Category Archives: Cross River NY
Foreclosures Split America | Chappaqua NY Real Estate
September’s foreclosure data showed America has become bipolar over foreclosures, with dramatic decreases in most states but increases nearly as great in judicial states where lenders are speeding up processing of defaults.
Foreclosure activity nationwide fell to the lowest level in five years in but increased in 14 judicial states, including Florida, Illinois, Ohio, New Jersey and New York as lenders begin to move on backlogged defaults after processing standards fully implementing the Attorneys General agreement take effect.
The national decrease in September marked the ninth consecutive quarter with an annual decrease in foreclosure activity and helped drop the third quarter foreclosure numbers to the lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2007. Foreclosure filings for the quarter decreased 7 percent from August and 16 percent from September 2011. Third quarter filings were down 5 percent from the second quarter and 13 percent from the third quarter of 2011, according to RealtyTrac.
In the West, declines were even more dramatic. In California, notices of defaults were down 20.7 percent from the prior month, and down 48.1 percent compared to last year. In Arizona, new foreclosures were down 37.1 percent, in Nevada down 40.1 percent, down 40.0 percent in Oregon and Washington saw new foreclosures fall 31.2 percent from August. Sales are also down with Arizona down 24.3 percent, Nevada down 19.5 percent, Oregon down 0.3 percent, and Washington down 33.5 percent from the prior month, ForeclosureRadar reported today.
Third quarter foreclosure activity increased on a year-over-year basis in New Jersey (130 percent increase), New York (53 percent increase), Indiana (36 percent increase), Pennsylvania (35 percent increase), Connecticut (34 percent increase), Illinois (31 percent increase), Maryland (28 percent increase), South Carolina (16 percent increase), North Carolina (14 percent increase), and Florida (14 percent increase). Among judicial states foreclosure activity in the third quarter decreased on annual basis in Massachusetts (16 percent decrease) and Wisconsin (12 percent decrease).
However, more foreclosures may be in store. “It was recently reported that the nation’s five largest mortgage servicers have implemented all of the 320 servicing standards required under the national mortgage settlement. The continued decline in Foreclosure Starts clearly shows that even though servicers are now apparently in compliance and clear to move forward with foreclosures, they are still in no rush to foreclose on the majority of delinquent borrowers,” said Sean O’Toole, founder & CEO of ForeclosureRadar.
However, processing time actually increased durinmg the quarter to a national average of 382 days to complete the foreclosure process, up from 378 days in the previous quarter and up from 336 days in the third quarter of 2011. It was the highest average number of days to foreclose since the first quarter of 2007.
The average time to complete a foreclosure increased substantially from a year ago in several states where recent legislation and court rulings have extended the foreclosure process. These states included Oregon (up 62 percent to 193 days), Hawaii (up 62 percent to 662 days), Washington (up 62 percent to 248 days) and Nevada (up 42 percent to 520 days).
The average time to foreclose decreased from a year ago in 15 states, including Arkansas (down 49 percent to 199 days), Michigan (down 15 percent to 226 days), Maryland (down 9 percent to 541 days), California (down 8 percent to 335 days), and New Jersey (down 4 percent to 931 days).
New Jersey documented the second longest state foreclosure timeline in the third quarter behind New York, where the average time to complete a foreclosure was 1,072 days for properties foreclosed during the quarter. Florida registered the third highest state foreclosure timeline, 858 days – down slightly from 861 days in the previous quarter – and Illinois registered the fourth highest state foreclosure timeline, 673 days.
Patch: Local Real Estate Market Shows Promise in Third Quarter | Cross River Real Estate
The residential real estate market in the Katonah-Lewisboro and Bedford Central school districts have shown signs of improvement in the third quarter, according to local realtors.
In the Bedford Central School district, 116 homes were sold in the third quarter of 2012, with a total volume of $105 million in sales, according to data provided by Houlihan Lawrence in Bedford.
The numbers are slightly higher than the previous quarter, when 112 homes were sold for a total volume of $97 million. Compared to the previous year, there were slight gains in home sales; in the third quarter of 2011, 112 homes were sold for a total volume of almost $136 million.
