
13 April 2017 | 2 replies
@Rob RoyYou probably have this worked out by now, but for future reference...I am retired Navy and my tax practice caters to military families - so I've seen quite a few tax returns from uniformed personnel.

28 June 2017 | 1 reply
Pennsylvania, for example, has a uniformity clause that raises a lot of issues that investors and municipalities in other states do not need to worry about.

24 January 2022 | 3 replies
@Erik NordgaardPretty much every appraiser is going to base the value of the property by things such as square footage, bedroom, bathroom count, floorplan functionality, views, condition, and home amenities (pools, finished basement/attic), garage, and location.Here is a link to the Uniform Residential Appraisal Report.

19 January 2022 | 5 replies
If any are missing or damaged I'll replace them (and perhaps the rest in the room to make it look uniform) but after that would anyone really notice if the baseboards in one bedroom are different than another?

7 February 2022 | 10 replies
I've tried chatting with a few appraisers on the phone just pick their brains and understand what they're looking for, but it really on makes things worse as there doesn't seem to be any kind of true uniformity in appraising as it ultimately relies on the opinions of humans and desktop appraisal only rely on data and not what can be seen by the human eye.

16 February 2022 | 5 replies
I had been a realtor my entire time as a soldier as well so I knew the job, however, really benefited from the full time days outside of uniform.

26 February 2022 | 2 replies
The Auction.com area had employees with brightly colored matching uniforms along with a branded pop-up tent and tables for paperwork.

28 March 2022 | 13 replies
Other bay area cities are smaller, less variance in crime, and uniformly low caps with less inventory per city.

20 March 2022 | 0 replies
However, it granted her request for a declaratory judgment that the contract was void and illegal based on its violation of the Georgia Uniform Securities Act.That act, like its federal counterpart, prohibits the sale of unregistered securities.

2 October 2022 | 11 replies
@Luke Chen85/15 rule or 80/20 rule are certainly an incorrect approach - UNLESS you apply it to a specific and uniform geographical area where a particular ratio is commonly accepted.