DC Section 8 | DC DHCD | Your Opinion on Affordable Housing

September 9th, 2009

The Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) will hold a series of public hearings to provide District of Columbia residents the opportunity to express their opinions concerning affordable housing, special needs housing, homelessness and community development and public service activities in the District of Columbia over the next five years (fiscal years 2011 – 2015).

Public hearings are scheduled for –

  • Thursday, September 17, 2009 at 6:30 pm at 441 4th Street, NW inside of the Old Council Chamber
  • Wednesday, October 14, 2009 at 6:30 pm at 1800 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, SE inside of the DHCD Housing Resource Center; conference room
  • Wednesday, October 28, 2009 at 6:30 pm at 3939 Benning Road, NE inside of the Marshall Heights Community Development Organization
  • Thursday, November 19, 2009 at 6:30 pm at 2000 14th Street, NW; Reeves Center, 2nd floor conference room  

District of Columbia residents who would like to present oral testimony are encouraged to register in advance either by email at dhcdevents@dc.gov or by calling (202)442-7251.  Please provide your name, address, telephone number, and organization affiliation, if any. 

Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) relay service is available by calling (800)201-7165.  A sign language interpreter will be provided upon request by calling (202)442-7251 five days prior to the hearing date.

Residents who require language interpretation should specify which language (Spanish, Vietnamese, Chinese-Mandarin/Cantonese, Amharic, or French).  Interpretation services will be provided to pre-registered persons only.  Deadline for requiring services of an interpreter is five days prior to the hearing date.  Bilingual staff will provide services on an availability basis to walk-ins without registration.

Written statements may be submitted at the hearing, or until 4:45 pm on Friday, December 11, 2009, and should be addressed to — ATTN: Leila Finucane Edmonds, Director, Department of Housing and Community Development, 1800 Martin Luther King Jr., Avenue SE, Washington, DC  20020.

Real Estate Investing in the DC Metro Area | How to Get Deals Done

August 16th, 2009

How Deals are Getting Done in DC, Maryland, and Virginia (DMV)

No one Knows Real Estate Investing Better than Your Local Successful Real Estate Investor. 

Real Estate Investing

No disrespect to the national gurus out there, but there’s no way that they can intimately know the nuances of state, county, town and city markets like a local successful real estate investor.  With the large amount of opportunities popping up in our area, you want to hear about the techniques and successful tactics your local investors are incorporating to get deals done. 

DC VA MD Real Estate Investor/Agent

Keving Toston: DC VA MD Real Estate Investor/Agent

Kevin Toston is a veteran investor and real estate agent in DC, Maryland, and Virginia (DMV) with over ten years of experience.  He is committed to enhancing the lives and businesses of fellow investors and offers many free tips, tools, and resources to guide them to success.

You Can Get Deal None in the DMV

I picked the brain of this real estate agent and investor extraordinaire during a recent recorded interview.  Well worth listening to, Kevin reveals:

  • The county on which he focuses his investing efforts and the top five towns/cities in that county
  • Identifying the types of real estate agents that will submit large volumes of wholesale offers for you
  • What qualities he looks for in an investment property
  • What courses helped him most as an investor
  • How to develop your buyers list
  • Online and offline marketing techniques that work
  • Using video to advertise your investment deals

Check out the link below and let me know what you think.  Submit your comments to this blog as well as any ideas you may have for future interviews.

Real Estate Investing

Shawn E. Costley | Shawn.Costley@pierservicesgroup.com | www.PIERServicesGroup.com

HR 1728: Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act

June 14th, 2009

House Bill 1728

House Bill 1728 - Why it’s Death to Your Business and What to Do About it.

I don’t know if you’ve heard about HR 1728, but it’s a heinous infringement on private property rights that is likely to shut down the creative selling market.  IT HAS ALREADY PASSED THE HOUSE AND IS UNDER CONSIDERATION BY THE SENATE NOW.

The U.S. Senate is considering a bill that would severely limit the way you do business as a creative investor and, more importantly, is an inexcusable infringement of the property rights of all Americans.

 

HR 1728, which you can view in its entirety here: www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-1728  

 

It covers a lot of different topics but here’s the important part.  You will NOT be able to sell more than 1 property with owner financing every 3 years!

 

Their definition of Seller financing includes land contract, owner-held mortgage or wrap-around mortgage-and who knows if they’ll define lease/options as owner financing, too?