Angela Kessel, a top realtor at Houlihan Lawrence in Bedford, said she’s encouraged by the numbers and the fluctuation in sales volume can be explained by the diverse market in the district which includes high-end homes.
“I am cautiously optimistic,” said Kessel. “I think we’ve hit bottom—I’m very bullish on this market.”
In Katonah-Lewisboro, 69 homes were sold in the third quarter of 2012, with a total volume of $46 million in sales, according to data provided by Coldwell Banker. That’s a jump from second quarter when 47 homes were sold at a dollar volume of $36 million, and a year-over-year improvement from third quarter 2011, when 41 homes were sold for $30 million.
“The third quarter is stronger and after the unbelievable downturn we’ve had to now see such phenomenal movement in the market is amazing,” said Nelson Salazar, a real estate broker at Coldwell Banker.
While volume increased, prices have remained steady or dropped in both districts, but locals shouldn’t expect to see them rise to pre-2008 levels, he added.
According to Salazar, the median sale price in Katonah-Lewisboro was $624,000 in the third quarter of this year, compared to $653,000 last quarter, and $600,000 in third quarter 2011.
“Historically there has been a gradual rise in home prices—except for the years between 2000 and 2008, when there was a rocket-like artifical rise in price. It’s unrealistic to think that we’ll see that again,” he said.
In Bedford, the median home price in third quarter 2012 was $637,500, as compared to the previous quarter, when it was $677,500. In the third quarter of 2011 the median price was $776,875.
Westchester County
The county-wide market also saw a second round of increased residential real estate sales during the third quarter, July 1 to Sept. 30, of this year, according to Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Service.
However, while sales volumes increased for two consecutive quarters, selling prices have not.
Highlights of the HGMLS report:
- Realtor firms participating in the Westchester-Putnam Division of the Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Service reported 2,243 closed residential transactions in Westchester, a 15 percent increase over the same period last year.
- During the second quarter, the year-over-year increases were 13 percent and 24 percent respectively. For Westchester, the third quarter volume was the highest since 2007, and for Putnam, since 2008.
- If the current sales rate continues, Westchester will close the year with approximately 7,000 sales in all residential categories (single family houses, condominiums, cooperatives, and 2-4 family houses), resetting sales volume convincingly above the 6,639 unit level when our local market entered into real estate recession in 2008.
The increased sales volumes have not boosted selling prices.
The third quarter median sale price of a single family house in Westchester was $630,000 or nearly 8 percent less than last year’s third quarter median.
HGMLS attributes the lower average price in the region to sellers’ price concessions in response to general economic conditions but also partly to a downshift in the proportion of high end ($1 million-plus) properties that were sold. In Westchester, such properties accounted for 22 percent of all house sales in the third quarter; in 2011 that ratio was 26 percent, and in 2010 it was 28 percent.
The only sector to enjoy price gains was Westchester condominiums, up by 4 percent to a median of $349,750. The cooperative apartment median fell by 7 percent, to $155,000.
The closings posted with Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Service in the third quarter largely reflected real estate sales and marketing activity that took place during the late spring and summer months of 2012. Other than low mortgage interest rates in that period there was not much supportive energy from other components of the economy that affect consumer confidence.
For example, the local unemployment rate has remained stuck in the high (for here) range of 7.5-7.6 percent range; and most consumers probably believe it is more than 8 percent due to the focus on that persistent national rate in the presidential election campaigns. The equity markets, which many consumers regard as an index of economic well-being, performed well over the course of this year, but with a pattern of volatility along the way that would intimidate all but sophisticated investors.
Still, posting two consecutive quarters of increased real estate sales in the region is encouraging because it occurred in the face of lackluster or even adverse economic circumstances, according to Hudson Gateway Multiple Listing Service.
“We are probably close to the point where buyers and sellers see eye to eye on the bottom line for prices, and where an increasingly active market generates its own energy for renewed health,” the organization’s latest report states.
