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Holiday Tree and Trash Removal In Kingstowne

Trash Removal Holiday Changes

If you usually have trash removed on Thursdays, please keep in mind trash is not collected Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 27), Christmas Day (Dec. 25), and New Year’s Day     (Jan. 1)—all of which are Thursdays this year. The trash will be picked up on the next regularly scheduled pickup day, which is a Monday in each of these cases. Please help spread the word, so everyone can spend these holidays resting—and not looking into a street lined with trash bags and recycling bins.

Yard Debris and Holiday Trees

Yard debris pickup ends December 24. Holiday trees can be left at the curb for a special tree pickup the first two Wednesdays in January, Jan. 7 and 14. Please remove all decorations from the trees before leaving at the curb.

 

Turkey Day Plumbing Tips

The day after Thanksgiving is the single busiest of the year for many plumbers. Big holiday meal preparation and cleanup can lead to a lot of unwanted waste in the kitchen drain and garbage disposal. Also, holiday house guests who require additional clothes washing, showers and toilet flushes put a strain on household plumbing.

“Often, the case is that a house already has partially clogged drains that go unnoticed, until holiday guests arrive and overwhelm the system,” said Paul Abrams, Roto-Rooter representative. Hectic houses full of people and frantic hosts quickly and easily lead to plumbing problems throughout the holiday season. “Even more problematic is that virtually every traditional Thanksgiving dish is a supreme drain clog culprit,” Abrams continued.

Thanksgiving hosts can avoid a visit from their plumber over the holiday weekend by following these clog-preventing tips:

-Never pour fats or cooking oils down drains. They solidify in pipes. Instead, wipe grease from pots with paper towels and throw in trash.
-Avoid putting stringy, fibrous or starchy waste in the garbage disposal. Poultry skins, celery, fruit & potato peels, for example, cannot be sufficiently broken down.
-Make sure the disposal is running when you put food into it. Don’t wait until it’s full to turn it on.
-For homes hosting weekend guests, it’s a good idea to wait ten minutes between showers so slow drains have time to do their job.
-Never flush cotton balls, swabs, hair or wet wipes down a toilet. They don’t dissolve and will cause clogs.
-Try to address any plumbing problems before the holiday and before guests arrive. However, in holiday emergencies, don’t hesitate to ask up front about extra holiday service fees. As always, know your DIY limits. Often, minor plumbing problems turn into plumbing catastrophes if not handled properly.

Reprinted with permission from RISMedia. ©2014. All rights reserved.

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For Sale: The Most Expensive Listing in the Nation

Want to live in the most expensive active listing in the country? Don’t we all. At $139 million, “Le Palais Royal” has carved out space as the priciest listing currently circulating. And it’s located in Florida, of all places.

The magnificent, French-inspired Beaux Arts masterpiece sits on Florida’s Atlantic Coast. The palatial, 60,000-square-foot estate roosts on more than four acres, with 465 feet of beachfront right on Millionaires Mile.

In addition to a strip of sand named after a club of the richest of the rich, Le Palais Royal has a 492-foot private dock, perfect for that private yacht you’ve always wanted, as well as an underground garage with parking for more than 30 cars. If that isn’t enough for you, then you will be tickled to know that the entryway is marked by a 13-foot, 22-carat gold-leaf gate and a 26-foot entrance fountain, one of six outside waterfalls lining the estate.

The front doors lead to a $2 million marble staircase with a steel-iron railing and (you guessed it) more gold leaf, which supposedly took craftsmen over two years to construct.

In addition to the estate’s 11 bedrooms and 17 bathrooms, the space is also home to the first-ever IMAX Theater contracted for private use, featuring a 50 by 27-foot screen and seating for 18 with a bar.

Currently under the final phase of construction, the space is slated for completion before the end of 2015, so start breaking open those piggy banks!

Listed by: William P.D. Pierce, Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate
Listed for: $139 million

Reprinted with permission from RISMedia. ©2014. All rights reserved.

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Freddie Mac 2014 Third Quarter Refinance Report

Freddie Mac recently released the results of its third quarter 2014 quarterly refinance analysis, showing the share of borrowers who are tapping their equity by cashing out at the time of refinance has doubled from the same quarter last year as a result of broad-based house price appreciation. However, the dollar volume remains very low at an estimated $8.0 billion.

