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qualityrealestatesolutions.com
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By qualityrealestatesolutions.com - on Aug 30, 2011
Posted in cathy066 

The best solution is to do a short sale.

We can help: http://qualityrealestatesolutions.com

For anyone in this situation let us help. There is no upfront fee.

Justin
I&R Maven
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Comment on: A tid bit of who I am

By I&R Maven - on Aug 8, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

Hmm, this was supposed to be a reply to the person who posted "money - no scams -!
I&R Maven
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Comment on: A tid bit of who I am

By I&R Maven - on Aug 8, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

 in response to CATLUV...   Thanks! I collect as much resource info as possible, to have handy when i get a call...which occurs much too often. So many people are hurting. We are right nnow, and have in the past, but we'll figure our basics out.

Still looking for inexpensive venture capital; a car/trailer, "Jazzy"-type scooter, and money to see my grandson and mother. I already have a ticket to get to either Charleston or Miami, and if I can get $$ this week, I won't have to pay for a hotel. But I am grateful, every day, for what we have now...
lady78
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By lady78 - on Aug 8, 2011
Posted in cathy066 

 in response to Matthew10...   I know someone who will be loosing a single family home in less than 30 days it is very sad to see what it feels like to loose a home when a person/family has lived in the home for over 40 yrs..my friend is at his wits end and doesn't know what to do because now the bank ownes the home and they were told to move within a months time..I myself do not know anything about owning a home because I rent and have never owned a home...are their any suggestions that you can help me with so I can pass it on to a friend of mine who is very sad that his grandmother will have to vacate her home of 40+ yrs?...and has no idea what to do next in order to keep the home somehow someway!.
CATLUV
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Comment on: A tid bit of who I am

By CATLUV - on Aug 7, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

 Maybe something on this page will be of some help ... Finding Financial Assistance and Avoiding Scams

dreneew09171970
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A tid bit of who I am

By dreneew09171970 - on Aug 4, 2011... modified on Aug 7, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

 

I have been out of work since February 2010 and actively looking for work but I haven’t had much luck.  My house is in foreclosure and the utilities are being shut off one by one.  I need help/advice.

 

I am a single parent of three kids well they aren’t kids anymore.  I have a daughter who is 21 she’s a student nurse in college to obtain her RN, I have a son he’s 20 he is an electrician and starts his last year of apprenticeship and my youngest son who is 18 he is a welder and fantastic baseball player, he graduated high school this year and a college picked him up and he got a 2 year scholarship for his pitching abilities for baseball.  All three of them are great people they have their own vehicles, pay their own car insurance, car payments, cell phone bills, personal needs and their own food and still manage to try to help me the best they can.  They even pay for their own school things and medical expenses.

 

I was with a man for 16 years we never married.  We had decided for me to by the house which was my grandparent’s and they had bought it the month and year I was born.  A year after I bought the house I lost my job and he walked out on me.  When he left I was devastated, I wasn’t expecting it at all what so ever.  The money I wish I had today that I paid in tolls to drive on top of the bridge near my house and just jump I would have a lot of money.

 

Actually a year ago I had a nervous breakdown and my daughter had me admitted into a mental hospital actually that was two years ago.  They wouldn’t release me unless she signed me out or the doctor released me.  I called her crying I just remember her words exactly “Mom you need help enough because we need our mom back” I knew she was right so I stayed it ended up being seven days.  There I was diagnosed with Bipolar I and a Manic Depressant I am medicated but I feel I am alone and I will never be normal!  I don’t have friends because I just can’t handle drama and my family isn’t much support with this condition they don’t know how to handle me nor do they try.  I haven’t done much right in my life but with these three I have.

 

I have a hard time trusting people! I always try to help others and make others happy instead of myself! I put everyone else before me! In the end I always turn out to be the bad person! My self-esteem is low and I need to work more on me and the hell with helping others!  I hate silence I cannot sit in a room with silence that just brings my worst enemy out who is my mind! 

 

I do enjoy different types of music and reading.  I find relaxation in crocheting, I find my laughter and to keep living life in my 3 precious kids.  I do enjoy the beach, skiing and I love baseball!

