
26 February 2017 | 6 replies
There is a major university within 2-3 miles, 3 major medical centers within the same distance, downtown is <2 mi away.

15 February 2017 | 35 replies
I agree they have higher earned income, but financial intelligence is not taught in law school or medical school.

24 February 2017 | 8 replies
Medical office you might hit a 7 cap there.

2 February 2017 | 20 replies
I've had it rezoned to O-1.Zoning says they want to see a Medical Office Bldghere, but my parcel is only 1.3 acres.Medical needs parking of 4 spaces/ 1000 SqFt It's too expensive to do underground parking OR a parking deck.I'd like to do a 2 story 18,000 Sq Ft bldgand that's 72 surface parking spaces.I'm thinking of opening up to the adjoining MF parcel to share their parking ( if zoning will allow aMF&O-1 zoning codes to share parking).I'm thinking of offering a brick wall to the 4 residential houses( that border my parcel on the right side) in exchange for them deeding over15' at the far end of their backyards(aka creating setbacks)ANY other ideas?????

23 January 2017 | 8 replies
Just dropped from $68,000 to $30,000 due to a family medical emergency.

7 January 2016 | 14 replies
I was an Emergency medical professional for 26 years.

9 November 2015 | 4 replies
I researched using Redfin and some areas which seem to have high numbers of home sales are the medical center, areas near UTSA or other universities, areas along 1604, as well as anything near our military bases.

3 July 2015 | 73 replies
I have 10,000 in medical bills that are scattered to collection agencies...

24 September 2016 | 11 replies
SBA's regulations on leasing require that the small business occupy at least 51% of the rentable property if the 504 project is for an existing building and at least 60% of the rentable property (with the intent to move into at least an additional 20%) if the 504 project is new construction.Eligible Borrowers: For-profit, non-publicly traded businessesTangible business net worth (including affiliates) not to exceed $15 millionAverage net income of the business not to exceed $5 million over the previous two yearsOwnership must generally be comprised of 51% U.S. citizens or Legal Permanent Residents (some exceptions apply)Examples of Property Types Fountainhead Finances:Medical offices or medical facilities (such as labs and clinics)Office buildings (including office condos)Warehouses (and other industrial properties)Day care facilities (for children or adults)Free-standing restaurantsLimited-service, flagged hotels (some unflagged destination hotels will be considered)Auto repair shopsAssisted-living facilitiesCall to ask about many other property types that are eligibleIneligible Borrowers: Non-profits (except sheltered workshops)Passive holders of real estate and/or personal propertyLending institutions (mortgage brokers and correspondent lenders are eligible)Life insurance companies (franchised agents are eligible)Businesses located in a foreign countryBusinesses selling products or services through a pyramid planGambling concernsBusinesses which restrict patronageGovernment owned entities (excluding Native American tribes)Consumer and marketing cooperatives (producer cooperatives are eligible)Businesses engaged in loan packagingBusinesses that have previously defaulted on a Federal loanBusinesses engaged in political or lobbying activitiesIneligible Use of Funds: Working capitalInventoryRolling stockBusiness “good will” or “blue sky”