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    Tip of the Day: Improve neighbor relations via mediation

    Consumer Reports News: August 25, 2008 12:55 AM

    When I first moved to New York City, my upstairs neighbor used to play R&B all night, every night. It could have been worse (heavy metal, Lawrence Welk), but I suffered through many restless nights. Fortunately, I eventually moved. But the memory sticks, and it came back in Dolby sound during my reporting of "Neighbor Wars," from the September 2008 issue of Consumer Reports.

    Two themes emerged as I spoke with experts and homeowners around the country. First, there are a lot of neighbor disputes out there. Second, no matter how trivial the conflict, it causes serious stress for everyone involved. "When you own your home, you have a commitment to the people around you," Emily Doskow, a Berkeley, California-based attorney and co-author of Neighbor Law (Nolo Press, 2008), told me. "If you're having a conflict with, them it raises enormous quality-of-life issues."

    I was surprised to learn just how extensive a network exists for feuding neighbors. The industry term is mediation, and it involves a neutral third party helping neighbors settle their differences. The goal is to open the lines of communication, rather than say who's right or wrong.

    Mediators, many of whom are local volunteers, can be brought in at any stage of a dispute. "We like to say is ‘It's never to early, it's never to late, don't fight with your neighbor, mediate'," explains Lorig Charkoudian, executive director of Community Mediation Maryland, a nonprofit group that provides training to mediation centers. Today there are 400 community-based mediation centers nationwide; services are either free or on a sliding scale. Homeowners can also hire a private mediator, often an attorney who will charge higher fees but may be more familiar with the intricacies of the law than a community mediator.

    I wish I had known about mediation all those years ago, when the R&B reverberated through my floorboards each night. Who knows, maybe my neighbor and I would even have hit it off. At the very least, the mere thought of R. Kelly might not keep me up at night.—Daniel DiClerico

    Essential information: Read about another New York City neighbor dispute that was settled by an unexpected source of mediation, and see how trees are often the root causes of neighbor disputes.


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