
13 November 2018 | 65 replies
What kind of environmental do you need to do to make sure the old gas station site is clean?

12 December 2016 | 52 replies
I've seen on the tax sale list and people bought them: side of a cliff land at bottom of man made lake land on Army bombing range House torn down in 1972 on lease land, only the house was for sale land under railroad tracks sliver of land too small to do anything with environmental problems even super fund site, if you don't know what the super fund is look it up, its not good and certainly not super.
4 April 2014 | 10 replies
In California we have very strict environmental standards that, depending on the location of the property, can add time to projects getting the necessary approvals, etc.

25 June 2014 | 73 replies
I used to work for an environmental company and we charge close to $5k for a Phase I.

22 September 2014 | 8 replies
Mostly, I would stick with residential...although under the right circumstances, I might consider an office or retail property (industrial areas and industrial properties carry a lot of environmental risk and probably best avoided) That is my 2 cents.

17 April 2014 | 11 replies
Environmental phase one, site inspection, and cost reserve stable will cost some money a few grand or more.

20 April 2014 | 7 replies
I am very conscious of my credit score which is very good to excellent.All scenarios I envision is losing this home, AND my credit score will drop.My goal is to keep my credit intact.

23 November 2011 | 8 replies
The hacks from the environmental company teaching the class I took, the poor 2 guys raking in 4k for an 8 hour class, summed it up by saying anything under a scenario like this, a for-profit engagement, would be bound by the rules, of course consistent with the other nuances mentioned above.

25 January 2012 | 21 replies
A class I took years ago for special education talked about four stages of learning: 1. unconsciously incompetent - don't know that you don't know 2. consciously incompetent - now you know that you don't know it 3. consciously competent- can do it, and can explain it 4. unconsciously competent- been doing it right for so long, cannot fathom doing it wrongMost learning occurs in stage two, the best teachers are in stage three.

1 January 2012 | 2 replies
They should be able to do this pretty easily.If this is going to take too long (on the lender's side), just call and explain the situation, and I'm sure than can offer a workable solution.That said, I'm pretty security conscious when it comes to protecting my SS#, and I wouldn't have an issue with giving it to an attorney for a real estate closing.