14 March 2019 | 90 replies
The picture you posted is basically the same size as a single wide AND it has wheels.
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18 March 2019 | 3 replies
- this is a mess - after looking over the zoning plans for MY house ... the zoning plans don’t match my home , it says our driveway is in the front (it’s in the back) it says we have a patio (we do not) it also says we don’t have a crawl space under the house (we do) AND ALSO - it says our house of 16 feet wide - the crack begins at 16 feet 2inches ...I feel bullied and lied to by my city...
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1 March 2019 | 7 replies
Take your time, turn on the lights, and get multiple angles.
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1 March 2019 | 7 replies
Personally I want the top of my funnel wide and large.
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1 March 2019 | 10 replies
There could be several angles - denial and anger, embarrasment, or a willingness to sell to avoid the said foreclosure.
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4 March 2019 | 35 replies
Yes, I definitely want to consider all possible angles, including the negative!
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10 March 2019 | 50 replies
Well, its a done deal. Oregon just sent an ominous message to real estate investors. We are now the first state to incorporate mandatory statewide rent control with relocation fee's.What do you think this will do to t...
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6 March 2019 | 24 replies
Live in the house and then put a used double-wide on the other partial.
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11 June 2019 | 5 replies
They can give 30 days' notice if a sale similar to the earlier described is in the works.Tenants can still be evicted for cause; if, for example, they fail to pay rent or deliberately damage the unit.Rent increases limitedLandlords can only raise rents once a year for tenants, and when they do, rent increases are capped at 7 percent plus the yearly change in the consumer price index.The 7-percent plus CPI cap gives property managers wide latitude in raising rents each year, according to a Statesman Journal analysis.For instance, only once in the past decade have average rents for a 2-bedroom, 1-bath apartment built before 1990 in the Salem-Keizer area surpassed the cap adopted under SB 608, housing data shows.Properties built in the past 15 years are exempt from the 7 percent plus CPI limit, as are properties where landlords give reduced rents because of government subsidies or programs.The rules say landlords also have to adhere to the 7 percent plus CPI cap if they evict a resident without cause with 30 days' notice or serve an eviction notice within the first year of occupancy.Basically, landlords aren't allowed to evict tenants without cause and 30 days' notice just so they can raise rents past the limit.Landlords with four or fewer units still have to abide by the rent caps, according to Danny Moran, a spokesman for House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland.The bill isn't just geared toward apartments; single-family rental homes are also affected."
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7 March 2019 | 4 replies
My recommendation is to start with what is called a "top down analysis" which involves choosing an Metropolitan Statistical Area, then a sub-market within that MSA, then a specific multifamily product type and then you will work on choosing the correct property.Step 1: Analyze nation wide population, job, supply/demand and multifamily transaction trends in markets which you are interested in.