Tag Archives: South Salem NY Real Estate

South Salem NY Real Estate | Ball Tour Comes to Town – Bedford-Katonah, NY Patch

Republican State Sen. Greg Ball of Patterson brought his traveling legislative review to town hall Tuesday, and found his official audience—a three-member town board—less than enthusiastic about some of Albany’s accomplishments.

The board was especially critical of a state-imposed 2 percent limit on the amount that property taxes—the town’s principal source of revenue—may increase in any year. Coupled with so-called “unfunded mandates”—multiple things the state demands of the town but does not finance—the 2 percent tax cap “is very hard to achieve,” Supervisor Lee V.A. Roberts told Ball. “We’ve been cutting [the budget] for three years.”

Councilman Chris Burdick said that as a result of those cuts, which had already steeply pared town outlays, the tax cap’s arrival now “is almost punitive.”  Bedford was put at a disadvantage “because we’ve been fiscally prudent,” he said. “I really think those unfunded mandates had to be addressed first” by the legislature.

Councilman Francis Corcoran suggested that some less budget-conscious municipalities elsewhere had deservedly spent their way into a tax cap. “We understand there are lots of places that need it,” he said. But, Corcoran said,  “we would rather you had done mandates instead of the cap.”

Ball told him that “politically, it [the mandate relief] would have been a nonstarter.”

Roberts also beseeched Ball for state help with the municipal pension burden, saying, “We have to have some relief from that. . . . If you could address that issue it would be the most meaningful for us.”   

 

Board begins budget planning, Bedford Community Theatre explores non-profit status

 

The town board’s regular meeting Tuesday was only the centerpiece of an evening that saw hour-long work sessions both before and after the proceedings captured for television/web cameras. Directly and indirectly, the subject, was as it frequently is in these cash-strapped days, money.

In the early session, the board held the first in a doubtlessly lengthy series of meetings on the 2012 budget, not due to be adopted until December. “I know it seems like a long time to talk about the budget,” Roberts said, “but we have many items to consider.”

After the curtain fell on the regular meeting, the board and Town Attorney Joel Sachs met with a dozen members of the Bedford Community Theater. Arrayed around a makeshift table like a cast at a first-reading, they discussed the troupe’s future: should the theater group, once a quasi town department, be treated that way or would it—and the town—benefit from its becoming a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization. No firm decisions were reached, but by the meeting’s final act the nonprofit route was not drawing many rave reviews. “We have jobs, we have kids,” said member Diane Bradsell. “We don’t have time to be a 501(c)(3).”

South Salem NY Real Estate | ‘Urgency’ sells homes | Inman News

‘Urgency’ sells homes

Don’t rely on low interest rates in today’s market

After the tech bubble burst, people were leery about putting money into the stock market, and instead poured money into housing. It was easy to get financing — too easy, as it turned out. The inventory of homes for sale was low, and demand was high. When the demand is high and supply is low, prices go up.

Rising prices created a sense of urgency; buyers couldn’t buy fast enough. They wanted to own as soon as possible in order to take advantage of home-price appreciation that was rising rapidly in many areas.

This resulted in the housing bubble that burst in 2007. The housing market has been struggling ever since. Nationally, home prices have declined 30 percent to the level they were in 2002. Even low interest rates, coupled with low home prices, haven’t been enough to ignite home sales.

Part of the problem is that there is still too much inventory of unsold foreclosure properties, mostly located in areas where people can’t find work. Another factor holding the market back is the stringent mortgage qualification requirements. In the San Francisco Bay Area in 2006, more than 50 percent of home purchasers bought using loans that didn’t require conventional qualification, such as stated-income or no-cash-down mortgages. Those loans aren’t available today.

Many lenders today require a cash down payment equal to 20 percent of the purchase price. To get the best interest rate, your FICO (Fair Isaac Corp.) credit score needs to be 720 to 740. Before 2007, 620 got you a good rate. You also need to be able to verify a meticulous employment history.

The pool of qualified buyers has diminished significantly due to tightened lending criteria. Equity loss has kept many would-be trade-up buyers from moving forward. Of those who can afford to buy, many are nervous about buying now because of recent economic news indicating that the economy is slowing and unemployment is rising.

HOUSE-HUNTING TIP: This doesn’t mean that all homes aren’t selling, just a reduced number. This is because, in most cases, sellers are marketing their homes to fewer buyers. To be a successful seller in this environment, the goal is to create a sense of urgency by preparing the listing for sale and pricing it right for the market so that buyers feel that if they don’t buy it now, someone else will.

