Tony Tomasek
Official BiggerPockets Discussion of House Bill (HR) 1728
20 June 2009 | 54 replies
fa=PAGE.view&pageId=100679have FAR more impact on your freedoms than any change to owner financing rules.Just sayin'.
Account Closed
Texas Prop. Tax; No State tax?
5 July 2009 | 4 replies
How does this impact the higher Property Tax rate in conjunction/comparison to other states?
Cory Bray
US BILL TTHAT WILL MAKE IT ILLEGAL TO OWNER FINANCE
22 November 2011 | 2 replies
Unfortunately, owner financing gets caught up in the dragnet, and the impact could be devastating.
Jeff Tumbarello
More Knee jerk legislation
12 June 2009 | 2 replies
Call your federal Representatives and Senators today and tell them how the HVCC is impacting your business and ask them to help repeal the HVCC.
Daniel Hart
HOA struggling financially, can't foreclose on over-financed units, need opinions...
18 September 2009 | 32 replies
If the community looks like crap, it's going to impact values.
Ashan D
Enforcing Contracts via Late Penalties
22 July 2009 | 7 replies
Completion date shall be adjusted for change orders as agreed between Contractor and Client.make sure you get a lawyer to review any contract you put together as your local laws will impact what you can and can not legally bind a person/company to.
Stacy Dieckman
I want to join a GURU group, who should I join?
16 June 2010 | 13 replies
Rules and laws are changing quickly, I think there will soon be an impact on many of the startegies and products that can be spun in the future, watch who you hook up with.
Nick J.
Do you Paintball?
2 September 2009 | 10 replies
I've known situations where bigger guys like us are occasionally hit and the "insulation" actually absorbs the impact enough to cause the ball to bounce off without breaking.
Vikram C.
MH Park vs Apartment Building
27 September 2009 | 16 replies
So increasing the income or reducing the expenses has much more impact than the income on a mobile home note...
Timothy W.
"The Box" What would you do?
8 November 2009 | 11 replies
There is a principle who's name escapes me (referred to in Super Freakonomics) that when someone offers and insanely high amount of money for a ridiculously simple act - the risk of unintended consequences and their negative impact increases exponentially.