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February 4, 2011 at 2:53 PM in reply to: OT: LOL… All you folks that are trying to eat organic from places like Whole Foods…. #662864February 4, 2011 at 2:53 PM in reply to: OT: LOL… All you folks that are trying to eat organic from places like Whole Foods…. #663467
no_such_reality
Participant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]
I’m no expert on this by a long shot… but are you suggesting that going all-organic would increase crop yields around the globe? In other words, if we abandoned GMO, fertilizers, etc. – all of the “bad” stuff – would the resulting yields not decline on an aggregate basis?[/quote]There are scores of different crops in scores of different types of farms around the world. High-tech solutions will probably work well in certain environments, not so well in others. Seems like the high-tech stuff isn’t working well in India for whatever reason. There’s not going to be any one answer on how to feed 7 billion people, if it’s even possible at all.[/quote]
I’m not sure what technology/GM solution people are expecting to severe drought followed by torrential rain and flooding.
February 4, 2011 at 2:53 PM in reply to: OT: LOL… All you folks that are trying to eat organic from places like Whole Foods…. #663604no_such_reality
Participant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]
I’m no expert on this by a long shot… but are you suggesting that going all-organic would increase crop yields around the globe? In other words, if we abandoned GMO, fertilizers, etc. – all of the “bad” stuff – would the resulting yields not decline on an aggregate basis?[/quote]There are scores of different crops in scores of different types of farms around the world. High-tech solutions will probably work well in certain environments, not so well in others. Seems like the high-tech stuff isn’t working well in India for whatever reason. There’s not going to be any one answer on how to feed 7 billion people, if it’s even possible at all.[/quote]
I’m not sure what technology/GM solution people are expecting to severe drought followed by torrential rain and flooding.
February 4, 2011 at 2:53 PM in reply to: OT: LOL… All you folks that are trying to eat organic from places like Whole Foods…. #663942no_such_reality
Participant[quote=CONCHO][quote=davelj]
I’m no expert on this by a long shot… but are you suggesting that going all-organic would increase crop yields around the globe? In other words, if we abandoned GMO, fertilizers, etc. – all of the “bad” stuff – would the resulting yields not decline on an aggregate basis?[/quote]There are scores of different crops in scores of different types of farms around the world. High-tech solutions will probably work well in certain environments, not so well in others. Seems like the high-tech stuff isn’t working well in India for whatever reason. There’s not going to be any one answer on how to feed 7 billion people, if it’s even possible at all.[/quote]
I’m not sure what technology/GM solution people are expecting to severe drought followed by torrential rain and flooding.
no_such_reality
ParticipantThe 2nd probably got five cents on the dollar if they’re lucky with the first holding that boat.
As for the steal. Or deal depends. Seems like a lot of people feel that this house, in this situation, even listed at $850K should have been sold for a million.
Given your experience, and other’s concerns of fraud, how much below ‘short sale’ market do you think this was with the rumors what the state of affairs on the property (i.e BBQ island)?
At $850K listing last September, how many offers do you think they should have gotten given the typical short sale experience of trying to get people to see it?
no_such_reality
ParticipantThe 2nd probably got five cents on the dollar if they’re lucky with the first holding that boat.
As for the steal. Or deal depends. Seems like a lot of people feel that this house, in this situation, even listed at $850K should have been sold for a million.
Given your experience, and other’s concerns of fraud, how much below ‘short sale’ market do you think this was with the rumors what the state of affairs on the property (i.e BBQ island)?
At $850K listing last September, how many offers do you think they should have gotten given the typical short sale experience of trying to get people to see it?
no_such_reality
ParticipantThe 2nd probably got five cents on the dollar if they’re lucky with the first holding that boat.
As for the steal. Or deal depends. Seems like a lot of people feel that this house, in this situation, even listed at $850K should have been sold for a million.