Condo building’s insurance won’t cover all damage | Cross River NY Real Estate
DEAR BENNY: If damage to an individual unit is from a common-area element and was caused by negligence, and the condo documents as I understand them state that the damage to the unit involved is the responsibility of the condominium owners association, should that not then be covered by the master policy? Also, what is an HO-6 policy? –Lois
DEAR LOIS: If a unit is damaged as a result of a common-element problem, such as a roof leak or a brick-pointing problem, then the association is responsible regardless of negligence.
For example, let’s say a common-element pipe breaks because of old age and causes damage to individual units. The association’s first obligation is to notify the master insurance carrier of the problem and then fix the problem. Let the insurance company adjuster determine if there is coverage, and if so, to what extent.
Typically, the master policy will pay to repair the walls, floors and ceiling of a unit that was damaged from a common element. However, betterments, which are additions made since the unit was created, such as new kitchen or bathroom cabinets, or new parquet flooring, are often excluded. You have to carefully review the terms and conditions of the master policy.
An HO-6 policy is commonly called a “condominium owner’s policy.” According to Virginia-based USI Insurance Services LLC, the HO-6 policy will provide such coverage for personal property, liability, loss of use, and medical coverage. However, unlike a tenant’s policy, it will also include “dwelling” coverage in an amount selected by the unit owner. Betterments, if excluded from the master policy, will be included in the HO-6.
You can obtain more information on the Internet merely by typing in “HO-6” into your favorite search engine.
DEAR BENNY: I have a question about a recent article in which you discussed the tax implications of gifting a home. You wrote, “If you die and leave the house to someone, that person gets the stepped-up basis. …” My question is: Wouldn’t the brother to whom the house was gifted have to pay an inheritance tax, (death tax) if the property was not in a trust? –Don
DEAR DON: Some states impose inheritance tax on the value of assets that a decedent leaves to others.
For example, Maryland imposes an inheritance tax on the value of assets left by the decedent to anyone but a close relative. Property left to a brother is exempt. Generally, the inheritance tax is paid by the estate, but would “follow” the property, if not paid by the estate.
So, for example, if a niece or nephew receives an interest in joint property on account of the owner/uncle’s death, and there is no estate open, the niece or nephew would have to pay inheritance tax on the receipt of the property.
By contrast, there is no inheritance tax in the District of Columbia.
So the answer depends on what state you are in. You would have to discuss your individual situation with your own financial adviser.
Note: “Death tax” usually refers to estate tax, which also varies state by state. For example, Maryland has both an estate tax (assets over $1 million) and an inheritance tax. Virginia presently imposes neither inheritance tax nor estate tax.
And, of course, there is also a federal estate tax with current exemption of $5.12 million. Stay tuned to the political weather forecasts; this may change.
DEAR BENNY: My wife and I are purchasing a two-bedroom condo. We are paying cash, and intend to have her parents live there for a year, and then we will likely turn it into a rental. Our current single-family home is in the name of my wife’s and my revocable living trust.
We are trying to determine what the best options are with our rental real estate. We are both professionals, and have worries about liability.
1) Should we purchase the condo in the names of our revocable trusts, and go for the largest liability policy available for the property, i.e., $1 million (or is more recommended)?
2) Should we form a real estate limited liability company (LLC) to hold the property? And if so, who should be the members: my wife and myself as the members, or create the LLC with the trusts as the members?
I know that with a real estate LLC we would need to have a tax ID, business credit card, business checking account, and to run the LLC as a business separate from our personal finances.
3) Are there tax considerations we should worry about if we put the condo in the name of the revocable living trusts or LLC? (For example, would that set the basis for the property value and prevent our children from getting the benefit of a new basis upon our death? We are in our early 40s with a couple of kids). –Bret
DEAR BRET: You have asked some very serious questions that require a thorough evaluation of your financial situation. I can provide only some basic suggestions, but you really need to discuss your situation with your own financial and legal counselors.
