Archive for June, 2010

Martin Luther King, Jr. Quotes

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A genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus.

A lie cannot live.

A man who won’t die for something is not fit to live.

A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan.

All labor that uplifts humanity has dignity and importance and should be undertaken with painstaking excellence.

At the center of non-violence stands the principle of love.

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.
Martin Luther King, Jr.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Mortgages Can Help, Rather than Hinder, Finances

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By Dan Serra

RISMEDIA, June 28, 2010–(MCT)–While most financial-savvy consumers do their best to avoid debt, one debt that is unavoidable to many families is a mortgage. Because many of us feel more in control of our home and expenses without a mortgage, a common question is whether to pay it off as quickly as possible.

The answer depends on each person’s financial situation. A mortgage can actually be a blessing to some.

For example, mortgage interest is tax-deductible. This deduction saves taxpayers about $103 billion a year, according to the U.S. Treasury. The benefit is less to owners of low- to moderate-valued homes who may not have much interest or enough to claim it by itemizing deductions. But for families with a higher net worth, it allows a tax savings and may encourage them to buy larger homes.

With tax brackets for the wealthy rising next year, this tax break becomes more valuable. When the break is included, a 6 percent mortgage could have a rate closer to 4 percent in reality. Calculate your mortgage’s effective rate by subtracting your tax rate from 100 and multiplying that number by the interest rate. For example, a 28 percent tax bracket with a 6 percent mortgage would result in (.06 x 72) to equal the equivalent of a 4.32 percent mortgage rate after considering tax savings if itemized. That helps the interest look less daunting.

In addition, with the possibility of investing with a goal of a 5 or 6 percent return, instead of putting that money into a mortgage the homeowner could get a return higher than the effective rate, which could help grow net worth. On the other hand, if the effective rate is higher, it may make sense to pay down the mortgage.

Another situation that makes paying off a mortgage attractive is for someone at risk of bankruptcy. Many states offer protection from creditors seizing a home to pay debts. If a home is paid in full, it is more likely the owner could stay in it if he goes broke, providing he can pay for the upkeep.

Money taken out for a mortgage also could reduce net worth later in life. The potential for higher investment returns are gone; that money will not be able to grow if investments grow over the long term. Not to mention having too much invested in a house. That could be detrimental at retirement. While we can get a loan for a house, there are no loans to finance retirement.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Careful Planning Can Stretch a Thin Budget

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By Nirvi Shah

RISMEDIA, June 28, 2010–(MCT)–Jenny Camacho moved to South Florida in December, hoping the weather would be easier on her health than the frigid, snowy winters of New York and looking forward to living closer to two of her children.

She had spent four years working as a cook at a senior center in Brooklyn, fine-tuning her skills at preparing meals for people with special dietary needs. Despite the recession, she thought she would find a job in a region known as a snowbird and senior roost.

Jobless six months later, she had run up debt on her credit cards, trying to preserve some of her savings and still make ends meet. Camacho rents an apartment in Sunrise, Fla., with her youngest daughter, Priscilla.

But Camacho, 51, recently met with counselors from Sunrise-based American Debt Counseling after hearing them speak at Workforce One, a Broward County employment office. Ever since, she has stretched her budget enough that she hasn’t used her credit cards since April.

“Right now there is no income. They teach you how to control your spending,” Camacho said.

In this economy, it’s difficult to think about boosting credit scores, building savings or erasing debt. But it’s not impossible — and the recession may be just the right boost someone at any income level needs to brighten their financial picture, said Barbara Stark, director of community development and education for American Debt Counseling.

Her nonprofit company and several others in South Florida offer free advice and help to people in need of credit counseling and money management.

“There’s always hope,” Stark said. “It’s not a question of how much money you have. It’s how you manage it.”

For example, she said, the true cost of using a credit card can be really scary — if you know what that true cost is. A $50 dinner charged on a card with an interest rate of 22 percent can cost $2,500 paid over 20 years, she said.

“Once they begin to see they’re not earning any more money, yet they’re living a better life, it makes sense,” she said. “You should get help before you really need it, so you don’t get into a dire situation.”

In Camacho’s case, things were pretty dire by the time she requested help, said Andrea Mitchell, a certified credit counselor.

Mitchell talked to Camacho’s creditors, who agreed to lower the interest rates on her debt — a service that Camacho is paying for. Mitchell has helped Camacho find occasional work, including baby-sitting. And she counseled Camacho to rely on her family.

