
2 September 2007 | 5 replies
Safety and Security are ALWAYS the number one concern of tenants, and they should be yours as well.

8 September 2007 | 0 replies
Too many invested right past the “line of safety.”

3 October 2007 | 5 replies
However if the seller cannot get his credit in check and align himself to buy back his property, I will simply throw it on the market.Keep in mind the original safety net is 75 percent of the value at the buy in price, this is Southern Californian RE, the price will almost never drop so drastically in that short amount of time.

24 October 2007 | 13 replies
This would increase safety and with college students there's no telling what kind of bonfire they might build.

13 May 2011 | 37 replies
For most people, that can be accomplished on a $100K income (or even less).In my personal experience, making $100K/year working 4 hours/week isn't too difficult when you are good at automating, systematizing, prioritizing, batching, outsourcing and delegating -- all things that are covered in the book.If you're looking to get independently wealthy working 4 hours/week, this book won't be able to help you with that...but then again, it doesn't purport to...
25 October 2007 | 4 replies
They don't understand that the city will probably take care of this safety issue when they can, and that they (Board)can, if that fails, get a court order beforehand which would protect the association.

11 December 2007 | 22 replies
Granted they get a cut, but at the same time it gives me the safety that I am dealing with someone who knows everything necessary in the area I plan on buying real estate.

13 January 2008 | 6 replies
I understand the smoke detector thing... many insurance companies have specific requirements and inspections for safety and liability reasons etc.

31 May 2008 | 33 replies
The top safety latch was latched - so you can imagine what that meant.

17 April 2008 | 41 replies
It acted as a "safety net" that I knew was there, but never needed.Educate yourself and your wife.