You need to ventilate the area before you end up dead
Get a letter send a professional courtesy to have the issue address this way you will have legal recourse if something happened
Call the department of health if one tenant ended up moving it must be some other source of carbon monoxide poisoning
Get a carbon monoxide detection alarm. They don't cost much and when it goes off you call 911 and run for the door. The fire department will show up and that will start the process that will get your landlord to fix the issue. Once the fire department gets involved... they will fix it.
They can "say" the landlord knows about it all they want to but if a proper maintenance request was never submitted & there is no paper proof the landlord knows about it you will have no case.
Get PGE to red tag the line, submit a proper work order, then you have a case if they still refuse to address the problem.
First you need to get PG&E to red tag the gas line. They are saying there isn't a leak no one will do anything.
Once it is tagged you can move out.
carbon monoxide detection
About three weeks ago we found out that our stove had a high level of carbon monoxide and we had PG&E come fix the leak the same day...or so we thought. We kept smelling fumes of some sort and we were feeling really tired, lightheaded and nauseas.We called PG&E this morning and they had a different guy come out as the other one we got numerous times kept saying nothing was wrong. Well we found out there was a high level of CO again. The thing is my complex knew about the problems our stove was having and never replaced it according to both matenance guys. They have tried to tell both the managers and property owners and they haven't done anything about it. What can I do and who can I get in touch this. I want to add that a women from another unit had to find somewhere to stay because the CO leak in her unit was so bad.