Tag Archive for: michigan

The BetterBuildings for Michigan program has launched and it’s coming to Eastown! This three year, $30M American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) supported program uses a community approach to deliver energy efficiency improvements for homes and businesses by providing access to incentives and affordable loans.

>>note updated Meeting Dates and times: It’s now January 13 and 20 at 6 p.m., January 15 and 22 at 10 a.m.

The program was developed by a multi-stakeholder group including the Michigan Department of Energy, Labor & Economic Growth (DELEG)Michigan Savesthe City of Grand Rapidsthe Economic Development Corporation of the city of Detroit; and the Southeast Michigan Regional Energy Office. BetterBuildings for Michigan will leverage each dollar of the federal funds available within the program with a minimum of five dollars from other investments, thereby leveraging over $150M in private and public funding.

Here’s the link to the Detroit article.

The objective of the BetterBuildings for Michigan program is to create

  • a sustainable energy efficiency market by providing outreach and education to increase demand,
  • a skilled energy efficiency workforce to meet that demand, and
  • the tools for lenders to make ongoing investments in energy efficiency in residential, commercial, industrial, and public buildings.

The City of Grand Rapids, the West Michigan Environmental Action Council (WMEAC) and Eastown Community Association (ECA) will be performing outreach in a portion of Eastown. Those within the outreach target area have access to $1050 in basic energy efficiency upgrades as well as a comprehensive home energy assessment. Based on the assessment, a resident may decide to upgrade to other energy efficiency measures that may be supported by attractive financing up to $12,500. More information can be obtained by contacting the West Michigan Environment Action Council at 451-3051.

Additional information on Eastown Sweep

The targeted neighborhood in Eastown is outlined between Fulton, Fuller, Lake, and Wilcox Park/Aquinas College and includes an estimated 429 homes. This neighborhood will be receiving advance notice of the program and events starting the week of January 3rd this may come in the form of a direct mailing, door2door invitation, or door hangers.

The official program kick off in Eastown starts on Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Residents will not be able to officially sign up for the program until January 12th.

Information Meetings will be held at St. Thomas Church in the basement community room.

Program sign up meetings:

January 13 and 20 at 6 p.m., January 15 and 22 at 10 a.m.

Door-2-Door Canvassing Events: WMEAC will be canvassing the neighborhood the week of January 17-22 for program information and sign up. Deadline for resident sign up is

February 12th, 2011

Also, starting on January 12th, the WMEAC office at 1007 Lake Drive SE & the ECA Office will become home bases for the neighbors to visit, get more information, and sign up during normal business hours of both offices.

The program website should be available by the official program kick-off on January 12th.

That site will be www.betterbuildingsgr.org

Questions from residents about the program can be directed to WMEAC.

Ann Erhardt

Outreach Project Manager

WMEAC
616-451-3051 x24

aerhardt@wmeac.org

WELCOME!
MyGrFSBO.com is designed to provide a place for sellers to list their homes for sale by owner, while connecting them with potential buyers in the market for a new home.

Unlike most fsbo website services, mymifsbo.com is completely FREE of charge, and we provide our visitors with extensive tools and resources for use throughout the entire home selling and buying process.

Link: Question and Answer

Good question…many homes for sale by land contract are not listed on the MLS because sellers just dont like paying commission before they are free and clear of the home. Say you buy a listed home on land contract, you close two weeks later, 6% of the 10% down payment from the buyer is split by the listing and selling broker. The seller is left with the remaining 4% or so minus closing costs, and a 3-5 year loan to keep track of. “Might as well just rent it and wait for the market to pick up” is something Realtors hear often these days.

I have two answers for you. First, there a lot of investors in town selling homes on land contract. Often a sign in the yard sells a home like that in a good neighborhood and good schools. You’ll want to talk to a Realtor who knows who those investors are, and which ones are worth contacting and which are not. Second, if you have at least a good 10% to put down on a house, look for your ideal home in the ideal neighborhood that is currently for rent, and make an offer. Just because its not listed does not mean its not for sale! And…you’ll want a good Realtor to represent you so you dont get ripped off in terms of value, terms, interest rate, and general business conduct.

LINK to full article.

For over 80 years the Fulton Street Farmers Market has brought locally grown produce and homemade items to the heart of Grand Rapids. Last Tuesday the association unveiled an estimated $3 million renovation of the market that will improve vendor conditions and customer experience. The new designs include a 2,000-square-foot building, which will house 8-12 vendor stalls year round…

Photo Credit: Lott3Metz Architecture

MLIVE ARTICLE

From GRAR

The Grand Rapids Association of Realtors, or GRAR,  is now part of the South and West Michigan Regional Information Center, or SWMRIC.