 

So what does it mean to be “subject to the law”? Well, at the very least, it means that you will have to comply with a long, confusing, and penalty-filled piece of national legislation. Here are the types of transactions that you would be restricted from doing more than once every 36 months:

 

o Selling YOUR OWN HOME using a land contract or owner-held mortgage so that you can get a quicker sale, higher sale price, or better rate of interest than is available in other investments

 

o Carrying back owner-held second mortgages on investment properties that you sell

 

o Doing any kind of installment sale on residential properties including homes, condos, mobile homes, and even raw land that is zoned residential

 

Yes, there will undoubtedly by ways to “get around it”-some have suggested that getting a mortgage broker’s license and then learning and following the vast new set of regulations would circumvent the “problem”. But bottom line is, this law has to be stopped and it has to be stopped NOW. Here’s why:

 

1. Congress is trying to regulate the wrong thing. The deals we make are not “loans”-they don’t involve the transfer of money, or points or closing costs or adjustable rates or any of the other things that caused the mortgage crisis to begin with. They are INSTALLMENT SALES. We don’t give money to the “borrower” and wait for it to be paid back: we give a property to the borrower and wait for it to be paid off. Regulating this will have no effect on the foreclosure crisis

 

2. It is a completely unacceptable infringement on private property rights. When I own a piece of property and find a ready, willing, and able purchaser, I should be able to control the sale of that property within the existing laws of my state, which already regulate the interest rate that I am able to charge and some of the terms of the sale. The government does not have the right to tell us that we need special licensing to sell our own properties; nor do they have the right to further regulate the terms under which we can sell or burden small investors with a new set of rules that we can’t comply with.

 

Not only will this new law, if passed as written, effectively choke off owner financing as an exit strategy for you, it will also take away housing choice for your buyers. The millions of Americans who’ve been through foreclosure in the last 3 years can’t buy a house in any way OTHER THAN to negotiate owner financing with a seller-and HR 1728 would greatly reduce the number of properties available in this way. Millions of potential home owners who would otherwise be able to re-start the process of paying off a home, and get the tax advantages of ownership, will be reduced to renting until they are able to qualify for bank financing.

 

What to Do Right Now….

 

This bill has already passed the House and is waiting for Senate approval. Please contact your senator via email and snail mail to let him know that this law MUST NOT PASS in its current form. You can get your senator’s contact information here: www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm  

 

As always in cases like this, you have an automatic handicap to overcome-the fact that you are a real estate investor and are therefore viewed as part of the problem. So when you write, don’t emphasize the nature of your business, just that you and your buyers would be greatly aversely affected by the new law.

 

We need THOUSANDS of these communications to go out in the next few days to have a CHANCE of stopping this in its tracks. So whether you’re a new or experienced investor, PLEASE take the time right now to write your elected representative!

 

Here are some sample letters or emails:

 

1) IF YOU HAVE A REAL ESTATE LICENSE….

 

Dear Senator [name]

 

My name is (insert name here) and I am a life-long resident of (insert city name here).

 

I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the “Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act”.

 

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of Ohioans and the ability of home owners to sell properties in this already-slow market.

 

As a real estate broker, I have seen several dozen cases in the past year of home sellers and buyers coming to an agreement for an installment sale on a property that the owner desperately needed to sell (often to avoid foreclosure) and the buyer desperately wanted to buy, but could not raise the downpayment needed for conventional financing.

 

In all cases, these sales turned out to be win-win deals for the buyer and seller; the seller was able to get rid of an unwanted property to a buyer who loved it, and the buyer was able to get his new home at an affordable payment and interest rates with none of the usual costs (points, application fees etc) inherent in more conventional mortgage transactions.

 

In (your state), these transactions are already regulated by state law: a low maximum interest rate is already in place, and both the buyer and seller are protected by other regulations at the state level.

 

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them. In its current form, it would all but shut off the “owner financing” market that is the only way that many sellers can sell and many buyers can buy right now.

 

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from transacting business that is beneficial to both of them-they are not the problem that the bill seeks to solve. HR 1728 would be extremely harmful to thousands of your constituents.

 

It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure, as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and easily by negotiating owner financing.

 

Thank you for your consideration;

 

Insert Name
Licensed Real Estate Broker license #
Phone #
email

 

2) IF YOU SELL HOUSES WITH OWNER FINANCING…

 

Dear Senator [name]

 

My name is (insert name here) and I am a life-long resident of (insert city name here).

 

I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the “Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act”.

 

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of Ohioans and the ability of home owners to sell properties in this already-slow market.

 

As a professional housing provider, I sell several houses each year to home buyers on installment sale [or, if you have not purchased a property, add here: "I had planned to sell several houses this year on installment sale]-a practice that would become impossible under this law in its current form.

 

I find that in today’s slow market, the best way for me to help buyers who desperately want to become homeowners, but who cannot raise the downpayment or meet the other terms needed for conventional financing, is to allow them to make payments directly to me.

 

These sales are win-win deals for both the buyer and myself; I am able to turn over homes that I’ve bought and rehabbed (often from foreclosures) to buyers who love and can afford them, and the buyer can get his new home at an affordable payment and interest rates with none of the usual costs (points, application fees etc) inherent in more conventional mortgage transactions.