“She helped them and now they’re reciprocating,” Mitchell said. Camacho’s son also lives in Broward. “Jenny is very much a survivor. She came to me wanting to survive. There’s no other word to describe her.”

In addition, Mitchell came up with a spending plan for Camacho — who was already spending little more than for basic necessities.

MAKE A SPENDING PLAN: Knowing what your monthly expenses are is key, said Ellen Siegel, a certified financial planner in Miami.

Figure out how much money is coming in from every source: a paycheck, child support, alimony, social service agencies.

Then figure out what’s going out — fixed expenses, such as rent and a car payment; variable expenses, necessary items that aren’t a set amount each month, such as food and medical bills; and discretionary spending, things you don’t need, but want, such as a vacation, movie tickets, birthday presents.

“Too many people have no idea whatsoever where their money is going every month,” Stark said.

Siegel, a member of the Financial Planning Association of Miami-Dade, is a volunteer with the group’s new Money 101 program, which offers services at the United Way of Miami-Dade’s new Center for Financial Stability in Hialeah.

She takes the idea of building a spending plan one step further.

“How do we get into trouble? Money’s not real,” Siegel said. It’s in the form of a credit card, debit card, check or bank balance.

Once a month, she cashes a check and puts the cash into different envelopes for the month’s expenses — gas, groceries, clothing, rent or mortgage payment, utilities and an emergency fund, a must for everyone, no matter their net worth.

“That’s a very, very powerful strategy,” Siegel said. It shows how far your money goes — or doesn’t.

KEEP YOUR CREDIT CARDS: When someone is in debt, it may be tempting to cut up credit cards so they can’t be used to accumulate more debt, Siegel said.

While that sounds like a good idea, those credit cards may be needed at some point.

Her suggestion: Put them in a plastic bag and put the bag in a cup of water. Put the whole thing in the freezer.

“If the car blows up and you have to use your credit card, you can,” she said. Any time the cards are needed, it will take patience to use them. They’ll have to be thawed — and slowly, since microwaving the frozen cards would melt them.

“You can’t just be hungry, angry, lonely or tired and go shopping.”

Building a good credit history and improving a credit score actually requires having some debt, or a history of paying off debt regularly, Stark said. And credit cards held for a long time are good for a credit score.

Although Camacho isn’t using her credit cards anymore, she’s still making payments each month.

“We got them to lower the interest rate so much so that she was able to make a minimum payment,” Mitchell said. It’s low, but not so low that Camacho will be paying off her debt forever. She should be able to pay off the debt she has now in five years or less.

One financial guru’s philosophy is to line up every bill in size order. Pay the minimum on every bill. Whatever money is left over should be used to pay off the smallest bill.

The advice isn’t typical — many financial planners would suggest putting more toward the bill with the highest interest rate, Siegel said, but faith-based financial expert Dave Ramsey’s method offers a sense of accomplishment.

LOOK AT CREDIT REPORT: Credit reports are free. But that doesn’t mean people are looking at them, said Angelo Gonzalez of Miami Saves, who is director of the Economic Independence Program at the nonprofit Cuban American National Council.

“We encourage people to look twice a year,” he said. “We’re lucky if they pull it once every five years.”

The only truly free reports — that don’t require signing up for any additional services — are at annualcreditreport.com. Beware of impostor sites that prey on people who misspell the website.

The reports don’t include scores, however. Those must be purchased.

The reason to look at the reports: Find errors, forgotten debts and fraud — and start fixing the problems, Gonzalez said.

That is, if you can tell what they are. “The other challenge is, have you ever looked at your credit report? It’s like reading Greek. A credit report is useless unless you know how to read it,” he said. “We’ll hold a workshop and go item by item.”

While all of his organization’s services are free, they can also pull credit reports — one from each bureau — for about $13.

SEARCH FOR SAVINGS: They also teach a variety of courses and offer suggestions on how to stretch a limited budget.

Some ideas are more obvious than others, he said, such as buying more fruits and vegetables and less meat and seafood to lower food bills.

Partnering with another family while shopping may also cut costs: Buy in volume at a wholesale store and divvy up the items.

“You end up saving a lot of money. People get that. That resonates more than putting $10 in a savings account,” he said.

Negotiate with everyone, Siegel said, even if you think someone won’t budge on the price.

“If there’s a doctor bill, if there’s a car bill, just ask. Say, ‘I need some consideration. What can you do for me?’ ” Siegel said. “The world is sympathetic now. Everybody is feeling it.”

