
13 November 2018 | 4 replies
Remember, HAs are government workers and most have vacation time they are using up at the end of the calendar year.

10 December 2018 | 50 replies
Hardest lesson learned:How much the government controls what you do with your property.

18 November 2018 | 10 replies
I have been talking with my mother who has been working civil service for the government for over 20 years.

13 November 2018 | 18 replies
@Tim Porsche yea the deal would be solid if I can eliminate at least the electricity and gas which goes 600$ a month for 4 units however I am not sure if the government would subsidize that the rent is already 950 per unit includes utilities

13 November 2018 | 0 replies
As greatful as I am to do what I love for a living I recently realized how little control one has over their future if the present is governed only by your clients needs and your ability to deliver on them.

11 January 2019 | 52 replies
The DC location had to do with proximity to government.

13 November 2018 | 2 replies
It is a daily challenge to navigate the local, county, state and federal governments; local Code Enforcement, Housing Authorities, Department of Real Estate, Franchise Tax Board, Secretary of State, IRS, Dept. of Fair Housing & Employment, HUD...to name a few.

14 November 2018 | 8 replies
@Robert BladeIn general, lenders want to see monthly housing debt of no more than 28%-33% of your income and total debt of no more than 38% of your income.The rental income should be ~80% supposedly your current rental income to account for vacancy etc, If you are government employees guarantee for perpetual income want to work another 10-15 years you can be a bit aggressive on total debt.
14 November 2018 | 9 replies
As a matter of fact that what the power of deferred taxes is - the power to use the governments money to grow from one to several - Kudos to you!!!
13 November 2018 | 2 replies
Scott shall not be considered active under the following circumstances: unemployed while seeking gainful employment, on disability from full time employment, retired from government employment, or other circumstances out of control and atypical to choosing to pursue his housing business endeavors as his sole source of primary income. 1.Should Scott choose to “actively” engage in housing as his source of employment as defined above, Scott agrees to give 25% (twenty five percent) of his net profits accrued from his active efforts during the period of marriage to wife in the case of a divorce.2.Payment of such percentage of funds shall be payable over 120 equal monthly payments, or equivalent to no greater than 10% of Scott’s New York State Adjusted Gross Income, verified annually with payments adjusted the 1st of November each year, whichever is less, to ensure no undue hardship to Scott or the business will be endured.