Sellers are often in denial about how much a buyer will pay for their home. They have difficulty seeing their home from a buyer’s perspective. This is unfortunate, because buyers know current market value better than most sellers do.

Today’s buyers study the market carefully before they buy. They know the sale price of recent listings in the area that sold. They know when a listing is priced at, under or over market.

Sellers whose listings aren’t selling should ask their real estate agent to give them feedback about buyers’ reactions to their home. If the objections are about features that can’t be changed, like a location on a busy street, the list price will need to be adjusted to account for the incurable defect.

During a hot seller’s market, buyers often overlook incurable defects because they don’t want to miss out on swift appreciation. Affordability is motivating today’s buyers. They don’t expect to see appreciation soon.

In some places, prices could decline further before turning around. Low interest rates make homes more affordable for buyers. So do lower home prices. Overpriced listings reduce affordability, and they don’t sell.

THE CLOSING: The best time to reduce the price of an overpriced listing is as soon as the market indicates that it’s priced too high.

Dian Hymer, a real estate broker with more than 30 years’ experience, is a nationally syndicated real estate columnist and author of “House Hunting: The Take-Along Workbook for Home Buyers” and “Starting Out, The Complete Home Buyer’s Guide.”

South Salem NY Real Estate | Fed Sees Few Gains in Housing Market

The U.S. housing market remains anemic, with little change seen in the early weeks of summer, the Federal Reserve reported today in its most recent snapshot of the nation’s economy.

Residential real estate sales throughout the nation were largely unchanged from late spring, according to the Fed’s latest Beige Book report on the nation’s economy, released today. Most of the nation’s 12 Federal Reserve Districts reported that home prices were flat or declining in the most recent six-week period, although the Minneapolis, Richmond (Va.) and Atlanta districts reported increased sales activity.

Residential construction activity increased in the Minneapolis District during the current reporting period, but otherwise remained flat or down in the rest of the nation. At the same time, construction and other activity in the rental residential market was generally up across most of the nation, as economic uncertainty, tight credit and foreclosures continue to push more Americans toward rental housing.

There were a few positive trends in residential real estate, but they tended to be weak and scattered about the nation. Sources in many parts of the country reported increasing foot traffic by potential home buyers, but this has not yet translated into increased sales.

 In the Boston District, reports from some states indicated sales were running higher than two years ago, which was seen as encouraging – sales last year are widely regarded as artificially inflated by the homebuyer tax credit. Sources in the district generally expect to see weak sales for the rest of the year, with no significant increase in home sales until 2012.

Sales activity was up in the Richmond District, which contains the Washington, D.C. area, which has been the nation’s best-performing real estate market over the past year, according to various reports. Most of the sales increases were among low- to mid-priced homes, although some areas also reported increased activity at the high-end of the market, with a low inventory of such properties in the D.C. area.

In the southeast, sales activity were up slightly over last year’s levels in the Atlanta District, driven primarily by increased sales in Florida, which has been one of the nation’s hardest-hit housing markets since the downturn. Sales in the Kansas City District remained flat, although with increased demand for entry-level and high-end homes in some Colorado mountain resort areas, possibly due to investors positioning themselves for a rebound.

Otherwise, the Fed reported that overall economic activity continued to grow at a moderate pace, although with the rate slowing in the eastern part of the nation during the six-week reporting period. Consumer spending and manufacturing were up overall, although labor conditions remained soft, with little gains in either employment or wages.

Officially titled the “Summary of Economic Conditions” the Fed’s Beige Book is released eight times a year and reports on overall economic conditions across the nation and in the 12 Federal Reserve Districts.

South Salem NY Real Estate Prices down 11%, Sales up 22% | RobReportBlog | South Salem NY Homes

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South Salem NY Real Estate Report  |  June 2011   |   RobReportBlog

 

South Salem NY real estate had a 22% increase in the number of sales in the first half of 2011.  The median price of a sold South Salem NY home dropped 11% to $505,000 in the first half of 2011.

 

2011 South Salem NY Real Estate sold stats  (six months)

27  homes sold

$505,000   median price

$2,000,000   high price

$265,000   low price

2648  average size

$245  average price per foot

190  average DOM

93.85%  average sold to ask

 

2010 South Salem NY Real Estate sold stats  (six months)

22  homes sold

$567.650  median price

$1.027,000  high price

$60,000   low price

2541  average size

$244  average price per foot

240  average DOM

92.41%  average sold to ask

 

South Salem NY Homes

South Salem NY Homes | Appeal Possible After Wolf Center’s Court Setback – Bedford-Katonah, NY Patch

Keeping all options open, the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem will likely move to appeal a judge’s rejection of a wolf compound on town-owned land, the organization’s executive director says.