FIND MORE INCOME: Consider renting out a room in your home — to someone you trust — to bring in more income, Gonzalez said, and be sure to have the renter sign a lease agreement.

And don’t think collecting unemployment means you can’t work, he said. The income must be declared, but if you can find suitable part-time work, take it. Camacho’s youngest daughter, Priscilla, 19, is working part-time and Camacho is willing to take any job, even if it doesn’t involve working in a kitchen.

Whatever someone’s situation, there’s a way out.

Linda Eads, founding principal of MAST Academy, recently created the Youth and Family Financial Literacy Institute in Miami-Dade. The nonprofit’s aim is to teach financial literacy in schools and families — and, she hopes, prevent some of the situations people have found themselves in during this recession.

“As I matured, I realized, ‘Wow, I can do so much more with this if I would budget even better,’ ” Eads said. “No matter how old you are, you can change your ways.”

Jenny Camacho agrees — although she said she doesn’t have the money to pay her bills beyond the end of June.

“Everything is going to come out OK. We’re going to survive with whatever we have,” she said. “Sometimes you struggle but something better comes out on the other side.”

(c) 2010, The Miami Herald.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Solar Survivor Touts New Loan Program for Homeowners

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By Steve Gelsi

RISMEDIA, June 25, 2010–(MCT)–For decades, the push for solar power has stalled not on public support, but on cost. That might be about to change with the launch of a unique tax program that’s exciting some industry veterans.

Gary Garber is one. Garber built his first solar panels from scratch back in 1976. They went up on his parents’ roof top in nearby Walnut Creek, Calif. Today he runs Sun Light & Power, a 60-employee solar panel installation firm that’s been behind some of the San Francisco Bay Area’s biggest solar power arrays.

Like many other “alternative” industries, solar energy has gradually gone mainstream, scaling up operations, driving down costs — even partnering with local governments to promote renewable energy.

Yet it still generates less than 1 percent of the nation’s electricity. Why? Because a typical residential system’s $25,000 price tag is a huge hurdle for most homeowners.

Clearing that hurdle is the main mission behind an effort gaining momentum around the country called Property Assessed Clean Energy, or PACE. It allows people to borrow money from municipalities for energy efficiency upgrades and pay it back through their property taxes.

Gerber said the key to the program’s success is that energy savings paid for by PACE can be used to offset those higher property taxes.

“Let’s say you replace your $100 utility bill with a $100 a month payment to your property taxes — it’s pretty close to a wash,” said Gerber, who also serves as president of the California Solar Energy Industries Association. “And if it isn’t a wash this year, then two or three years from now it will be, because energy costs are going up.

“You’re basically saying, ‘I’m going to pay the same amount for energy for the next 20 years. I’m going to peg my energy cost to today’s costs.’ That’s pretty compelling.”

PACE was launched in 2007 as a pilot project hatched by Cisco DeVries, a former assistant to the Berkeley mayor. When the Berkeley test took off, states began passing legislation to allow municipalities to create their own programs. DeVries now works as president of Renewable Funding LLC, a private company that helps cities start PACE programs.

At last count, 19 states have passed PACE legislation, including California, Florida, Texas, New York, Massachusetts and Maine.

Some local governments, such as Sonoma County, Calif., in the San Francisco metro area, and Boulder, Colo., have set up PACE programs on their own. Sonoma’s is called Sonoma County Energy Independence Program.

Santa Rosa, Calif., resident Ed Smith said he heard about the county program a few months ago at a local home improvement show and decided give it a try.

Smith had 32 solar panels installed on his home at a cost of about $5,000, including a discount for being among the program’s first participants.

He figures his property taxes rose $100 a month while his electric bill has dropped as much as $300 a month over the past four months.

“It’s been totally fantastic,” Smith said. “We’d been wanting to do something green. I’ve been recommending it to my neighbors. It would be a great thing for schools to do since they have flat roofs that catch a lot of sun. Plus school districts need to save money.”

John Haig, Sonoma County energy and sustainability manager, said there was a surprisingly strong response to its version of the PACE program. Its energy improvement loans charge 7 percent interest and participants can choose to pay them off in 5, 10 or 15 years.

So far, Sonoma County has been paying about $2 million a month for energy improvement projects. Haig said the money has helped local contractors withstand a slowdown in residential construction.

Sonoma County initially put up the money for the loans, but plans to issue bonds or other debt instruments backed by property owner payment schedules.

“The appeal of the program is inherent in the financing model,” Haig said. “It provides an ability of people to get over the first cost hurdle, which is what stops many people from doing these sorts of projects, and allows them to keep the financing with the property should they happen to sell it.