The biggest change will involve the MLS, the Multiple Listing System, which is how all the homes currently on the market can be viewed by Realtors, Clients and the general public. GRAR was using Solid Earth for their MLS, but to join with SWMRIC, converted over to that system, using Rapattoni instead. And while for the most part, all the listings transferred over, there are still a few gliches being worked on. In addition, the number of characters for property descriptions is also limited to 1000, so many Realtors will need to downsize their comments.

SWMRIC covers available Real Estate in the South and West Michigan counties of Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Branch, Calhoun, Cass, Hillsdale, Ionia, Kalamazoo, Kent, Lake, Manistee, Mason, Mecosta, Montcalm, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, Osceola, Ottawa, St. Joseph, Van Buren and beyond.

Serving the following Realtor Associations: Battle Creek Area, Branch County, Grand Rapids, Greater Kalamazoo, Hillsdale County, Mason-Oceana-Manistee, Montcalm County, Southwestern Michigan, St. Joseph, West Central Michigan and West Michigan Lakeshore.

Link to full RAPIDIAN ARTICLE

A coalition of 24 community organizations will be presenting a position paper to the Grand Rapids City Commission at 10:30am tomorrow (7/27/2010) calling for cooperation to address growing housing concerns as a result of the recent changes in the real estate market.

The position paper calls for three primary issues to be addressed.

* Ensuring a minimum standard of quality among all rental units by adding single family rental units to the City’s rental inspection and certification program.

* Redesigning the City’s vacant property inspections program to mitigate the negative effects that the foreclosure crisis has had on property values, crime, and neighborhood stability.

* Creating a comprehensive, accessible, and accurate database of parcel information.

Link to Rapid Growth Article


Savvy Chic Savings
Hop In Deals
Savings Angel

All hail the queens of frugal blogging!

>>excerpt…read full article at above link<<

Jolon Hull hunts coupon deals for metro Grand Rapids savers, and Cindy Curtis turns up discounts for those who buy locally. Why are you spending so much, they ask.

Jolon Hull had never used a coupon in her life until last year. Then everything changed, and the frugality queen was born.

Cindy Curtis left a successful career in sales and now pounds the pavement to find unique and new businesses around Grand Rapids.

Both West Michigan women believe local consumers will follow them on the path of saving money and supporting area business through the new websites they’ve launched. They spend long hours posting every deal they can find on their individual savings websites so that busy people don’t have to search the Internet.

That’s what makes them different than the vast array of national sites offering savings and discounts around the country. Hull and Curtis want you to keep your money here.

Frugal blogging
Hull created Savvy Chic Savings last fall to help her and others save money and find the best local deals. Her goal is to post seven to 10 new offers every day, checking primarily pharmacies, grocery stores and online discounts in what she calls “frugal blogging.”

An unusual activity for Hull, 30, a single woman who hadn’t thought much about saving money on purchases. But when a cousin gave the Sparta woman a $10 razor she got for a dollar, and a handful of free personal care items, Hull changed her mind about couponing.

Hull really started paying attention, when in one month, she ended up with $761 in free brand name items at a local drugstore by following sales, using coupons and signing up for a loyalty card.

“I never saw any value in coupons until I realized how much you can get free,” Hull says. “Obviously I saw the value in this and the value of the Internet. Now I do all the work to help my readers get the best deals…”

206 Foreclosure Listings are Currently listed in Grand Rapids. Many aren’t listed on the MLS.

Grand Rapids foreclosures 6/30/10

For an up to date list of all current Grand Rapids MI foreclosures in your price range and area, please email invest@grar.com.
Here are some quick links as well:

HUD Homes
Fannie Mae
Freddie Mac
OCWEN
Fifth Third Bank

Click the “Foreclosures” tab for more info.

Negative Impact of New Appraisal Rules

-by Pete Bruinsma, GRI

Here are two examples I’ve encountered in the past six months in which the new HVCC/FHA appraisal rules have negatively affected sales. First, a quick opinion.

The new rules for conducting appraisals are a great example of how a well-intentioned idea can be placed into practice prematurely. I know not one Realtor, lender or appraiser who is thrilled with these new rules. Quality of my appraisals have been lower, prices higher, appraisers are paid less as a result, and authority and liability have been misappropriated.

In many regions, homes are worth less now than they were worth three years ago. Some home value inflation and some demand was manufactured through fraud, committed through improper lending and appraisal practices. Although this undisputed truth was witnessed by most Realtors, lenders and appraisers, the “fraud” word is easier to finger than the abundance of  misjudgments made by lenders, consumers and economists over the course of many years. I feel as though the new method of operation for appraisals is an overcompensation.