 

The Philadelphia Phillies are my favorite team.  My daughter and I coached a T-ball team this year for the first time and we had a blast it was so much fun we are doing next year and we didn’t even know any of the kids or the parent’s we did it to get me out of the house and to help my mind.

 

But I am here for any help or advice anyone can give me at all!

 

Thank you to all of you in advance for you advice and help!

 

Daneta

dreneew09171970
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Comment on: PLEASE HELP

By dreneew09171970 - on Aug 5, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

 in response to CATLUV...   Thank you I will definately check into that website.
dreneew09171970
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Comment on: PLEASE HELP

By dreneew09171970 - on Aug 5, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

 in response to brit5467...   Everything you said I no about but like you said it's time I swollow my pride and use that disabled card which is something I didn't want to do what so ever I am sitting here crying as I was reading your response and I still am! I hate being bipolar and a manic depressant and right now the episodes and my emotions are bad! I will do what you so and I would like to keep in touch with you if it's ok I don't no many people with our diagnosis and I also have no family support and really no friends.
dreneew09171970
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Comment on: PLEASE HELP

By dreneew09171970 - on Aug 5, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

 in response to brit5467...   LOL it's ok take all the time you need I shouldn't have allowed things to get this bad before I started researching it's my own fault so I have all the patience in the world right now!!!
dreneew09171970
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PLEASE HELP

By dreneew09171970 - on Aug 4, 2011
Posted in dreneew09171970 

I have 3 kids, my boyfriend of 16 years walked out on me last year. I ended up having a nervious breakdown and was hospitalized for 7 days. In the hospital I was diagnosed with Bipolar I and Manic Depression. I am currently on medication. I have been out of work since February 2010 and actively seeking work with no luck. My house is in forclosure and my utilities are in the process of being shut off. The utility bills are high and are currently being shut off. Cable and internet are already off and any day now so will the electric. The water will be shut off if I don't pay the bill by August 12, 2011. The house is in forclosure the mortgage hasn't been paid in over a year. Any help you could give me would be great! I live in New Castle, DE!!!
baldy
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By baldy - on Jun 14, 2011... modified on Jun 14, 2011
Posted in cathy066 

I am currently losing my home due to forclosure, lost my job and my buisiness went under due to the economy. i have two children that have lived here since they were born and don't want to tell them daddy has lost his home. I have owned this home for 8 years, am currently going thru divorce as well. Only need 5,000.00 to bring mortgage current and begin to make regular payments again. Are there any programs out there that don't take forever to get qualified for or anyone that can help me out with this. i dont have any place to go if they take my house from me. 

TylerWhite
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Comment on: need help to pay my mortgage

By TylerWhite - on May 25, 2011
Posted in bh70116 

1 (888) 954 6736

They pretty much saved my house
Retiredmilitaryneedshelp
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Retired Miltary needs help

By Retiredmilitaryneedshelp - on Apr 14, 2011
Posted in Retiredmilitaryneedshelp 

I know people through out the country are having problems thanks to our wonderful government. Well I am in deep enough and its time to bury my pride and ask for help also. I have recently retired from the Air Force and have had trouble finding a job. I finally found one that i started at the beginning of the month, but the pay is far from good and since I retired and had a hard time finding a job my bills have sky rocketed and my credit has dropped. My mortgage is almost 3 months behind, same with car payments. My daughter has braces which haven't been adjusted in 6 months because I can't afford dental insurance. I am not trying to get anyone to feel sorry for me but I am asking for some help, if its a loan I will pay it back, if its a grant or charity that's even better. I am asking for about $5000 not to get out of debt, just to get caught up on bills and get some insurance. Any help would be greatly appreciated and payed back.
Peek a boo
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Peek a boo - on Oct 26, 2010
Posted in cathy066 

i can help call me @ 504 298 9206

Peek a boo
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Peek a boo - on Oct 26, 2010
Posted in cathy066 

i can help call me @ 504 298 9206

Starshine
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Starshine - on Mar 31, 2010
Posted in cathy066 

 in response to doing great...   I feel the same way. I just ordered groceries and have to eat shaking and how am I going to afford just what you mention...It really sucks. I physically can't work because there is nothing holding me up if I don't eat . I want to take a nap and can't as someone is bring food i hope 5-7pm...None of my neighbors help...I can't wait till it gets warmer.
doing great
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By doing great - on Mar 31, 2010
Posted in cathy066 

