
10 December 2013 | 18 replies
They are fugal and aren't going to be allured into paying the top of the market because the kitchen has granite and cute little pendant lights over the island.3) Someone that maybe just has a great JOB and even though they have accumulated that much cash they are not necessarily all that investment savvy and would be more likely to use that as a big downpayment on a $600-800K+ house.4) Someone who has so much money that $200K is a drop in the bucket and will buy a much more expensive home either with financing or a lot more cash.Part of my "bias" is that $200K is actually a lower end price point in MA.

11 December 2013 | 6 replies
A real estate agent has been showing me some properties and I would like to know if there's someone at BP that could shed some light on this market.

10 December 2013 | 10 replies
I just went through my most costly eviction and the tenant is finally out and my pocket is light just over $3,500.

28 December 2013 | 21 replies
I'll just call them "festive" lights.

8 December 2013 | 10 replies
You can't really learn without doing IMO, but you may learn some aspects by videos, like wiring up a light switch or putting a door knob in, so I agree with Jon. :)

8 December 2013 | 13 replies
We dodged an expensive problem a little more than a year ago when an ESA on a multi-family brought to light two abandoned USTs (~1000 USG each), both of which likely still had residue oil in them {unless they had rusted through and leaked}.

11 February 2014 | 27 replies
Hopefully I've been able to shed some light on the other side.

4 September 2014 | 28 replies
That is very cheap, I don't think $250 covers the E&O per deal and a decent profit to keep the processor paid and lights on.

21 September 2020 | 31 replies
We all conserve energy by only using the lights in the common area when needed and turn off the a/c and heat once the last person leaves for the evening.