Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
EconProf
ParticipantBobS
They must mean Reo Terrace in the Paradise Hills area.
This actually looks like a fair price for a rental investor.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
They must mean Reo Terrace in the Paradise Hills area.
This actually looks like a fair price for a rental investor.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
They must mean Reo Terrace in the Paradise Hills area.
This actually looks like a fair price for a rental investor.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
They must mean Reo Terrace in the Paradise Hills area.
This actually looks like a fair price for a rental investor.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I’d fully advise them of your plan to apply the deposit on the last day of the grace period to pay rent–usually 5 days. Try to get their acquiescence, be friendly & reasonable, showing them how they will be protected. IF they then chose to give a 3-day notice, then the clock starts ticking. Your goal is to keep pushing the date back until it becomes moot.
They have to SERVE you with the notice, which may take a few days (get the proper form, fill it out perfectly, serve it in person). Then there is, I believe, 3 weeks minimum after they file an unlawful detainer which cannot start until after the end of the 3-day notice period, weekends and holidays not counted. This should put you easily into September. Besides, you can further delay the court date by ANSWERING the complaint on the form you are served on. This gives many more days.
IF you show up in court with all your evidence, you should prevail, but will most likely not be necessary.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I’d fully advise them of your plan to apply the deposit on the last day of the grace period to pay rent–usually 5 days. Try to get their acquiescence, be friendly & reasonable, showing them how they will be protected. IF they then chose to give a 3-day notice, then the clock starts ticking. Your goal is to keep pushing the date back until it becomes moot.
They have to SERVE you with the notice, which may take a few days (get the proper form, fill it out perfectly, serve it in person). Then there is, I believe, 3 weeks minimum after they file an unlawful detainer which cannot start until after the end of the 3-day notice period, weekends and holidays not counted. This should put you easily into September. Besides, you can further delay the court date by ANSWERING the complaint on the form you are served on. This gives many more days.
IF you show up in court with all your evidence, you should prevail, but will most likely not be necessary.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I’d fully advise them of your plan to apply the deposit on the last day of the grace period to pay rent–usually 5 days. Try to get their acquiescence, be friendly & reasonable, showing them how they will be protected. IF they then chose to give a 3-day notice, then the clock starts ticking. Your goal is to keep pushing the date back until it becomes moot.
They have to SERVE you with the notice, which may take a few days (get the proper form, fill it out perfectly, serve it in person). Then there is, I believe, 3 weeks minimum after they file an unlawful detainer which cannot start until after the end of the 3-day notice period, weekends and holidays not counted. This should put you easily into September. Besides, you can further delay the court date by ANSWERING the complaint on the form you are served on. This gives many more days.
IF you show up in court with all your evidence, you should prevail, but will most likely not be necessary.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I’d fully advise them of your plan to apply the deposit on the last day of the grace period to pay rent–usually 5 days. Try to get their acquiescence, be friendly & reasonable, showing them how they will be protected. IF they then chose to give a 3-day notice, then the clock starts ticking. Your goal is to keep pushing the date back until it becomes moot.
They have to SERVE you with the notice, which may take a few days (get the proper form, fill it out perfectly, serve it in person). Then there is, I believe, 3 weeks minimum after they file an unlawful detainer which cannot start until after the end of the 3-day notice period, weekends and holidays not counted. This should put you easily into September. Besides, you can further delay the court date by ANSWERING the complaint on the form you are served on. This gives many more days.
IF you show up in court with all your evidence, you should prevail, but will most likely not be necessary.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I’d fully advise them of your plan to apply the deposit on the last day of the grace period to pay rent–usually 5 days. Try to get their acquiescence, be friendly & reasonable, showing them how they will be protected. IF they then chose to give a 3-day notice, then the clock starts ticking. Your goal is to keep pushing the date back until it becomes moot.
They have to SERVE you with the notice, which may take a few days (get the proper form, fill it out perfectly, serve it in person). Then there is, I believe, 3 weeks minimum after they file an unlawful detainer which cannot start until after the end of the 3-day notice period, weekends and holidays not counted. This should put you easily into September. Besides, you can further delay the court date by ANSWERING the complaint on the form you are served on. This gives many more days.
IF you show up in court with all your evidence, you should prevail, but will most likely not be necessary.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I bicycle around this area a lot and have noticed there is a very strong correlation between the house and lot values and the proximity to the power lines. Whether they are or are not a health/environmental hazard, what counts is the market’s perception, and it is very negative.
Another factor that will hurt these values is that most of the houses were put up in the runup to the 2005/6 price peak. The builders went for square footage over lower density, and the neighborhood show it. No amount of architectural gyrations will disguise the fact that your big box is smack next to your neighbors big box, and your 3rd and 4th cars are clogging the available street parking.
The next trend will be downsizing to reasonably-sized houses, shedding some possessions, and heating and cooling a smaller abode. This trend was in evidence in the earlier 1990s correction.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I bicycle around this area a lot and have noticed there is a very strong correlation between the house and lot values and the proximity to the power lines. Whether they are or are not a health/environmental hazard, what counts is the market’s perception, and it is very negative.
Another factor that will hurt these values is that most of the houses were put up in the runup to the 2005/6 price peak. The builders went for square footage over lower density, and the neighborhood show it. No amount of architectural gyrations will disguise the fact that your big box is smack next to your neighbors big box, and your 3rd and 4th cars are clogging the available street parking.
The next trend will be downsizing to reasonably-sized houses, shedding some possessions, and heating and cooling a smaller abode. This trend was in evidence in the earlier 1990s correction.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I bicycle around this area a lot and have noticed there is a very strong correlation between the house and lot values and the proximity to the power lines. Whether they are or are not a health/environmental hazard, what counts is the market’s perception, and it is very negative.
Another factor that will hurt these values is that most of the houses were put up in the runup to the 2005/6 price peak. The builders went for square footage over lower density, and the neighborhood show it. No amount of architectural gyrations will disguise the fact that your big box is smack next to your neighbors big box, and your 3rd and 4th cars are clogging the available street parking.
The next trend will be downsizing to reasonably-sized houses, shedding some possessions, and heating and cooling a smaller abode. This trend was in evidence in the earlier 1990s correction.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I bicycle around this area a lot and have noticed there is a very strong correlation between the house and lot values and the proximity to the power lines. Whether they are or are not a health/environmental hazard, what counts is the market’s perception, and it is very negative.
Another factor that will hurt these values is that most of the houses were put up in the runup to the 2005/6 price peak. The builders went for square footage over lower density, and the neighborhood show it. No amount of architectural gyrations will disguise the fact that your big box is smack next to your neighbors big box, and your 3rd and 4th cars are clogging the available street parking.
The next trend will be downsizing to reasonably-sized houses, shedding some possessions, and heating and cooling a smaller abode. This trend was in evidence in the earlier 1990s correction.EconProf
ParticipantBobS
I bicycle around this area a lot and have noticed there is a very strong correlation between the house and lot values and the proximity to the power lines. Whether they are or are not a health/environmental hazard, what counts is the market’s perception, and it is very negative.
Another factor that will hurt these values is that most of the houses were put up in the runup to the 2005/6 price peak. The builders went for square footage over lower density, and the neighborhood show it. No amount of architectural gyrations will disguise the fact that your big box is smack next to your neighbors big box, and your 3rd and 4th cars are clogging the available street parking.
The next trend will be downsizing to reasonably-sized houses, shedding some possessions, and heating and cooling a smaller abode. This trend was in evidence in the earlier 1990s correction. -
AuthorPosts
