In short, no. According to state law, a landlord cannot shut off utilities without agreement from the tenant unless there is an emergency, repair or construction.
“We fear a repeat of two years ago,” Paul Meisler, president of Pioneer Beck, wrote. To be"cautions
“A preemptive measure does not count as an emergency. Your infrastructure is supposed to be able to [handle that],” Jacob said. “If there’s a major rainstorm coming, the landlord can’t be like, ‘You can’t be in the house because your roof is going to leak.’”
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