's the kicker though my daughter's oven went out and they replaced her stove within a week of her asking no questions asked. Still think I'm lying or I'm the problem here??? Because I've been vocal about the abominations and the criminal activity and the illicit drugs in this building is the reason why I feel I have been singled out to suffer
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HUD is a federal agency so if this is a HUD building, contact the constituent affairs office of your member of Congress and your two U.S. Senators. Also local news programs love this kind of story so contact each of your local TV stations.
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Dowagerqueen7 Feb 16, 2026
II already went to the state representative I also went to HUD... HUD shut me down in 2 days. They were supposed to take 30 days to look over my case and instead I got shut down immediately. The regional manager had threatened me and told me that no one would ever do anything about her or her job status that if I complain to all agencies including the president nothing will happen that's because she knows people within HUD. She knew exactly what she was doing. She also boasted that other people have tried in the past and she's still there. But people don't know is my daughter went 3 months without her keys to her apartment and she was unlawfully confined to her apartment upstairs on the 4th floor I'm on the second floor she couldn't leave her apartment to go do shopping go to see her doctors go to her mental health appointments or do anything because she was afraid that the crackheads and the building would gain access to her apartment and rip her off. My daughter was also assaulted and drugged in this building. This all happened in December. Someone stuck a piece of metal in her lock and her key broke off I removed that piece of metal and the very next day she used her spare key and the same thing happened when we asked management to get her keys they said they would order them and instead from October 6th until December 10th she had no way to lock her door. That is unacceptable. We have called everybody that you can think of and not a soul reached out to help us. We have since decided to move and we are actively looking for another place to go to problem is there's a lot of places that are not accepting low-income families. I have several applications out and I'm waiting for a townhouse to open up for me and my daughter. You guys have no idea what I have been going through and what my daughter has been put through. Two Saturdays ago I was hospitalized because the person above me through gasoline out of his window down the brick wall and I was inhaling fumes and it got to the point where I had to call the fire department and they called the ambulance for me... But hey I'm the problem not them right????
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Get on the two-year wait list. Sometimes things move faster. You clearly are not safe in that building and need to find another place to live. Ask APS to help you with this. Try not to see them as your enemy but a resource. I don’t think anyone here thinks you are lying about the conditions you are living in. Unfortunately this is the case for too many people. There often is not a simple solution. You can only move at this point, I doubt you will get any justice or be safe there if the criminal element in the building see you as a threat.
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Dowagerqueen7 Feb 18, 2026
Thank you out of all the information I feel that you have given me more information that is useful. They have sensed fixed the problem with the radiator. I guess my concern is 2 weeks after it was finally fixed after I called the code enforcement officer on the building and management I now am having to deal with APS showing up at my door and also not returning my phone calls to at least let me know what the allegations are or what I am dealing with. After having to deal with the situation in the building which is already quite stressful and now I have more stress added on. I thank you so much and will be getting on the waitlist as well as calling each and every resource you have furnished to me. I am waiting for a townhouse to get back to me when they have an availability which she said I will not be waiting too much longer as the wait list is completely open they are just waiting for an eviction... They have to go to court. They said it wouldn't take too much longer and that once that happens they will clean out the townhouse and I will get moved in me and my daughter. Again thank you so much for helping me I really appreciate all of you and all the information that was given. I've never had to deal with this issue ever before. I am grateful for having people like you stand up and give me the information that I need that is helpful and useful at this time God bless all of you.
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I really have a hardtime believing that you had no heat and none of the angencies you dealt with did anything about it. Did you try the Housing authority. Someone felt you were unsafe living alone and called APS. Maybe that person thought APS would help you with your problems. Really surprised they did not talk to the landlord about the no heat. Maybe you should move. If you have a caseworker at Social Services, ask if they can help you.
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SamTheManager Feb 16, 2026
Yes, I can't help wondering if they did end up talking to the landlord or will be talking to them soon. When was the heat off, I wonder. Was it during this recent cold snap? If so, that is a reason to call APS, I think, especially if no one is doing anything about conditions in the apartment. It doesn't mean that she was reported herself or that she would get in trouble for being unable to care for herself. I wouldn't want to be a landlord that was not providing heat in this cold, where in parts of PA the temp was below freezing at night for almost 3 weeks. It got down to -15 for a few nights. If that is when this person was without heat, I would be very concerned for anyone's welfare that didn't have heat.
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Call the Department of Aging for your city. They deal with this type of thing all the time. They may even be able to help you find a safer place to live. Work along with APS. Even if someone called, they have done you a favor. Let them document and take pictures of the unit. Tell them you feel unsafe where you are and that you need assistance moving into a reputable building.

