
22 April 2016 | 10 replies
I guess the other sign of hope is that the provincial government has another consultation exercise about allowing private bailiffs to enforce court orders such as evictions, or alternatively setting up a designated administrative authority to do this that would be self funded by fees.

26 November 2018 | 41 replies
Here's what I've listened too so far.http://realestateguysradio.com (generic real estate podcast)http://www.richdad.com (rich dad poor dad, cashflow quadrant, 2 other audio books)http://www.thenorrisgroup.com (real estate notes)http://michaelquarles.com/author/michael/ (http://www.yellowletters.com (Whole tailing)http://www.biggerpockets.com (real estate podcast with niche guests)http://www.thelandgeek.com (buy and sell raw land, finance land notes for passive income)http://www.amazon.com/Think-Grow-Rich-Napoleon-Hil...

23 April 2016 | 4 replies
You get him or her peeved, and the agent will tattle to some authority, and you'll have to be called in to explain yourself.

24 April 2016 | 9 replies
You need to be authorized to encapsulate, in which there is a process...but paint is not an encapsulant.

24 April 2016 | 4 replies
Well the author and you have misinterpreted what HUD's new guidelines are.

27 April 2016 | 10 replies
Landlords can and do get in trouble for that sort of thing.If the homeowner really wanted to pursue this, this first step would be determining if there's a statute that authorizes some kind of treble damages or attorney fees.

26 April 2016 | 9 replies
A credit data aggregator does sell this data to authorized entities under a permissible use agreement.

2 May 2016 | 5 replies
John, sure enough, once I found a lawyer she brought all the other players to the table (including the surveyor, Dave).Virgilio, I did a lot of reading to and was happy to see that most of the prominent real estate-centric authors use similar math for valuing deals.

26 April 2016 | 9 replies
@Nick Brubaker, I downloaded an application straight from my city's housing authority and it specifically asks how long the tenant expects to live there, so I think (at least in NY) it must be a legally allowed question.
21 September 2019 | 4 replies
Check with the authority having jurisdiction (Fire Dept/inspections) for what edition of the life safety code, and fire code they go by.