Given your experience, and other’s concerns of fraud, how much below ‘short sale’ market do you think this was with the rumors what the state of affairs on the property (i.e BBQ island)?
At $850K listing last September, how many offers do you think they should have gotten given the typical short sale experience of trying to get people to see it?
no_such_reality
ParticipantThe 2nd probably got five cents on the dollar if they’re lucky with the first holding that boat.
As for the steal. Or deal depends. Seems like a lot of people feel that this house, in this situation, even listed at $850K should have been sold for a million.
Given your experience, and other’s concerns of fraud, how much below ‘short sale’ market do you think this was with the rumors what the state of affairs on the property (i.e BBQ island)?
At $850K listing last September, how many offers do you think they should have gotten given the typical short sale experience of trying to get people to see it?
no_such_reality
ParticipantThe 2nd probably got five cents on the dollar if they’re lucky with the first holding that boat.
As for the steal. Or deal depends. Seems like a lot of people feel that this house, in this situation, even listed at $850K should have been sold for a million.
Given your experience, and other’s concerns of fraud, how much below ‘short sale’ market do you think this was with the rumors what the state of affairs on the property (i.e BBQ island)?
At $850K listing last September, how many offers do you think they should have gotten given the typical short sale experience of trying to get people to see it?
no_such_reality
ParticipantDid you read the notes?
1. 15% bonus for National Board Cert. Basically, add 15% to every entry.
2. $3000 for bilingual.
3. the schedule points are based on semester units (going through the motions count grinding out training sessions). The steps are just years employment. You did notice that Schedule 27 is the only one going out to steps (years) 11-14? That should clue you in to the way the advancement through schedule works.
And that last note: annual rates shown,
for full time assignments (6 hour or 8 hours) Plus the note at the top (Annual is 204 paid days or equivalent hours) AKA 1632 hours.
A work year in private sector is 2080 less a pittance of holidays (six to eight) and somewhere between two and four weeks vacation. let’s call it three on average and 7 holidays. 1900 hours roughly.
Look at the table, a teacher with 8 years experience will be in the $65K range base. Add 15%. That’s $74,750. Or are you saying the average teacher in LA hasn’t been around 8 years had hasn’t been doing any training? Possibly add $3000 on bilingual.
no_such_reality
ParticipantDid you read the notes?
1. 15% bonus for National Board Cert. Basically, add 15% to every entry.
2. $3000 for bilingual.
3. the schedule points are based on semester units (going through the motions count grinding out training sessions). The steps are just years employment. You did notice that Schedule 27 is the only one going out to steps (years) 11-14? That should clue you in to the way the advancement through schedule works.
And that last note: annual rates shown,
for full time assignments (6 hour or 8 hours) Plus the note at the top (Annual is 204 paid days or equivalent hours) AKA 1632 hours.
A work year in private sector is 2080 less a pittance of holidays (six to eight) and somewhere between two and four weeks vacation. let’s call it three on average and 7 holidays. 1900 hours roughly.
Look at the table, a teacher with 8 years experience will be in the $65K range base. Add 15%. That’s $74,750. Or are you saying the average teacher in LA hasn’t been around 8 years had hasn’t been doing any training? Possibly add $3000 on bilingual.
no_such_reality
ParticipantDid you read the notes?
1. 15% bonus for National Board Cert. Basically, add 15% to every entry.
2. $3000 for bilingual.
3. the schedule points are based on semester units (going through the motions count grinding out training sessions). The steps are just years employment. You did notice that Schedule 27 is the only one going out to steps (years) 11-14? That should clue you in to the way the advancement through schedule works.
And that last note: annual rates shown,
for full time assignments (6 hour or 8 hours) Plus the note at the top (Annual is 204 paid days or equivalent hours) AKA 1632 hours.
A work year in private sector is 2080 less a pittance of holidays (six to eight) and somewhere between two and four weeks vacation. let’s call it three on average and 7 holidays. 1900 hours roughly.