1) Generally it’s a good idea to put rental real estate into a LLC for liability purposes. Membership interests can then be titled in the name of the trustees of your revocable trust. If for estate planning or financing or other reasons it is desirable to title the property in the name of the trust, then a large liability policy would be the way to go. Other assets in the trust (and possibly those outside the trust titled in the names of the grantors, but this is a matter of state law, and I do not believe entirely settled) could be subject to a judgment against trustees.
2) Whether you and your wife individually — or the trustees of the trust — should be members of the LLC holding the rental property would depend on more facts than you have provided. There are issues with successor trustees and other issues that could come into play if the trustees are listed as the members, and I can’t think of any great advantage to doing it that way.
3) Generally, the trust or the LLC would have the same basis in the property as the grantors at the time of the transfer. A step up in basis in the property would happen upon the death of the trust grantor or LLC member, so that the trust property or membership interest in the hands of the beneficiary would have a stepped-up basis. (This presumes we are talking about a revocable living trust; it could be different with an irrevocable trust.)
But please talk with your own financial and legal advisers. I cannot and do not provide specific legal or financial advice.
7 free tech tools for brokers and agents | Chappaqua Realtor
Technology doesn’t have to be expensive or hard to use. It doesn’t have to take up space on a computer — it can reside in the cloud.
Some of the best and easiest-to-use software is free and can be found on the Internet. Any piece of technology that saves time or money or makes life easier is worth exploring, even if it isn’t used directly for selling real estate.
Here are some of my favorite free services. These apps are not just for Realtors, and have a large and sometimes very loyal user base, which is why they are continually upgraded and new features are added:
IFTTT — IFTTT is a service that lets you create powerful connections with one simple statement: If this (trigger), then that (action). IFTTT is free and it is very cool. The possibilities or recipes are endless. For example, I can set it so the action of taking a picture using Instagram triggers Evernote to create a note.
Article continues belowThe site is filled with free recipes, examples and ideas, and there are 52 channels. A channel is an application like Gmail, or Evernote or Foursquare. A check-in on Foursquare could trigger a note to Evernote or a post to Blogger, or an Instagram photo could automatically be sent to Dropbox.
LastPass — I forget passwords and hate to write them down. Some of the sites I use require that I create strong passwords that I forget, and others require that I change my password on a regular basis. I gave up on remembering and tracking all of that a couple of years ago and use a free version of LastPass. One master password gets me into the “vault” where my passwords are stored, but there is so much more.
The LastPass extension is in my Web browser and I have LastPass set up to sign me into some of the websites and services I use on a regular basis. There is a mobile app, but I have found that I can use the Web browser on my phone or iPad and access my passwords that way, too. My passwords are available to me anywhere that I have Internet access.
Skitch — Skitch isn’t as great as it used to be. The last update took some features away, but I am going to go out on a limb and suggest that the features will be brought back. Skitch works on mobile phones and on computers. I use it on my phone and tablet for sketches or to draw on screen prints.
On my computer I use it for making screen shots that I can draw or type on. Very handy for bloggers and Realtors. Skitch is now part of Evernote so I can automatically store my Skitch creations in Evernote. On phones with the Android operating system, Skitch is a button built right into Evernote and a stand-alone app. There is a Skitch website where Skitch images can be posted and shared.
Google Drive — Google Drive is similar to Dropbox but not the same, and I use it differently. Google Drive is where I write and store all of my articles for Inman News. Dropbox doesn’t have a built-in word processor.
The word processing program built into Google Docs is as good as Microsoft Word (at least for my uses) and seems to be superior to anything I can find for word processing on the Macintosh. Google Drive works with Google Docs, and I can start a new document right in Google drive on any device no matter where I am. I can’t lose it because it gets saved in the cloud.
Ribbet! — When my favorite Internet-based photo editing site Picnik closed down, I was upset. I know that Picnik has been integrated into Google Plus but it isn’t a stand-alone program anymore and parts of it are missing. Ribbet! is the new Picnik. The free version is wonderful, and the premium version is amazing and free at the moment. The site is great for editing photos and for adding effects, captions and frames. Ribbet! is a wonderful tool for creating images for blog posts or for real estate marketing.
