Over the last decade, landlord Paul Bertelson has bought dozens of homes in Minneapolis' toughest neighborhoods, some for as little as $10,000, and rented them out to poor people who often had nowhere else to go.
Now his properties are drawing scrutiny. Troy Lewis, the father who survived a fire that killed five of his children at one of Bertelson's properties, blames the landlord for what he says were poorly maintained heat and electrical systems, a charge Bertelson disputes.
The fire department has said the cause of last month's blaze at 2818 Colfax Av. N. remains undetermined, though it suggested a space heater may have played a role. Lewis said he relied on a continuously running space heater, as well as heat from the oven, to keep the apartment warm when the landlord did not fix the heating system.
A dozen current and former tenants of seven properties owned or managed by Bertelson, including the previous occupant of 2818 Colfax, have told the Star Tribune that he or his staff failed to address serious problems, including flickering electricity, sparking outlets, faulty heating systems, mold and infestations of mice and bedbugs. Other tenants have described Bertelson as a responsive landlord.
Tiffany Zollicoffer said that for months she plugged in electric space heaters, turned on the stovetop burners and had to open the oven to keep her three children warm after the furnace at 4045 Colfax Av. N. stopped working and was "red tagged" as dangerous by CenterPoint Energy in November. Zollicoffer said after Bertelson didn't fix the heat, she moved out the last week of February and that he gave her $100 to stay at a hotel.
"Just because we live in a neighborhood where there's gangs, drugs, violence, prostitution, that doesn't mean we want to live with ... rats, mice, no heat," said a tearful Zollicoffer, adding that she has nowhere to live now. "It's not fair if you're paying your rent."
Bertelson declined to respond to the tenants' allegations, citing privacy rules and the ongoing fire investigation. In earlier interviews following the fire, he defended his record as a landlord, saying that the heat and smoke detectors worked properly at 2818 Colfax and that he hadn't received complaints from Lewis.
A lawyer representing one of Bertelson's companies, Mission Inn Minnesota, said in an e-mail that it has a deep passion for helping those living in poverty.