I know what you mean. I have been a hard worker all my life. I have never been in debt. I am going to lose my home, car, and grooming buisness. I have put in over 20 applications. Guess what? I still don't have a job. My car is breaking down and can't even afford insurances. Life can't get any better.

dnamom
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Comment on: I can help you with forclosure ,modify your loan for you ,Please read

By dnamom - on Oct 28, 2009
Posted in bandit61 

I am wondering if you could hepl with the purchase of our home...we have a broker working on it, but it seems he is having trouble getting a lender.  We do have some credit issues.

Can you giude us in the right direction??  We are renting the home we are wanting to buy.  They are calling it a short sell..not really sure what that is though.

bandit61
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I can help you with forclosure ,modify your loan for you ,Please read

By bandit61 - on Oct 28, 2009
Posted in bandit61 

Hello Everyone,

Looking for anyone who needs help in saving there home from forclosure, I can help you modify your loan and I need help with someone who can help me with a website. I am a mortgage consultant looking to help who ever needs it for a donation please but if you dont have it I know how it is.I have been layed off since June 1 without unemployment and things are very bad I have a 4 year old and it looks like it is going to be a bad holiday but I trust God that he will keep us blessed with a meal on the table and our lights on if you think you can help all I can say is Thank You and may God Bless you and your family

any donation will be paid back with interest

the drum guru
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Comment on: Renters rights and the law

By the drum guru - on Jun 9, 2009
Posted in Discussing "Information & Referral" 

 in response to alaskan_guy32...   

The ONLY legal way you can keep his stuff as collateral is IF he signs a document describing all his stuff in detail, afffixing a price to it, and that he is giving it to you to hold as collateral until he pays the money he owes you, and it is signed and NOTARIZED.  

Having said the above, you need to check with the Fair Housing Agency in your city to make sure there are no local rules, laws, or codes attached to the housing laws prohibiting this.  They can tell you if it is legal. The law differs from state to state you have to check the law in your state.

Here is some information that might prove helpful to you....

Good luck.