Pixlr–o–matic — photo editing software available on mobile devices and on the Internet. There are several related products on the Pixlr site, including Pixlr, which has many if not all of the features found in Photoshop elements, and it is free. Pixlr-o-matic is fun and I can even make a poor-quality photo look artistic by applying some filters and maybe a frame. It works with pictures that have already been taken or can be used with the camera in an Android, iPhone, iPad or a webcam on a computer.
Chrome browser — advertised as a “fast free browser.” I love Chrome. It even works on computers that are so slow they make me want to cry. Chrome doesn’t slow my computer down even when I have 30 tabs opened and it never crashes. Check out the Chrome Web store and find browser add-ons for everything I mentioned in this article except IFTTT.
How to Use Eyeline Matching for Smooth & Logical Video Storytelling | Cross River Realtor
Before planning any video shoot, it’s important to have a good understanding of how the footage is going to be edited as this can make a big difference in how you approach the shoot. There’s a big difference between shooting and then editing versus shooting for the edit. Ideally you’ll always be shooting for the edit as it leads to a more efficient production when you know who will be editing, what equipment is needed, what shots are required for continuity, etc…
On this week’s Reel Rebel video production tip episode, Stephen explains an important concept to nail down when shooting for the edit called “eyeline matching.”
What is Eyeline Matching? Continuity Editing
Eyeline matching is a film editing technique associated with continuity editing to help establish a logical coherence between shots and make the storytelling smooth, logical and continuous. Eyeline matching is one of the basic building blocks of movie making for a narrative film or story. Eyeline, as you might guess, refers to the trajectory of the looking eye. Eyeline matching isn’t just about seeing what the character is looking at, it’s about the angle at which they’re looking at it. It applies often to other characters, but also applies to anything that can be looked at.
This technique is based on the premise that the viewers will want to see what the character they are watching on the screen is viewing. This means there will be a cut to show what is being looked at by the character on screen. It can be:
- An object
- A view
- Another character
The eyeline match will begin with a character looking at something off-screen. It is then followed by a cut to the object or person at which he is looking. For instance, a man is looking off-screen to his left, and then the film cuts to a television that he is watching, a character he is looking at, etc.
If you’re watching a movie, and a character is looking off screen at something, your natural expectation is to next see what that character is looking at. That’s almost always the case, but you can’t just get any old shot of whatever that character is looking at. You are trying to sell the reality of the film. This means that when you cut to the shot of whatever you’re character is looking at, the audience needs to believe that they’re looking at it through the eyes of your character.
Examples of Eyeline Matching
For example, Character A, is clearly the star of the show. Let’s say he’s deciding which pair of shoes to wear. In the shot, you can see that not only is Character A looking off camera, he is looking DOWN and off camera. Your audience will expect to see a high angle shot looking down on whatever he is looking at, in this case his shoes, as if from Character A’s point of view. In shot A you see the angle at which Character A, is looking. This is his “eyeline.” In shot B you see what he is looking at from that same angle.
Alfred Hitchcock’s “Rear Window,” is one example of a film that makes frequent use of eyeline matches. The main character is confined to his apartment. He looks out its rear window often at events in the buildings across from him. Hitchcock frequently cuts from the character looking off-screen to the focus of his gaze.
Here’s an example from The Stendhal Syndrome (La Sindrome di Stendhal, Italy,1996) where the Director, Dario Argento has his protagonist Anna looking at Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus (c1485).
The Stendhal Syndrome (La Sindrome di Stendhal, Italy,1996)
The term “eyeline match” can also refer to the practice of setting off-camera eyelines for single shots of characters within a scene. They are shot so that when these shots are cut together, each of the characters appear to be looking at the correct character, without any confusion. Factors influencing the position of the off-camera eyeline are usually placed off camera, but sometimes are by giving the on-camera actor a mark to look at. These factors include the 180 degree rule, camera lens/height/distance to subject and geography of the set. For example, you take matching close-ups of two actors in a scene. They are shot on the same lens with the camera placed at matching heights.
