The dilapidated Country Village, with its broken plumbing, cockroach infestations and sagging ceilings, was the last straw.
After spending months and more than 525 hours of staff time trying to get the landlord to fix the plethora of problems at that apartment complex, the Burnsville City Council is now looking at ways to tighten its rental property licensing law.
The new approach, still under discussion, will likely include annual fees for property owners and regular building and fire code inspections.
"The apartments in Burnsville kind of have a bad image overall," Council Member Mary Sherry said. "I think this will help everybody."
The city, which has about 8,900 rental housing units, has been trying to get a handle on rental properties for years, passing its existing rental licensing law in 2005.
That ordinance grants a license, free of charge, and ranks properties in three tiers based on best practices. But there are no set inspections and problems surface only if there are complaints.
In the case of Country Village, it wasn't until firefighters responded to a fire there that residents started coming forward with problems.
The proposed changes call for fire code inspections of common areas annually and a broader inspection of each rental unit every three years.