AlaskaLandlordandTenant ActPublished by the Alaska Court SystemPUB-3012/08NOTICE:This publication includes a summary of landlord and tenant rights and obligations underAlaska law, provided by the Alaska Department of Community and EconomicDevelopment, Division of Occupational Licensing, Real Estate Commission. Theirpublication was last updated December 2004. Visit their website atwww.dced.state.ak.us/occ/pub/landlord.pdf to update this printed information. Inaccordance with Alaska Statute (AS) 44.23.020 (b)(8), information in their publicationhas been approved by the Alaska Department of Law.The Alaska laws governing landlord and tenant rights and obligations reproduced hereare from the 2008 Alaska Statutes. Laws are subject to revision by the legislature. It isyour responsibility to check for any amendments to the Alaska Statutes by visiting theAlaska Legislature website at www.legis.state.ak.us/folhome.htm, contacting yournearest Legislative Information Office, or going to your local public or law library.The Alaska Court System offers an electronic version of its Eviction booklet, CIV-720 onits website at www.state.ak.us/courts/forms.htm. CIV-720 describes procedures forevictions from residential property. CIV-720 is also available at all Alaska Court Systemlocations.The Alaska Court System encourages you to read and familiarize yourself with theAlaska Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Alaska Statute 34.03.010 - AS34.03.360) before taking any action affecting your or another person’s rights.PUB-30 (12/08) 1PUB-30 (12/08) 2Table of ContentsLandlord Tenant Act: What it means to you..... 3What housing is covered by the Act?............... 3Definitions ........................................................ 3Moving inRental agreements........................................... 4What to include ................................................ 4Late fees........................................................... 5Mediation or arbitration .................................... 5What the agreement cannot say ...................... 5Mobile home rental agreements ...................... 6Unsigned or undelivered agreements .............. 6What is a lease?............................................... 7Security deposits.............................................. 7Limit on deposits and prepaid rent................... 7Application fees ............................................... 7Where deposit may be kept ............................ 7Interest on security deposits ............................ 7Change of property ownership ........................ 8Responsibility for security deposits ................. 8Inspection reports ............................................ 8Landlord’s rules................................................ 9Enforcing the rules .......................................... 9Changing the rules .......................................... 9Canceling a rental agreement ......................... 9If the property isn’t ready for move-in .............. 9If landlord refuses to turn over premises ......... 9Illegal discrimination ...................................... 10Protected classes .......................................... 10Refusal to rent to smokers ............................ 10Indications of discrimination .......................... 10Who to call about discrimination ................... 10Living thereLandlord responsibilities ................................ 11Tenant remedies ........................................... 13Housing Codes .............................................. 14Tenant Responsibilities ................................. 15Landlord remedies ........................................ 16Landlord’s right to access ............................. 16Notice requirement ........................................ 16Tenant refusal to allow access ...................... 16Harassment by landlord ................................ 16Locks ............................................................. 17Raising the rent ............................................. 17Damage to the dwelling ................................. 18Condemned dwellings ................................... 18Moving prior to end of lease .......................... 18Subleasing .................................................... 19Questions for sublease applicants ................ 19Denial of permission to sublease .................. 19Moving OutGiving proper notice ...................................... 20Time limits ..................................................... 20How to deliver notice .................................... 21Cleaning up & clearing out ............................ 21Damages ....................................................... 22What can be charged to tenants? ................. 22Responsibility for accidental damage ........... 22Return of deposits ......................................... 22When landlord may keep the deposit .......... 22Evictions ....................................................... 23Can tenants be evicted in the winter? ......... 23Eviction for late rent ..................................... 23Eviction for deliberate damage .................... 23Eviction for illegal activity ............................. 23Eviction for failure to pay utilities ................. 24Eviction for tenant breach of duties ............. 24Eviction by landlord’s choice ........................ 24Termination of mobile home tenancies ........ 24Abandonment ............................................... 25When is property considered abandoned? .. 25Abandoned belongings ................................ 26Holding a public sale .................................... 26Serving a Notice to Quit ............................... 27Requirements of notice ................................ 27Challenging an eviction ................................ 