Two (out of many more) things that bug me about this:

The advent of the “Re-appraisal” – Appraisers I know recently billed $300-350 per appraisal and retained much of that. Under new rules they share the fees with management companies, costs are driven down through competition, and they now retain 50-60% of the former fees with the purchaser paying the same or more. Plus, appraisals are under hightened scrutiny, so less money for tougher work. Since appraisers are not allowed to have any contact with referring lenders under the new rules, and findings are largely unchallenged, items never before noted on an appraisal such as “peeling paint” are new cause for a note on the appraisal, and a the call for a re-inspection with an additional fee. This easy pay correction for the appraiser is just passed down to the buyer.

Discouragement of Localism – Lets face it, without connections in the business with good lenders, surveyors, lawyers, title companies, sign companies, builders, contractors, government officials, neighborhood associations and more, the job of a good Realtor would be a lot less streamlined, and the end product to clients would be less valuable. Taking the fair, reliable, knowledgeable, local appraisers we’ve worked with for years out of the running for our new business has many negative implications and should be reevaluated. Plus, appraisers randomly assigned to find comps in neighborhoods with which they are unfamiliar simply results in bad appraisals.

Here are my two examples from personal experience:

Example 1: I’m representing the buyer. Short sale finally approved after 5 months! One month deadline to get it closed, Bank of America requires 4 days to examine the HUD statement prior to close. Appraisal ends up taking three weeks and costs $650.

The chain of command explains a lot of the problem: Short sale negotiator -> Realtor -> Loan Officer -> Bank -> Appraisal Management Company -> Appraiser (via fax).  The initial appraisal request took 5 days to reach the appraiser and three more to fit into his schedule. Once there, he noted some loose shingles and peeling paint, subject to repair and a $125 re-inspection fee. Repairs were made, re-inspection request submitted, 5 days for the request to reach the appraiser and two more to fit into his schedule. Appraiser comes back, repairs are satisfactory, but he notices one piece of rotten wood underneath the shingle repair, where water had been leaking. This is on a porch overhang. He notes it on the appraisal, subject to repair and a $125 re-inspection fee. He also calls for the water to be turned on again even though we’d submitted our plumbing inspection from a certifed plumbing inspector, along with a letter that stated the water was on at time of inspection.

We did make it happen, the deal did close in time, but it came down to the final day. The loan officer voluntarily paid for the two re-inspection fees. The buyers and sellers ended up emotionally exhausted but happy.

Example 2: Rehab project purchased for $17,000. Pre-construction appraisal estimated current value of $17,500 with final estimated finished value of $68,500. Finished appraisal comes in at $20,000.

Home had been sold two years prior in less-than-perfect condition for $85,000. Home was fully rehabbed by licensed contractors including new mechanicals, roof, insulation, foundation and drainage work, new hardwood floors, landscaping, paint, bathroom, etc. Tenants placed for $750/month. Home appraised for a refinance, $450 charged. Appraisal came in at $20,000 with four comps, all short sales and foreclosures in poor condition. I personally found two 3-month-old non-foreclosure sold comps and one pending sale, of similar construction, age and size within 1/2 mile that supported $60-70k. These were submitted to the bank and denied.

Now, does the owner gamble another $450 by going through another bank, not knowing who is going to appraise the home? Maybe. Does the owner realize a benefit in lowered taxes from the city assessor taking this $20,000 appraisal into consideration when determining taxable value?  Nope.

Frustrating.

Fannie Mae Introduces HAFA Program


On Tuesday, June 1, Fannie Mae issued Servicing Guide Announcement SVC-2010-07, introducing Fannie Mae’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives (HAFA) Program. It, like Treasury’s Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program (as described in Supplemental Directive 09-09 Revised), is designed to mitigate the impact of foreclosures on borrowers who are eligible for a loan modification under the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) but ultimately are unsuccessful in obtaining one.

Program Features
The Fannie Mae Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program, which becomes effective August 1, 2010, simplifies and streamlines the use of short or “preforeclosure” sale and deed-in-lieu of foreclosure (DIL) options on HAMP-eligible loans by incorporating the following unique features:

  • Complements HAMP by providing alternatives for borrowers who are HAMP eligible (including borrowers facing imminent default);
  • Allows the borrower to receive pre-approved short sale terms prior to the property listing;
  • Prohibits the servicer from requiring, as a condition of approving the short sale, a reduction in the real estate commission agreed upon in the listing agreement;
  • Releases the successful HAFA borrower from future liability for the debt;
  • Uses standard processes, documents, and timeframes;
  • Provides financial incentives to borrowers, servicers and subordinate lienholders; and
  • Utilizes verified borrower financial and hardship information collected in conjunction with HAMP, eliminating the need for additional eligibility analysis.

For More Information
For complete program information, read the Announcement. Other related materials are available on the new HAFA page on eFannieMae.com.