“They don’t have to feel like they’re going to have to pay for a solar array that they’re leaving in the home in five years, because it stays with the property and the next person picks up the cost,” Haig said.

Wayne Seaton, head of the sustainable public infrastructure group within Wells Fargo Securities’ government & institutional banking unit, said his group has been helping municipalities set up the necessary financing.

“Our role would be to enable municipalities to acquire funding mechanisms for PACE programs and to arrange for cost-effective financing,” Seaton said. “As PACE evolves, we’re confident you will see financing mechanisms coming to the marketplace including bonds.”

Berkeley Mayor Tom Gates said his city is planning to pool resources with several other communities under a program called California First to relaunch its PACE program this year, three years after the pilot program.

“We’re really happy that this is one of the programs that got started in Berkeley, and it’s just taken off like wildfire,” he said. “We found that as good as the program was, you actually need to go to scale.”

Banding together with other communities will help cut administrative costs, he said.

“This is actually a free-market approach, believe it or not, that started in Berkeley; a free-market approach to take solar and make it go all over the United States,” Gates said. “It’s all done through lenders putting up the bonds and placing it on the property. So it’s a good mechanism that’s shown it can travel.”

Solar panel installer Gerber said other issues also need to be worked out, such as keeping interest rates low and assuring that contractors are paid promptly.

In the wake of the real estate crash, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which guarantee many U.S. mortgages, are taking a close look at PACE loans. Some are wary of a program that would increase debt levels while home prices continue to drop.

“It’s got all the right economics to take off in a huge way and then cause huge losses,” David Felt, a retired senior Federal Housing Administration lawyer, told The Wall Street Journal recently. “When you’re able to market to people who can’t get financing for an ordinary home-equity loan, that should set off alarm bells.”

Gates said borrowers must have a good credit rating and equity in the home to qualify. He said the federal government could guarantee PACE bonds and help keep interest rates lower.

Shortly after Ronald Reagan won the presidency in a 1980 landslide, the solar panels installed by Jimmy Carter came down from the White House and the nascent solar business went from a new hero of the energy business to a near-zero.

Over the next 15 years, a period of cheap fuel prices and little government support, Gerber figures 95 percent of California’s solar businesses went bust. But he hung in there.

“I had found what I loved to do,” said Gerber, who kept busy servicing existing solar water heaters and construction projects. “It didn’t even occur to me to stop doing this.”

Toughing it out paid off for Gerber as the nation gradually turned its attention to achieving energy independence and lower greenhouse gas emissions. These policy shifts — and higher fuel prices—brought the solar installation business roaring back.

A nationwide solar tax credit now allows home owners to deduct up to 30 percent of the cost of their solar panels from their taxes, a program Congress has extend to 2016.

In addition, California and many other states require power companies to pay home and business owners for surplus power generated by solar panels through a program called net metering. That gives solar power owners the thrill of seeing their electric meters run in reverse as their surplus power flows onto the grid.

Meanwhile, utilities such as Pacific Gas & Electric Corp., California’s biggest electricity provider, have been investing heavily in solar and wind power to meet strict state-imposed renewable energy requirements.

Another boost comes from power-purchase agreements in which home owners and businesses buy electricity produced by solar panels owned by someone else. This approach is being championed by solar-power company SolarCity.

The Solar Energy Industry Association, the industry’s national lobbying group, is promoting an investment tax credit to defray solar panels’ manufacturing costs.

These and other programs helped U.S. solar power capacity jump 37 percent last year, according to the SEIA.

Yet Gerber said the industry still needs subsidies to compete with fossil fuels, which already receive ample government support.

“We’re getting to what we call grid parity, with the … cost of solar energy getting closer and closer to the standard cost of conventional fuels, which are subsidized,” he said. “If we took those incentives away for oil and coal and nuclear, solar would win right now.”

Incentives or not, solar energy continues to draw support from non-profits, businesses and individuals seeking looking to generate electricity with few environmental risks.

In one of its high-profile projects, Gerber’s company installed a 66-kilowatt solar panel array from SunPower Corp. at Berkeley’s David Brower Center, a large facility housing nonprofit groups and other tenants. The Web site for the building features real-time data on the amount of electricity being generated.

Amy Tobin, executive director of the center, provided a quick tour of the roof on a recent cloudy day and said that people often ask to see the solar panels.

“It’s amazing,” she said. “Look … it’s raining and we still have energy being generated by these panels on the roof.”