27Foreclosure problems .................................. 27Notice to quit after foreclosure ..................... 28Lockouts, utility shut-offs or threats ............. 28Tenant remedies .......................................... 28Subsidized housing additional rights ........... 28Retaliation by landlord ................................. 29When it is unlawful retaliation ...................... 29Actions considered retaliatory ...................... 29When it is NOT retaliation ............................ 29When a rent increase is “In good faith” ........ 29When a tenant won’t move .......................... 30How F.E.D. cases work ............................... 30Problems with your landlord or tenant ......... 30Suggestions for resolving disputes .............. 31Where to go for help .................................... 31Sample Notice Forms ............................. 33-48The Landlord and Tenant Act: what it means to youWhen a landlord and tenant get along well, things are better all around. Dealing with unhappy tenants is alot of trouble for a landlord, and few tenants want the inconvenience and expense of moving simplybecause they cannot get along with their landlords. Yet, landlords and tenants frequently have problems.Sometimes, landlords do not make repairs or unfairly keep back security deposits. Sometimes, tenantsdamage property or refuse to pay the rent. This booklet briefly explains your responsibilities as a landlordor a tenant under the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (AS 34.03.010 et seq., the “Landlordand Tenant Act”). It explains what a tenant needs to know when he or she is:Moving in: ........................... pages 4Living there: ........................ pages 11Moving out: ......................... pages 20Sample forms, such as notices to quit, etc., begin on page 33.The Landlord and Tenant Act covers rental of a residence, such as an apartment, a mobile home, or ahouse. It does not apply to rooming houses, hotels or motels, temporary housing at a shelter orsupportive housing program, or any type of commercial property.1Tenants who receive a government housing subsidy or live in a government housing project may haverights in addition to those provided by state law. This pamphlet does not cover those issues.Such tenants should check their lease agreements and may also wish to consult with the Alaska HousingFinance Corporation or an attorney for specific advice.DefinitionsSeveral important terms are used in this booklet. This is what some of them mean:Dwelling unit, property or premises: the place that is rented, which could be a house, apartment,condo, mobile home, or mobile home park space.Landlord: the property owner or his agent, which could include either a licensed property manager ora resident manager.Property Manager: an individual licensed to practice real estate in Alaska who works on behalf of theproperty owner to rent, manage and safeguard a property.Resident Manager: an individual who resides on the property and manages it on behalf of theproperty owner or the licensed property manager.Tenant: any of the people who rent the dwelling.Damages: money claimed by, or ordered to be paid to, a person as compensation for loss or injury. Itmay mean the amount claimed by the landlord from the tenant’s security deposit based on thedamages the landlord has incurred by reason of the tenant’s failure to comply with the obligationsimposed under the Landlord and Tenant Act. Or it may mean the monetary compensation that aperson wins in a lawsuit, such as the value of lost rent or the cost of repairing property damage (to alandlord), or the value of housing or utility services not provided (to a tenant).Security Deposit: payment to a landlord or property manager by a tenant to ensure that the tenantwill pay the rent due and will maintain the property and will not damage it. Security deposits are heldin trust by the owner or manager until the tenant moves out, and are then returned or applied to payfor damages and/or delinquent rent with an accounting to the tenant.Rental Agreement: means all agreements, written or oral, and valid rules and regulations adopted bythe landlord, making up the terms and conditions for the use of the dwelling unit.Lease: a contract which conveys the right to use and occupy property for a certain specified period oftime in exchange for consideration, usually rent. Precise legal definition of many of the terms used inthe Landlord and Tenant Act may be found at AS 34.03.360.1 AS 34.03.330.PUB-30 (12/08) 3MOVING INGet a written agreement:Before a tenant moves in, the landlord and tenant must come to an agreement. It may be verbal orwritten, but written is best. Without written proof, even two honest people can later disagree on what wasactually said. The written agreement may be called a “Rental Agreement,” a “Tenant Agreement,” orLease.”The agreement should include:the name and address of the person authorized to manage the premises,the name and address of an owner of the premises, or a person authorized to act as an agent of theowner, for the purpose of service of process and receiving notices and demands from the tenant orthe owner’s agent and,the name and address of the tenant(s),2how many tenants and pets are to occupy the unit,who holds the deposit,reasons the deposit or a portion of it may be retained by the landlord,the amount to be paid for rent and deposits,when, where, and how the rent is to be paid,when the rent is considered delinquent, and what thepenalty will be for late payment,whether this is a month-to-month tenancy or a lease with a definite contract period,who pays for utilities and what services are provided,a list of prohibited equipment (snowmobiles, musical equipment, motorcycles, etc.),a list of landlord and tenant repair and maintenance duties and who pays for them,rules on subleasing or assignment of the