 

In Ohio, these transactions are already regulated by state law: a low maximum interest rate is already in place, and both the buyer and seller are protected by other regulations at the state level.

 

Without the ability to sell homes in this way, I will no longer be able to invest in and renovate any of the tens of thousands of vacant, ugly houses placed on the market by the foreclosure crisis, and my small-but-beneficial business will literally be in ruins. Perhaps more importantly, the homeowner-buyers that I serve will be forced to rent rather than moving toward the American dream of home ownership.

 

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them. In its current form, it would all but shut off the “owner financing” market that is the only way that many sellers can sell and many buyers can buy right now.

 

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from transacting business that is beneficial to both of them-they are not the problem that the bill seeks to solve. HR 1728 would be extremely harmful to thousands of your constituents.

 

It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure, as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and easily by negotiating owner financing.

 

Thank you for your consideration;

 

Insert Name
Perfect Properties, inc.
Phone number
email

 

3) IF YOU BUY HOUSES WITH OWNER FINANCING:

 

Dear Senator [name]

 

My name is (insert name here) and I am a life-long resident of (insert city name here).

 

I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the “Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act”.

 

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of Ohioans and the ability of home owners to sell properties in this already-slow market.

 

In the past year, I have purchased and renovated several homes-made possible only because the sellers of these homes were able to sell to me using owner financing in an unrestricted way.

 

For many of these property owners, seller financing was the only way to unburden themselves of an unwanted property that, in some cases, was headed toward foreclosure before I purchased it.

 

Without this ability, I can not continue to buy and renovate properties in the neighborhoods that so need me and my colleagues to invest our time, energy, and money in rehabbing properties. Bank financing is not an option for these properties because of the condition; only financing carried by the sellers will suffice.

 

Section 101(3)(e) would keep my sellers from utilizing this method of getting rid of unwanted properties in today’s market, should they have more than 1 to sell.

 

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them. In its current form, it would all but shut off the “owner financing” market that is the only way that many sellers can sell and many buyers can buy right now.

 

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from transacting business that is beneficial to both of them-they are not the problem that the bill seeks to solve. HR 1728 would be extremely harmful to thousands of your constituents.

 

It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure, as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and easily by negotiating owner financing.

 

Thank you for your consideration;

 

Insert Name
Perfect Properties, inc.
Phone number
email 

 

 © June 2009 HR 1728:  Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act

Foreclosed Homes: Selling Quickly in Prince William County

May 8th, 2009

For real estate investors in the Northern Virginia area, a glimpse of good news.  A ray of sunshine has shown on the Prince William real estate market.  If your interest is in foreclosures, consider looking closer into this area, based upon the video below.

Landlord Tenant Issues: Knowing the Maryland Law is Critical to Your Rental Success

April 24th, 2009

Landlord Tenant Issues:  Knowing the Maryland Law is Critical to Your Rental Success

By Shawn E. Costley

A successful landlording experience is contingent upon a good relationship between you and your tenant.  A rental agreement between the two of you is always a requirement; therefore it is important that you have an understanding of the commitments made in your contracts in order to avoid any potential problems.

Below are key portions of Title 8 (Landlord and Tenant) of the Maryland Code as it relates to Residential Leases (Subtitle 2) and Landlord Remedies Other Than Distraint (Subtitle 4).

Section

Subject

8-203 Security Deposits and Surety Bonds
8-203.1 Security Deposit Receipt
8-204 Right of Tenant to Possession at Beginning of Lease (Quiet Enjoyment)
8-205 Landlord to Give Tenant Receipt
8-208 Automatic Renewal Provisions
8-208.1 Retaliatory Evictions
8-208.2 Retaliatory Actions for Informing Landlord of Lead Poisoning Hazards
8-211 Repair of Dangerous Defects; Rent Escrow
8-212.1 Liability of  Military Personnel Receiving Certain Orders
8-213 Applications for Leases; Deposits
8-402 Holding Over

Although the Maryland Code itself is quite lengthy, the above table illustrates some of the more common situations that arise between landlord and tenant and how to best address them.  Having knowledge of these circumstances before they have a chance to occur could save you quite a bit of pain (and money).

I highly recommend that you compare your current lease agreement and rental documentation to the Maryland code and see if they are in compliance.  If not, make the necessary changes immediately.  Not doing so could make your agreements partially unenforceable if not void altogether.

Having a successful landlording experience truly is contingent upon having a good relationship between you and your tenant.  Understanding the commitments made in your rental documentation is critical to avoiding any potential problems.

To really stay in tune with the latest information of concern to real estate investors in the DC Metro and Baltimore areas, sign up for the “Prince George’s Real Estate Investor” at www.PIERServicesGroup.com.