While no firm decision has been reached, executive director Deborah Heineman said in a telephone interview that the center will probably file a notice of appeal while it studies other alternatives when she returns to work after her current vacation.

The notice, which is not itself a formal appeal, keeps the legal door open to filing one later if the center decides to go that route.

State Supreme Court Justice J. Emmett Murphy ruled against the Wolf Conservation Center Tuesday in a lawsuit brought by the Westchester Land Trust against both the center and Town of Lewisboro. In a five-page opinion, Murphy upheld the trust’s central contention that building enclosures for the wolf compound would violate a conservation easement restricting use of the property.

The proposed eight-acre wolf compound would have occupied a sliver of the Leon Levy Preserve, a 380-acre stretch of hardwood forests and wetlands, bounded by routes 35 and 123. It includes about 90 acres of New York City watershed and is formally bound to remain forever wild.

Lewisboro bought the property in 2005, when it could still be developed. In return for the town’s granting a conservation easement—including the prohibition against any development—the land trust chipped in $5.5 million of the $8.3 million purchase price. A foundation largely funded by Levy, a fund manager and philanthropist who died in 2003, supplied $5 million of the land trust’s contribution. His widow, Shelby White, who arranged the gift, could not be reached for comment.

Lewisboro and New York City’s Department of Environmental Protection also kicked in $1 million each and the Dextra Baldwin McGonagle Foundation contributed $500,000 over five years.

In his decision, Murphy called the restrictions on the land’s use “unequivocal,” saying, “The plain language of the easement itself expressly provides that its purpose is . . . to hold the land which comprises the preserve in an ‘undeveloped state’ in perpetuity and to provide for ‘passive recreational activities.’”

While the easement does not specifically outlaw a wolf compound, he noted, it clearly forbids the kind of “excavation, extraction, grading or removal of soil” associated with fence building.

Heineman called it unfair to make fences an issue. “Of course you have to have fences when there are wolves,” she said. “But nobody said a word about them when we were walking the property [in 2009, discussing a lease for the compound].”

But Tom Andersen, the land trust’s director at the time of those discussions, disputed her recollection, saying fences had been an integral part of the talks from the beginning. Asked why the land trust had not simply rejected the wolf center’s overtures at the first mention of any construction, Andersen said the discussions never got beyond the talking stage.

“We always said that for the land trust to make a decision, we needed to see a real [written] proposal,” he said. “They never did that.” Instead, the Wolf Conservation Center negotiated a lease directly with the Town of Lewisboro, he said, prompting the land trust’s lawsuit.

Andersen called the court decision “very important,” going beyond the Wolf Conservation Center dispute to provide judicial affirmation of the land trust’s many conservation easements.

Heineman said the Wolf Conservation Center, believing it had a green light for the compound, applied for and subsequently received a $300,000 grant from the state’s Department of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Another $1.3 million in private donations also came into the center to help fund the compound.

Pianist Hélène Grimaud and others founded the nationally known Wolf Conservation Center in 1999. Some wolves roam the center’s current grounds in South Salem, shielded from people and eventually set free in the wild. A handful of others—now down to one—become “ambassadors,” trained to meet the public, both at the center and at venues far removed, to educate people about wolves and the center’s work.

Westchester Land Trust, with roots in Lewisboro and Bedford, was founded in 1988 and has since grown into a countywide organization that seeks to protect environmentally important open space.

South Salem NY Real Estate | Dual agency disclosures fail homebuyers | Inman News for South Salem NY Homes

Dual agency disclosures fail homebuyers

A look at some of the worst-offending states

Flickr photo courtesy of <a href=Flickr photo courtesy of Son of Groucho.

Although some states ban the practice, called dual agency, in which the same real estate broker represents the buyer and seller in a real estate transaction, most states have settled for a kind of disclosure Band-Aid that doesn’t work well for consumers.

It’s a little like the warnings on cigarette packets about the dangers of tobacco that really don’t make much difference to those who really want to smoke.

I’m told that more states used to ban dual agency, but real estate associations lobbied hard for the passage of regulations that permit this “double-ending” as it is also referred to, in some form. So what we have ended up with is a kind of cigarette packet of regulations: “Yes, you can have dual agency (or some variation of it), but here’s your warning” — which is most often ignored.

