
14 August 2016 | 22 replies
As such, UBIT would not likely apply.On the other hand, if you were using an IRA to invest in non-performing notes where a key strategy was to foreclose and then resell the house, and that was the primary enterprise conducted on a regular basis, then UBIT could apply.The principal behind UBIT is that it is a tax designed to level the playing field for tax-paying businesses when tax exempt entities are directly competing with those businesses by engaging in commercial activities in a similar fashion as normal businesses in the field.

26 August 2016 | 17 replies
Change the name and put up a new sign, and also hang a banner that says "Under New Management" on it.

25 May 2017 | 0 replies
Wondering what your thoughts would be regarding a Virtual Project Management service to serve investors regarding: Estimating, Takeoffs, Permitting, Interior/Exterior Design Plans, Project Coordinating, Time Management, Receipt tracking, Light Bookkeeping( Payroll Included ), Communication, Daily photo sharing, Real-time Job progress tracking, Projected profits, Photo book creation, and overall daily tasks that can be done from a phone/mobile device or computer...Pretty much a complete Virtual Project Management Admin office...My Question: Any additional suggestions or topics that would be beneficial to your needs in which a virtual service could accommodate?

27 November 2016 | 11 replies
It depends on your level of comfort with your design.

7 May 2015 | 4 replies
Now I have learned my limits and will direct the homeless young family to the social services designed to help them.Social change is a very broad statement, as Bill Gulley !

23 January 2019 | 6 replies
These skills include graphic visualization and rendering, energy modeling, sustainable site management and building design, to name a few.
25 December 2016 | 20 replies
Also, FWIW, my wife is a graphic designer/architect and I'm pretty sure I would have heard about it sooner if we were living in the degree of squalor this bill indicates.

21 September 2009 | 33 replies
It's simply a scare tactic designed to prevent the victim from resisting.

24 June 2016 | 1 reply
(On a relevant note, our architects were able to design more SF in the final plan than what was originally presented to the buyer; the profits from the additional SF should more than cover the increased costs from the City's spec changes.)My questions are:Does the buyer have grounds to withhold closing?