Look at the table, a teacher with 8 years experience will be in the $65K range base. Add 15%. That’s $74,750. Or are you saying the average teacher in LA hasn’t been around 8 years had hasn’t been doing any training? Possibly add $3000 on bilingual.
no_such_reality
ParticipantDid you read the notes?
1. 15% bonus for National Board Cert. Basically, add 15% to every entry.
2. $3000 for bilingual.
3. the schedule points are based on semester units (going through the motions count grinding out training sessions). The steps are just years employment. You did notice that Schedule 27 is the only one going out to steps (years) 11-14? That should clue you in to the way the advancement through schedule works.
And that last note: annual rates shown,
for full time assignments (6 hour or 8 hours) Plus the note at the top (Annual is 204 paid days or equivalent hours) AKA 1632 hours.
A work year in private sector is 2080 less a pittance of holidays (six to eight) and somewhere between two and four weeks vacation. let’s call it three on average and 7 holidays. 1900 hours roughly.
Look at the table, a teacher with 8 years experience will be in the $65K range base. Add 15%. That’s $74,750. Or are you saying the average teacher in LA hasn’t been around 8 years had hasn’t been doing any training? Possibly add $3000 on bilingual.
no_such_reality
ParticipantDid you read the notes?
1. 15% bonus for National Board Cert. Basically, add 15% to every entry.
2. $3000 for bilingual.
3. the schedule points are based on semester units (going through the motions count grinding out training sessions). The steps are just years employment. You did notice that Schedule 27 is the only one going out to steps (years) 11-14? That should clue you in to the way the advancement through schedule works.
And that last note: annual rates shown,
for full time assignments (6 hour or 8 hours) Plus the note at the top (Annual is 204 paid days or equivalent hours) AKA 1632 hours.
A work year in private sector is 2080 less a pittance of holidays (six to eight) and somewhere between two and four weeks vacation. let’s call it three on average and 7 holidays. 1900 hours roughly.
Look at the table, a teacher with 8 years experience will be in the $65K range base. Add 15%. That’s $74,750. Or are you saying the average teacher in LA hasn’t been around 8 years had hasn’t been doing any training? Possibly add $3000 on bilingual.
no_such_reality
Participant[quote=sdrealtor]least one agent didnt stand up at the weekly meeting asking if anyone knew about a 1 story real ocean view home w? at least 2000 sf coming up. It is unquestionably the hardest to find and hottest commodity out there. You put that house on the market as an equity sale at $1M, clean it up a little, make it easy to show and within 30 to 60 days it would have sold.
[/quote]
Agreed. Now, this isn’t an equity seller. No body is cleaning it up. In fact, it’s getting quazi-stripped. It isn’t selling in 30 to 60 days. It’s not easy to show. The seller doesn’t care. It may not sell at all cuz the bank or 2nd says screw-it.And… $720K probably isn’t the real price.
BTW, (not a dig) but I’m assuming none of your three that would put an offer in did. They didn’t see it. They weren’t actively looking. No standing search for it?
Clean it up and make it an equity sale at a $1Million? Then $720K plus 2nd kick, replacement high end pool BBQ, appliances and lipstick for the pig will give a flipper about $100K profit on their $850K
investmentgamble.Can the system be gamed? Heck yeah. Does the MLS tell the story – hell no.
It could be a pocket listing.
It could be stupid banks.
It could be rougher than anybody thinks inside.
It could be a huge second that took a bath that could buy out the first.
It could be a straight up deal that if you didn’t hit day one had a dozen people in line.Would I buy it at a $720K, yeah. Could it sell for a million, yeah, as you said dressed and equity seller.
Would your buyers buy it missing the pool BBQ island, the appliances and probably missing the normal beautiful home gloss and looking kind of piggy?
How much? Much much they willing to go knowing it’s $720K to clear the first and not knowing how much to clear the second and they’ve got some pig slop to clean up?
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