The way it now works in some states: An agent or broker has to reveal to the homebuyer the possible ways that the buyer will be represented, including dual agency. The buyer signs a disclosure statement and everyone pushes on.

The problem is — and all real estate agents understand this — when consumers find a house they want to buy, they become so emotionally involved in the purchase that they barely listen to the legalities because they are focused only on two things: price and purchase.

Besides, they may end up signing many disclosure documents, so no matter what the documents say, it all gets lost in the shuffle of papers.

“A consumer will do much more due diligence and much more research buying a car, which is 1/20 the value and guaranteed to depreciate compared to a property,” said Tim Walters, a principal with The Home Buyers in Minneapolis. “They do much more research on car buying than on who will represent them in buying a home and what is the best way to purchase a house.”

Secondly, even if a consumer does, perchance, look at the disclosure, the wording is often so obtuse it’s really hard to discern the point being made.

Walters sent me the Minnesota disclosure, which begins: “Minnesota law requires that early in any relationship real estate brokers or salespersons discuss with consumers what type of agency representation or relationship they desire.” I’m not sure how to interpret the meaning of “early,” here, and the wording seems vague.

Walters said that in Minnesota disclosure is to be discussed at initial contact, though in practice that may not be the norm.

“The agency agreement is a legal-sized document of a page and a half and it is really remarkable how it is skimmed over,” he said. “You don’t go over it in detail, because it even says on the document that this is not a contract, just a disclosure.”

In Arizona, N. Mark Kramoltz, an attorney and real estate broker, abhors dual agency, calling it a “fiction” invented by the real estate industry to double-dip, or win commission for both sides of a sale.

“This is the biggest purchase of people’s (lives) and they deserve to have the best representation, the utmost loyalty and confidentiality, and dual agency automatically undercuts that,” he said.

Kramoltz is not a fan of Arizona’s disclosure form, which was created by the state Realtor association. “It says if there is going to be dual agency, then both the buyer and seller have to consent, but it doesn’t mean informed consent — only that they have to sign a document. The form gives weak notice that dual agency is not in the best interest of buyer and seller.”

Kramoltz said many agents now represent themselves as buyer’s agents, but will also take listings.

New Jersey requires disclosure at first significant contact, said Paul Howard of www.njhomebuyer.com and a member of the National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents.

The big loophole in New Jersey is that brokers can advertise as being buyer’s agents, but they work for large companies that have listings.

The New Jersey disclosure statement, titled, “Real Estate Relationships,” does state that “to work as a dual agent, a firm must first obtain the informed written consent of the buyer and the seller,” but people who want to be dual agents minimize the effect of it, said Howard.

“I was in an online discussion and an agent commented that she explains the advantages of dual agency to her clients,” Howard said. “My reply was, ‘The state law requires that you tell what the disadvantages are.’ ”

The problem is a lack of proper disclosure, said John Sullivan, vice president of Buyer’s Edge Co. Inc. in Silver Spring, Md. “If consumers were more aware of their choices, there wouldn’t be a problem with dual agency, because no one in their right mind would do it.”

Sullivan works in Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C.

“The D.C.-area disclosure is probably the worst in the nation,” he said. “It says nothing more than the dual agent represents the buyer and seller. Virginia says much the same thing, with the addition that you might be entitled to other rights under the law, so here’s a citation — go look it up. Maryland’s law is so confounded it actually permits an agent working for a brokerage to perform functions that a broker cannot perform.”

As with other states, in Maryland and Washington, D.C., disclosures are to be made at the first scheduled meeting, which is always a problem. As the National Association of Realtors’ studies in the first decade of this century show, only about 30-35 percent of homebuyers received disclosure information in the first meeting, and as many as 22 percent didn’t received any disclosure at all.

Even before the recession, buyer representation lawsuits started to multiply significantly, according to a legal scan by NAR.

“State real estate associations lobbied for the passage of laws permitting dual agency,” said Bruce Hahn, president of the American Homeowners Grassroots Alliance. “But, it was short-sighted on their part because of all the problems that have (arisen), bad publicity, and damage done to the profession’s reputation.”

Steve Bergsman is a freelance writer in Arizona and author of several books. His latest book, “After the Fall: Opportunities and Strategies for Real Estate Investing in the Coming Decade,” has been ranked as a top-selling real estate investment book for the Amazon Kindle e-reader.