Vilnius resident collides with detective due to huge electricity bills: electricity supplier files for bankruptcy, housing manager ignores it Business



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Reader Lisa bought an apartment in a house marked 49A Pramonės Street in Vilnius. This building is a former Soviet factory that was later privatized.

It is equipped with apartments and various companies are located on the ground floor of the building.

Lisa says she has been living in the 20-square-meter apartment since June.

“During quarantine, I work from home and use a computer. I cook very rarely because I am lazy to do so. I also rarely wash because I go with my parents. There really are not many appliances in the home,” 15 minutes said the reader.

Photo by Julius Kalinskas / 15min / Renovated building Pramonės str. 49a

Photo by Julius Kalinskas / 15min / Renovated building Pramonės str. 49a

Despite the fact that every month you see several hundred kilowatt-hours on your electricity bills.

In January, for example, Lisa’s cost was 402 kilowatt-hours and she paid just over € 152 for electricity. This accounted for the majority of the utility bills that he had paid at the time.

“It is not realistic,” he said.

He received replicas about the grass that is being cultivated.

As soon as she starts receiving similar electricity bills, the woman tries to find out why this is happening.

She explains after spending months communicating with the housing manager, My Housing.

It is this company that provides Pramonės st. The owners of Apartments 49A and other premises have electricity bills and the meters themselves are not available to residents.



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