“While the share of borrowers that cashed-out some equity has increased considerably over the past year, the refinance volume has also fallen sharply, resulting in a relatively small amount of equity cashed-out, to the tune of roughly $8 billion which is less than one-tenth of what we saw at the peak in mid-2006,” says Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist. “That said, based on the analysis contained in our third quarter refinance report, we estimate that those that lowered their payment by refinancing into a cheaper mortgage rate will save more than $1.5 billion in interest payments over the next 12 months of their new loan. On average, that’s an interest rate reduction of about 1.3 percentage points — a savings of about 24 percent. On a $200,000 loan, that translates into mortgage interest savings on average of about $2,700 during the next 12 months.”

Of borrowers who refinanced during the third quarter of 2014, 36 percent shortened their loan term, a four percent decline from the previous quarter. From 1990 through 2013, on average 28 percent of borrowers shortened their term.
In the second quarter, an estimated $8.0 billion in net home equity was cashed out during a refinance of conventional prime-credit home mortgages, up from the revised $5.6 billion last quarter. Adjusted for inflation, annual cash-out volumes during 2010 through 2013 have been the smallest since 1997.

In aggregate, U.S. home equity grew by an estimated $3 trillion during the two-year period through June 30, 2014. Much of this gain was attributable to home value gains, with shorter-term loans and faster-than amortized principal paydowns also being a factor.

About 72 percent of those who refinanced their first-lien home mortgage maintained approximately the same loan amount or lowered their principal balance by paying in additional money at the closing table, unchanged from the previous quarter. Twenty-eight percent ‘cashed-out’ some equity, the highest share in five years; the peak on ‘cash-out’ share was 89 percent during the second and third quarters of 2006.

The median age of the original loan outstanding before refinance was 7.0 years during the third quarter. The median age was 7.0 years or older in each of the last four quarters, the most since the analysis began in 1985.

For more information, visit www.alyssanair.com

Reprinted with permission from RISMedia. ©2014. All rights reserved.

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Money-Saving Tips that Really Work

It’s one thing to resolve to save more of your hard-earned money, and another to actually do so. Good Housekeeping Magazine offers five reader-submitted tips that can work wonders to help you stash away cash:

 

Add a dollar to your savings each week – Take the 52 Week Money Challenge and put away a dollar the first week, two dollars the second, three dollars the third, etc. Granted, it gets a little tougher each week, but by the end of the year, you will have $1,378 saved!

Downsize to one car – It may sound impossible, but if one car sits unused in a parking lot most of the day, you may be able to do this. When you calculate what that second car is costing you – including gas, maintenance, insurance, etc. – you may decide the sacrifice is worth taking a bus or train to work. You may even drop a few pounds by doing more walking – and you will be saving hundreds of dollars each month.

Stash away a few singles – Whenever you think about it, take a few singles out of your wallet and stash them away in an envelope. Chances are, you won’t even miss them. It will give you some available cash on hand in case of an unexpected expense. More than that, it will still build up, and you could pile up a couple hundred bucks each year. (More if, every once in a while, you stash away a fiver!)

Name your savings – Online-only banks will let you name multiple accounts (think Mama’s Spa Weekend or Hawaii, Here We Come.) When you see the names pop up on your statements, it makes savings seem like fun – and if you decline the ATM card, it takes days to get the money so you may avoid impulse spending.

Sort through your grocery cart – Before you head to the check stand, sort through your cart and eliminate items you don’t really need. If you can do without that candy or the bag of chips, put them back. It may seem like more trouble than it’s worth, but it’s good exercise and if you stash the cash you would have spent on those items, the savings will soon mount up.

Reprinted with permission from RISMedia. ©2014. All rights reserved.

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Q: Can a Home Be Sold for Less Than Its Mortgage?

A: Sometimes. But it is a complicated process and a lot will depend on the lender.

This process is called a “short sale,” which occurs when a lender agrees to write off the portion of a mortgage that is higher than the value of a home. But, usually, a buyer must be willing to purchase the property first.

A short sale may be more complex if the loan has been sold in the secondary market.  Then the lender will need permission from Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae, the two major secondary-market players.

If the loan was a low down payment mortgage with private mortgage insurance, the lender also will need to involve the mortgage insurance company that insured the low down payment loan.

The short sale can keep the homeowner from landing in bankruptcy or foreclosure. But it is not an easy procedure to approve, and it involves as much, if not more, paperwork than an original mortgage application.

Instead of proving your credit worthiness and financial stability, you must prove you are broke. And any remaining difference between your home’s value and the balance on your mortgage is considered a forgiveness of debt, which usually means it is taxable income.

Reprinted with permission from RISMedia. ©2014. All rights reserved.