Alexandra Hansil
MOLD & Water Damage Nightmare!
27 March 2019 | 14 replies
I just don't think I should be liable for their furniture or clothes and especially any health issue since I had no control of the situation.
Chris Seveney
What will you do differently in 2023?
29 December 2022 | 7 replies
A few things we will do differently in 2023: - we will close the capital raise for our Integrity Income Fund (performing/re-performing fund);- we will have a new bookkeeping team;- with acquisition of notes, we will be more strict in our search for equity (lower ITV) to protect downside risk for our investors;- our loan servicing company (BIFI) will have more loans to service as it continues to acquire additional state licenses;- I plan to focus more on my health and family than I did in 2022.-------- (and I agree that @John Underwood wins comment of the week)
Lana Nelson
Advice for disabled recently divorced person
10 September 2023 | 4 replies
This means her health insurance alone will cost about $1k/month from the quotes she has received.
Miles Goodwin
My intro to real estate "buying a crack house"
22 October 2022 | 6 replies
I eventually asked her what she knew about the house and she let me know who the owner was and that they bought it to fix it up but had health problems so they couldn't.
Chad Arnett
n00b in Salt Lake City, Utah
19 June 2018 | 4 replies
I work in digital marketing for a large health system here in Utah.
Rich Weese
"Retired at age 28 with a Lambo- " I just finished this thread.
30 May 2019 | 5 replies
Life is good, I wish you good health.
Kelsy White
New Member from Phoenix, AZ
10 July 2019 | 9 replies
I currently rent, but plan on purchasing a duplex or triplex next year.A little about me - I was an auditor for a CPA firm for almost three years, which consisted of working many late nights and weekends, until I suffered through an unexpected health issue and realized I didn't want to work my life away.
Jason Munger
"Buying" parents house...best strategy
15 February 2017 | 13 replies
What is their age and current health like?
Brittany King
How should I analyze a multi unit property?
14 February 2017 | 6 replies
It is like having health insurance for your property...you pay an annual premium (say $600)...and you pay a "co-pay"/service call fee (say $75) when something breaks and they send a contractor to fix it.
Katrina Razavi
Best practices for SF renovation projects?
18 March 2017 | 8 replies
Normally used on 203(k) renovation mortgages (eg, where you are financing the reno costs), but just like a cash buyer can still hire an appraiser of their choosing if they wish, someone doing renovations with cash can hire a HUD Consultant if they wish.Given your goals, they will walk the property and give you a work write up of everything required to do it fully compliant with all federal, state, and city, rules and regs (permits, zoning, health/safety, you name it).