The eyeline match creates order and meaning in cinematic space. It gives the viewer what they want and are expecting to see and it can really bring a story to life for the viewer.
6 Tips for Using LinkedIn the New Endorsements | Katonah NY Realtor
Vacant Homes Plague Neighbors | Chappaqua NY Homes for Sale
The vacant home next to Deborah Jackson’s house has been an eyesore and magnet of blight for much longer than the Chicago homeowner would care to remember.
The roof of the empty townhouse, which is connected to Jackson’s, is shredded and caved in, causing water to leak through Jackson’s walls. Overgrown bushes and bramble peek over the property’s 4-foot fence, and possums and stray cats — instead of a nice family — live inside.
The derelict property, which has been vacant for the better part of 15 years, even appears to pose safety risks. Jackson’s granddaughter was once struck in the face by a detached piece of the home’s roof; sometimes trespassers pay unsettling visits; and the home is infested with snakes.
“Anytime I see people or have heard people, I would always call the police,” she said. “I’m looking at a jungle out here. I can’t sit on my patio. My grandkids don’t want to visit me because of the snakes.”
Unfortunately for Jackson, it’s not the only vacant property in close proximity that causes the 59-year-old schoolteacher distress. The home to her left and the two directly across the street from her in the foreclosure-ravaged South Side Chicago neighborhood of Pullman are also unoccupied.
Jackson’s story captures the heavy toll that vacant homes can take on their neighbors’ quality of life, and, at the same time, it highlights a reality that is galling to residents in hard-hit areas: Many such properties are often left to deteriorate by banks.
Foreclosure nation
Since the housing collapse began, about 4 million Americans have lost their homes to foreclosure, resulting in a persistent glut of vacant homes on the market. Banks and other investors have managed to whittle down this supply somewhat in the past two years.
But according to online foreclosure marketplace RealtyTrac, there are still about 532,000 homes in the possession of banks or government-sponsored investors, and most of them are vacant and not listed. In addition, many of the 950,000 homes that RealtyTrac says are not yet repossessed, but still in some stage of foreclosure, have already been vacated.
The spotlight is usually on the economic impact of vacant homes: their tendency to drag down prices by selling at steep discounts and bloating housing supply. But sometimes less explored are the intangible effects of the empty properties on neighboring homeowners.
Magnets of blight and crime
Ed Jacob, executive director of Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, said vacant homes can burden neighbors — some of whom are teetering on the brink of foreclosure themselves — and even put them in harm’s way.
“They become magnets of crime. They’ll get stripped of all their copper,” Jacob said of the vacant properties. “People use them to stash their drugs. It’s a huge psychological effect on homeowners who are hanging on.”
Jackson is no stranger to this phenomenon. Thieves looted a neighboring abandoned property to her left — a different home than the one that’s infested with snakes. Authorities later told her that there was a danger of a gas explosion happening at the home because the burglars had removed the furnace.
“They took everything that wasn’t nailed down,” she said.
Vacant properties can cast such a dark cloud over their communities that, when those homes are finally purchased, it’s sometimes cause for celebration.
Ihsan Atta of Brookfield, WI, recalled living next to a vacant home for months that was teeming with rodents and had overgrown bushes. People living in the neighborhood had become so put off by the decrepit property that when an investment firm snapped it up recently, neighbors rejoiced.
“One neighbor went by— I thought she was so happy, she was going to kiss me,” said Marty Boardman, chief financial officer of Rising Sun Capital Group, the home investor that bought the property.
Are banks to blame?
The blight of vacant properties is often the fault of the financial institutions that own or oversee them. Those financial institutions — whether it be banks or government-backed organizations such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration — sometimes fail to keep up on the properties’ maintenance.
“Often that means that the lawn’s not being mowed and maintenance isn’t being done on the property, and so it’s just going to be an eyesore in the neighborhood,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac.
Financial institutions sometimes turn a blind eye to vacant properties in their portfolios because they either don’t want to pay or can’t afford maintenance costs, experts say.
Labeling some financial institutions “slumlords,” consumer advocates and local governments have tried to hold their feet to the fire.