This does not sound like an ideal situation to be in, and it seems like you are renting from a slum lord instead of someone who is reputable. Some of these folks are collecting the government subsidized money for these units but are not providing the upkeep and disabled and elderly clients are suffering because of it.

The Attorney General's office in my city has just busted a landlord and his mother for over seventy buildings where people had no heat or other necessities even in this cold spell we've been having lately. Tenants had to be relocated out of these buildings because they were uninhabitable.
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Dowagerqueen7 Feb 16, 2026
My state representative David madsen's office sent me a transfer application the problem is is when I submitted the transfer application I am being told there's a two-year wait
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I put some of the details of your situation into ChatGPT to see what it would recommend as next steps for you:

"Here are options and next steps you can take in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania for legal help with a serious/unsafe housing issues and HUD-related matters:

Local Legal Aid & Pro Bono Legal Services:

Free/Low-Cost Legal Aid Providers
MidPenn Legal Services – A nonprofit legal services provider that offers free civil legal assistance for low-income residents including housing issues (e.g., tenant’s rights, habitability, eviction defense). You can call them to apply, and they handle landlord/tenant and public housing cases. Eligibility is income-based. 
Pennsylvania Legal Aid Network, Inc. – This is the statewide consortium that coordinates legal aid providers (like MidPenn). They can help you locate the right legal aid program and may offer referrals or information on pro bono housing lawyers. 

General tip: Ask specifically for a housing rights/tenant habitability attorney or ask for a referral to someone handling HUD/public housing complaints if your case involves assisted housing.

County Pro Bono Programs:

Dauphin County Pro Bono Program – Coordinated through the local bar association. You can call the Dauphin County Bar Association Lawyer Referral Service at 717-232-7536 (press the pro bono option if available) to ask about free volunteer attorneys who might handle housing cases. 

What You Should Do Next

1. Document Everything

- Keep written records of lack of heat, APS visits, complaints to agencies, landlord interactions, and dates.

- Take photos/videos, keep copies of letters/emails, and log phone calls.

2. **Apply for Legal Aid Immediately

Contact MidPenn Legal Services right away and explain:

- You are in public housing (HUD) or subsidized rental.
- You have been without heat.
- You have reported conditions to APS/HUD and others with no change.

If they determine you qualify, they may represent you in court or in negotiations with the housing authority or landlord.

Tip: Many legal aid offices have long wait lists, so apply sooner rather than later.

3. Request a Court Order (“Show Cause”)
In Pennsylvania, when a landlord fails to provide basic services (like heat), you may be able to ask a court to enter a “show cause” order requiring the landlord to fix conditions or face legal penalties.

Legal aid can help you file this.

4. Contact Additional Resources

Even if you’ve already reached out to agencies:

HUD Complaint Hotline: file a formal complaint at https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/field_policy_mgt/complaint or call 1-800-669-9777. HUD must investigate housing discrimination and serious habitability violations.

Local Health Department: Lack of heat can be a local code violation and may lead to enforcement action.

5. Media/Advocacy Groups

Since media hasn’t helped, consider:

Tenant unions or housing advocacy groups in central PA.
Local government officials – city council or state reps may advocate on your behalf.

Critical Points

Legal aid services are based on financial eligibility. If you qualify, you could get a free attorney to represent you in housing court or a HUD dispute. 

A pro bono lawyer through the county bar may take your case if MidPenn can’t due to capacity."
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