Gerber said he’s happy to see solar becoming more mainstream, but still laments the years when America mostly turned its back on solar power.

“We have a technology that, if we had stayed on the right trajectory, we would not be talking about the energy crunch that we’re looking at today,” he said.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Avoiding Predatory Lending

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When shopping for a mortgage loan, homebuyers need to be aware of predatory lending practices. These unscrupulous activities can increase the cost of homeownership and rob the borrower of equity in the home. Many predatory practices are illegal.

Predatory lenders may mislead the borrower about the true cost of a mortgage loan, fail to provide legally required disclosure documents or add unexpected, unnecessary and excessive costs at settlement.

Unethical lenders may involve borrowers in mortgage fraud by asking the borrower to provide false information on the loan application or leave important line items blank on the application. Fraud can also involve inflated home appraisals and the misuse of mortgage funds.

The best protection against predatory lending and mortgage fraud is to shop around for a mortgage loan. Ask questions and get explanations so that you have a complete understanding of the loan. Be sure you know the total borrowing cost over the life of the loan.

Fannie Mae works to promote responsible lending and combat predatory lending and mortgage fraud. We want people to buy homes they can afford over the long term. We do this by:

  • Offering home mortgage products through lenders that make home buying affordable and sustainable for borrowers.
  • Supporting homebuyer education and counseling. Counselors and other housing professionals use our free Home Counselor Online™ tool as a resource to help consumers prepare for, apply for and receive home loans — as well as provide the post-purchase support necessary to remain successful homeowners.
  • Providing consumers with home-buying information through Fannie Mae’s Resource Center
    at 1-800-7FANNIE (732-6643).

High-pressure sales tactics, including pressure to act quickly, can be signs of predatory lending. Deals that appear to be too good to be true generally are just that — too good to be true.

Fannie Mae

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Warren Buffett Quotes

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FORT WORTH, TEXAS - NOVEMBER 3:   A retired pa...

A public-opinion poll is no substitute for thought.
Warren Buffett

Beware of geeks bearing formulas.
Warren Buffett

Chains of habit are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to be broken.
Warren Buffett

Derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction.
Warren Buffett

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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4 Fannie Mae Options to Avoiding Foreclosure

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If you want to stay in your home, but you had trouble paying your mortgage and are now behind with your payments. There are options available to help you stay in your home.

Refinance:

A new loan—with new terms, interest rates and monthly
payments—that completely replaces your current
mortgage. Even if your home value has decreased, you may
be able to refinance your loan as part of the government’s
Home Affordable Refinance Program (HARP).
• Make your payment more affordable by lowering your
interest rate or adjusting the terms of your loan
• No negative impact to credit score
• Stay in your home and avoid foreclosure

Repayment Plan:

An agreement between you and your mortgage company
that lets you pay the past due amount on your mortgage
payments over a specifed time period in order to bring
your mortgage up to date.
• Catch up on your past due payments over an extended
period of time
• Less damaging to your credit score than a foreclosure
• Stay in your home and avoid foreclosure

Forbearance:

An offer by your mortgage company to temporarily
suspend or reduce your monthly mortgage payments for
a specifed period of time.
• Have time to improve your financial situation and get
back on your feet
• Less damaging to your credit score than a foreclosure
• Stay in your home and avoid foreclosure

Modification:

An agreement between you and your mortgage company to
change the original terms of your mortgage—such as
payment amount, length of loan, etc. You may also be
eligible for the government’s Home Affordable Modification
Program (HAMP) created to help struggling homeowners.
• May reduce your monthly mortgage payments to a more
affordable amount
• Less damaging to your credit score than a foreclosure
• Stay in your home and avoid foreclosure

Download full Borchure

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Seven Ways To Cut Costs in the Home Office

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By Jeff Zbar, Onvia.com

RISMEDIA, June 21, 2010–Bootstrapping is a way of life for many in the home-office setting. With no corporate chief financial officer (CFO) to pay for the tools and hardware needed to run the business, cutting costs—without cutting corners—can help stretch the balance sheet.

Between start-up and daily operations, launching and sustaining a small business can be a constant battle. Look for savings by looking at everyday items to nip and tuck. From procuring hardware to getting the best telephone services at the right price, slice fractions off existing bills and lower the monthly nut.

Here’s a few other ideas:

1. Used-office-furniture stores or office-equipment leasing companies often have quality desks to sell at reduced prices; quality filing cabinets might be more difficult to find. Shop around for price and quality. Visit the local thrift or consignment shop and read the classified ads for sales, auctions and liquidations.