property,a premises condition statement and contents inventory,disclosure of lead-based paint as applicable for units built prior to 1978 (as required by the federalEnvironmental Protection Act), andany additional rules, covenants and regulations in place.2 AS 34.03.080(a).PUB-30 (12/08) 4Late chargesThe Landlord and Tenant Act does not state whether landlords may assess late charges when the rent islate or NSF fees when a check is returned for insufficient funds. It may be all right for the rentalagreement to specify a small flat-rate late charge or NSF fee that reasonably approximates the landlord’sactual costs caused by the tenant’s failure to pay rent on time or writing a bad check. It may also be allright for the rental agreement to specify a reasonable percentage-per-day late charge. Such a charge islimited by the state usury law to an annual interest rate of a maximum of five percentage points above theFederal Reserve discount rate, or if no precise rate is specified, 10.5%.3 Remember, no automatic latecharge or NSF fee is legally enforceable, unless it has been agreed upon beforehand.Resolving disputesA landlord and tenant can agree to mediation or binding arbitration to resolve disputes between them. Ifboth parties want to mediate or arbitrate disputes, they should include in the rental agreement (or in anaddendum to it) specific details of the types of disputes to be resolved in this way and the procedures tobe followed.4Understanding the agreementRental agreements are normally prepared by the landlord or the landlord’s agent. It is very important thattenants make sure they understand all the terms of the agreement. Tenants should ask for an explanationof any section they do not understand, before signing the agreement.What to watch out for:Rental agreements cannot:require the tenant or the landlord to waive any legal rights under the Act,5permit the landlord to get an “automatic” court judgment against the tenant (called a “confession ofjudgment”),6require the tenant to agree to pay the landlord’s attorney fees,7limit the liability of landlords or tenants when either has failed to meet their responsibilities,8make the tenant liable for rent even if the landlord fails to maintain the premises as required by law,9 orallow the landlord to take the tenant’s personal belongings.103 AS 45.45.010.4 AS 34.03.345.5 AS 34.03.040(a)(1).6 AS 34.03.040(a)(2).7 AS 34.03.040(a)(4).8 AS 34.03.040(a)(3).9 AS 34.03.050; AS 34.03.100(a).10 AS 34.03.250.PUB-30 (12/08) 5Standard form agreementsSome standard form rental agreements have been written to conform to the laws of other states, or arebased on older versions of Alaska law. These forms may need to be changed before signing them. Inaddition to the legal provisions already listed, any of the following statements should be removed from theagreement before signing it:agreement to let the landlord come into the dwelling whenever he or she wants,agreement to immediate eviction for nonpayment of rent,agreement that the tenant will make all repairs,release of the landlord from liability for accidents due to his or her neglect,giving up of the tenant’s right to the return of the deposit, orgrant of a power of attorney to the landlord by the tenant, or to the tenant by the landlord.Illegal provisions in the contractTo remove illegal wording, draw a line in ink through any provision that is not legally binding. Both thelandlord and tenant should initial the agreement next to each item that has been removed.Illegal provisions in an agreement are not enforceable against the tenant, even if both parties sign.Special rules for mobile home rentalsAbsent very specific exceptions, agreements between mobile home park operators and mobile home parktenants may not:prohibit the tenant from selling his or her mobile home,require the mobile home tenant to provide permanent improvements to park property,require a fee to let the tenant sell or transfer the mobile home, orrequire a fee to let the tenant set up or move a mobile home into or out of the park.11Mobile home park operators must give tenants a list of all capital improvements that will be required (suchas skirting, utility hook-ups, and tie downs) before the tenant moves into the park.12 Park operators mayspecify the type of equipment required, but cannot require that it be purchased from a particular supplieror company.13Unsigned or undelivered agreementsOnce the agreement has been carefully reviewed, both parties should sign it. The landlord must give thetenant a copy.If the landlord and the tenant agree to a rental agreement, and the landlord signs and delivers theagreement to the tenant but the tenant doesn’t sign it, the legal provisions of the agreement arenonetheless binding if the tenant moves in and begins paying rent. Likewise, if the tenant signs anddelivers the agreement to the landlord but the landlord doesn’t sign it, the rental agreement is binding ifthe landlord accepts payment of rent without reservation from the tenant.1411 AS 34.03.040(c).12 AS 34.03.080(d).13 AS 34.03.130(c).14 AS 34.03.030(a) and (b).PUB-30 (12/08) 6What is a lease?A lease is a rental agreement that specifies how long the tenant will stay in the property. If there is alease, the landlord cannot raise the rent or evict the tenant during the period of the lease, unless thetenant breaks the terms of the lease or the lease agreement provides for the increases.If the tenant decides to move during the term of the lease, the tenant is usually still responsible for therent for the rest of the lease period, unless the dwelling can be subleased or re-rented earlier. Seesections on Moving Prior to End of a Lease and Subleasing, pgs. 18-19.There may be times, however, when the tenant may quit the lease and not be responsible for the rent forthe remainder of the lease. See section on Tenant Remedies, pgs. 13-14.What is a security