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23 April 2019 | 8 replies
I can give you more podcasts and books recommendations if interested.Also, keep in mind it’s a lot easier to get verbal (soft) commitments versus the actual (hard) ones!
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19 April 2019 | 9 replies
I run a non profit that helps people find work at no charge, maybe I can help.
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19 April 2019 | 7 replies
@William JenkinsDoesn't sound like you would use financing for the contemplated investment of retirements, but if you did it would need to be non-recourse (either via a Solo 401k or SDIRA) and if done via an IRA subject to Unrelated Debt Finance Income tax.
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20 April 2019 | 7 replies
Also, when you get that big the loans become non recourse which is nice too.
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21 April 2019 | 6 replies
@Ian Ippolito great point on judicial/non-judicial.
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19 April 2019 | 2 replies
I am helping some friends with their non-profit organization that provides a place for families to stay while visiting someone at the local university.
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8 May 2019 | 21 replies
.), but I have had some real challenges such as just yesterday had a tenant OD (and pass away) in a unit, as well as not one but two kidnappings last summer, a tenant who’s son got shot in the face in the parking lot, some stabbings, countless fights and arguments and cops at the building and of course the missed rent payments (tenant portion of course which is only $50-100), and much higher turnover rate than my non-section 8 units just because folks who can’t afford rent generally have less stable lives and move/ are involved in crime/ go to jail/ fall off the wagon/ have incidents of domestic violence/ revert to homelessness etc. more often than other tenant classes.
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30 April 2019 | 4 replies
Section 8 tenants are a lot like non-8 tenants in that some will respect your property and some won't.
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19 April 2019 | 2 replies
If they did have such a list (they don't'), that list would only be useful if it contained personal, non public information on a borrower's payment/financial history, which would be illegal.
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30 April 2019 | 2 replies
I like the class functions they you could segregate costs by unit, building, and even geographic locations, such as NY vs MA, through the use of classes, subclasses, down 10 levels.At the same time, I also did accounting on the side for a government funded non profit that that I use classes to segregate funding sources.