2. Know anyone in a business? Sometimes businesses preparing to upgrade their furniture would part with it cheaply.

3. No matter the savings, don’t buy your chair used. A good—and reasonably priced—ergonomic chair can be found at the office superstore or even a warehouse club for less than $200. Your body—and health insurer—with thank you with reduced strain and fewer visits to the orthopedist or chiropractor.

4. Hit a local retailer to find out when they’re going to replace their furnishings and displays, which often make good, sturdy office hardware (for bookshelves, storage areas and filing racks).

5. Monitor your use of long-distance calling, and invoice clients where appropriate (remember also to charge clients for the taxes related to the long-distance calls you made on their behalf). Call long-distance at off-peak times and enroll in long-distance-calling programs. Also remember that rates change frequently, so call the providers to get the best rate. Don’t be afraid to switch, or to threaten to in order to secure a better deal.

6. Also monitor energy consumption. Track and cut waste. Use auto-setback thermostats and automatic light switches. Savings can be dramatic.

7. Don’t order a “business” telephone or fax line for the home office. A residential telephone line can be one-fourth the cost of a “business” line and serve the same purpose. Also, call your phone company to see if you can bundle long-distance, cellular and even Internet access into one, less-expensive package. At the very least, you might be able to write one check at month’s end—instead of three.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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Prepare for the Hidden Costs of Homeownership

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RISMEDIA, June 17, 2010–June is National Homeownership Month. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) recognizes this month as a time to celebrate the American dream of owning a home. While record low interest rates and recent tax credits for first-time homebuyers have enticed many families to turn their dream of homeownership into a reality, the hidden costs of homeownership can sometimes catch families off guard. Preparing for the hidden costs of homeownership, especially for first-time homebuyers, is a wise financial move.

The financial experts at Money Management International (MMI) understand that knowledge is the key when investing in a home. It’s more than a place to live; it’s a financial asset, a place to raise a family, and an investment in the community. Below are tips for buying, maintaining, and protecting your largest asset.

Home insurance - Homeowner’s insurance often costs quite a bit more than renter’s insurance, because it covers the home, in addition to your personal property. Depending upon where you live, you may also need to purchase supplemental insurance for hurricanes, floors, tornados, earthquakes, and other natural disasters that are not covered under your standard policy.

Maintenance and repairs - Owning a home means that you are responsible for the upkeep. These costs can add up quickly, especially in an older home with older systems and appliances. Expect to spend some money on routine maintenance every year. Keeping an emergency fund for unanticipated repairs is also a smart idea. Keeping up with routine maintenance will help your home maintain its value.

Utilities - Prepare to spend some additional money on utilities, including water, garbage collection, heat, and electricity. With more space, it’s likely that even the bills you paid when you rented will be higher in your new home.

Homeowners’ association fees - Find out if you will have to pay homeowners’ association fees. Many communities have a homeowners’ association, commonly called an HOA. An HOA is typically tasked with maintaining common areas and enforcing deed restrictions. Membership in a community HOA is often mandatory and members are charged a monthly or annual fee.

Home furnishings - You’ll probably need, or at least want, to purchase furniture and decor items for your new home. Most people, when purchasing a new home, decide to paint, upgrade the decor, purchase new furniture, and buy new linens.

“When purchasing a new home, factor in these items to your total budget to make sure that you are completely financially prepared for homeownership, ” said Cate Williams, vice president of financial literacy for MMI. “By doing this, you’ll rest assured knowing that you are purchasing a home that you can comfortably afford.”

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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4 Baseball Picks for 6-18

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Colorado Rockies Statue of Liberty, promotion ...
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1st pick is the Colorado Rockies over the Brewers.

Hammel is having an average season so far with 4.53 ERA.  However Parra is having a rough time this year with a 1-4 record.  Colorado is not the place to work out kinks in your armor.

2nd  pick is the Cubs over the Angles

Silva 8-1 on the season with an Era under 3.

3rd pick is the Nationals over the White Sox

Floyd is off to a rough start being 2-7 with an 5.64 ERA while Strasburg is 2-0 with an 2.19 ERA

4th Pick is Twins over the Phillies

Blackburn is 6-3 with an 4.96 ERA while Blanton is 1-5 with an ERA over 7.

As a Reno/Sparks real estate professional, I encourage all questions and comments on the Reno/Sparks real estate market or any of the articles posted in this blog.  You can email me @  chance at ballard-company.com or http://www.myspace.com/chancegates

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