March 13, 2008 at 4:42 pm (Blogroll, Politics, housing, property management, real estate, society)
Tags: economic development, FEMA, housing, HUD, hurricane, Hurricane Katrina, hurricane season, landlords, trailers
The government’s worst landlord is FEMA. After placing thousands of Hurricane Katrina survivors, mostly poor and low income people, in cheap trailers that were supposed to be temporary housing, FEMA and HUD, with the cooperation of local and state politicians appear to have abandoned them in favor of an economic development scheme aimed at creating long term solutions to a short term disaster.
Look at it like this. If your car has a flat tire, you need to replace the tire with a new one, or at least a tire that will get your car on the road so you can get to work every day. What you don’t need is the government to build a tire production facility somewhere just to make more tires that someone will sell you sometime in the future. But that’s how the government thinks your problem should be solved. Don’t help the survivors of our national disaster survive by helping with the construction of low cost affordable housing today, instead just dump a few billion into port development in order to create jobs sometime down the road.
FEMA is not equipped to handle low-income housing, and HUD …… Well what can you say about a government agency with a long record of corruption and scandal? The survivors of Hurricane Katrina will need government help for years to come. How long can a human survive in a mold, insect, and vermin infected government trailer that is environmentally hazardous to begin with? Is this a new form of social engineering in our country? We should be paying attention to this, because another hurricane season is about to begin.
Here are ten simple Landlord Rules that the nation’s worst landlords, FEMA and HUD could learn a lesson from.
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March 7, 2008 at 5:19 pm (Blogroll, property management, real estate)
Tags: internet marketing, landlords, property managers, rental, rental property, renters, save money
The question is whether or not landlords are able to find renters using the Internet and save money doing so. The most common way to market a rental property is through the newspapers or other print media. This approach reaches primarily into the local market, but does nothing to reach beyond. The Internet, on the other hand, is global and is the greatest information resource ever created. Landlords and property managers should seriously consider Internet marketing and the possibility of keeping the occupancy rate up by reaching out to find new renters through Internet.
Here’s an article where you can learn more about Internet Marketing for Landlords and how landlords may be able to save money doing so.
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March 6, 2008 at 5:32 pm (Blogroll, property management, real estate)
Tags: bad renter, good renter, landlords, property managers, screening renters
What makes the difference between a good renter and a bad renter? What qualities or traits are most desirable for renters, besides making the monthly payment before the tenth of the month? These are questions that landlords and property managers take into consideration when trying to screen potential renters applications. How do you go about this when you make a decision? Going by the gut feeling is often not good enough, so where can you get some good ideas?
Here are 10 tips for Screening Potentially Bad Renters that you are sure to find useful.
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