The City of Los Angeles brought a lawsuit against Deutsche Bank and U.S. Bancorp for allegedly failing to maintain some of their repossessed properties. Also, the National Fair Housing Alliance filed complaints with the Department of Housing and Urban Development against U.S. Bancorp and Wells Fargo for allegedly neglecting repossessed properties concentrated in minority neighborhoods.
If financial institutions sold foreclosures quickly, such properties would have less of a chance to grind on neighborhoods. But according to RealtyTrac, a repossessed property takes an average of 195 days to sell. And that’s after the average 378 days that a home takes to be repossessed by a bank, a period during which the home may be vacated by its former resident.
“Banks don’t know how to sell houses. They’re not very good at it,” said Boardman, whose company flips 30 to 50 homes a year. He pointed to a recent deal in which, he said, it took Chase two months to find an employee who actually had the authority to approve a sale.
‘My hands are kind of tied’
Jackson said that she recently convinced the Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation to clear debris out of the snake-infested backyard of the abandoned property that abuts her home, a job that she said took three hours for 11 men to complete.
Ideally, either a bank or the city will repossess the home and rehabilitate it. Public records suggest that the home has not been repossessed yet, according to RealtyTrac. But that’s out of Jackson’s hands.
Meanwhile, she’s tried to contact banks tasked with caring for some of the other four vacant homes neighboring her so she can nudge them into tending to the properties. But that’s proved impossible so far.
Two of the vacant homes — much like 80 percent of all repossessed properties in the U.S., by RealtyTrac’s measure — are not listed, so she can’t identify their owners.
She said only one of the four vacant homes surrounding her has a for-sale sign, but no one has answered calls from her or her neighbors when they have dialed the phone number on it.
She’s also tried to determine the other properties’ owners by searching public records, but she has been unable to identify some of the deed-holders and unable to reach the others.
Many concerned neighbors, as well as capable buyers, have hit the same roadblocks, experts say. Bureaucratic ineptitude, profit-driven asset-management strategies and the overall complexity of a securities market where mortgages once traded hands like hot potatoes are all to blame.
Despite the challenges, Jackson said that she is determined to reach the owners of the blighted homes that have tainted her neighborhood for years.
“But right now my hands are kind of tied,” she said.
House of the Week: New England Castle | Cross River NY Real Estate
Tips for Going Solar | Katonah NY Real Estate
For decades, harnessing the sun’s energy to generate electricity for houses was a bright idea that simply wasn’t practical for the average homeowner. Only recently have solar roof panels emerged as a viable option for individuals seeking an eco-friendly and cost-effective alternative source of electric power. To decide if a solar installation is right for you, consider a handful of factors:
Amount of sun
A photovoltaic (PV) system is only worth installing in areas that receive adequate sunlight. How much electricity would an array of panels generate on your roof? Reliable online tools exist to help you arrive at an estimate, and solar installation professionals can offer advice based on previous experience in your area.
Local utility rates
While residents of the Sun Belt are perhaps the likeliest solar converts, you don’t need to live in the brightest states to benefit. In comparatively less sunny regions where electric bills run high, folks can still obtain significant savings by going solar. The more you currently pay, the more you stand to gain.
Incentive programs
The upfront cost of a PV system is high, but numerous financial incentive programs are in place to help make the technology more affordable. Find out if you qualify for federal, state or local tax credits and rebates.
Assuming financial incentives, plentiful sunshine and high local utility rates, a PV system could pay for itself within about five years. Like other “green” upgrades, solar panels deliver payback, not immediately, but over the long term.
A growing number of homeowners are choosing to side-step the upfront expense by contracting with a solar leasing company. Such a provider will install a solar panel array at no cost to the homeowner. In turn, the homeowner pays for the solar-generated power that his household consumes, typically at a lower rate than is charged by regular utilities companies. That means solar energy is no longer a future fantasy. In some parts of the country, it’s actually one of the most affordable options out there.





The Stendhal Syndrome (La Sindrome di Stendhal, Italy,1996)