deposit?Many landlords demand a security deposit before a tenant moves in. This deposit protects the landlordfrom financial loss if the tenant fails to pay the rent, causes damage to the property, or does not clean upproperly when he leaves.Except for units renting for more than $2,000 per month, security deposits and prepaid rents may not totalmore than two months’ rent.15Sometimes a landlord asks for a nonrefundable application fee to place a prospective tenant on a waitinglist for an apartment. If an application fee covers the landlord’s actual, reasonable costs for servicesperformed (such as checking the applicant’s credit history), it is probably lawful.However, it is NOT lawful to charge a fee that becomes the security deposit if the tenant moves in, but isforfeited if the tenant decides not to take the unit. At most, such a tenant would be responsible for rentduring the time it takes the landlord to find a replacement tenant, and for the actual costs (such asnewspaper ads) of finding one.Where are deposits kept?Deposits and prepaid rent must be deposited by the landlord or the property manager in a trust account ina bank or savings and loan association, or with a licensed escrow agent.16 (Exceptions could be made inrural Alaska, if there is no bank in town and it would be impractical to bank the money). A trust accountcan be any separate savings or checking account labeled “trust account” and used only for deposits andprepaid rents. A receipt should be written whenever the tenant pays a deposit or prepays rent.Landlords are required to provide tenants with the terms and conditions under which prepaid rents ordeposits (or any portion of those monies) might be withheld by the landlord.Can deposits earn interest?The landlord/tenant law does not require that the trust account earn interest, but if the tenant’s depositdoes earn interest, the tenant is entitled to the interest under general trust law principles, unless bothparties have agreed otherwise. It is a good idea to specify in the rental agreement whether the deposit willearn interest, and if so, who gets the interest.If the property is managed by a licensed property manager, the interest on the tenant’s money in the trustaccount must go to the tenant, under the terms of the real estate license law, unless the tenant agrees inwriting that the interest may go to the property owner. The property manger may not keep the interest.15 AS 34.03.070(a).16 AS 34.03.070(c).PUB-30 (12/08) 7When there’s a new owner. . .When rental housing is sold, a new owner is responsible for refunding any security deposits and prepaidrents that may be owed to the tenants who move out after the ownership is transferred.17 Therefore, abuyer of rental property should make sure that the previous owner transfers all deposits and prepaid rentsalong with the property. If the previous owner makes a proper transfer of these funds and notifies thetenants of the sale of the dwelling unit, he is relieved of further responsibility. If not, the previous ownerwill still be responsible to the tenants for deposits and prepaid rents, even though the new owner is alsoresponsible.18When the property is sold at a foreclosure sale because the landlord has defaulted on his mortgagepayments, the buyer (usually the lender) often treats the tenancy as terminated, and tries to disclaimresponsibility for the tenant’s security deposit. Unless the landlord/seller has given the security deposits tothe new owner, the landlord/seller remains liable for the security deposits.19 The issue of whether thebuyer in a foreclosure sale is responsible for the tenants’ security deposits has not yet been decided bythe courts.Get a written inspection reportAn inspection report describes the condition of the property when the tenant moves in. It generally hastwo parts:a “premises condition statement” describing the condition of the unit, anda “contents inventory” itemizing any furnishings and describing their condition.The inspection report is not required by law, but if a landlord or tenant requests it, one should beprepared.20Many landlords and tenants find that an inspection report helps to protect their interests. Tenants, forexample, can use it to prove that they were not responsible for damages that existed before they movedin. Landlords can also use it to establish when damage occurred.To complete the inspection report, the landlord and the tenant should go through the premises together,writing down any damages, such as scratches or burns.Both should sign and date the report, and attach a copy to the rental agreement. The landlord can requirethat the tenant sign the report as a condition of renting the property. Before requiring the tenant’ssignature on an inspection report, however, the landlord must advise the tenant that the signed report canlater be used by the landlord to determine whether or not to refund any deposits and to compute therecovery of other damages to which the parties may be entitled.21The landlord and tenant should then make another list showing which damages the landlord has agreedto repair or change, and the date that the work should be completed. A common time limit is ten days.The list should be signed and dated by the landlord before the tenant moves in, then signed and dated bythe tenant when the work has been completed. Again, everyone should keep a copy.If a landlord refuses to make an inspection report, it is a good time to consider looking for anotherlandlord. Finding another place to live before a conflict arises is much easier than trying to settledisagreements over money and damages when the tenancy ends.17 AS 34.03.070(f).18 AS 34.03.110(a).19 See In re Wise, 120 B.R. 537 (Bkrtcy.D Alaska 1990).20 AS 34.03.020(e).21 AS 34.03.090 (b) and AS 34.03.335.PUB-30 (12/08) 8Living by the landlord’s rulesNearly every landlord has rules that tenants must live by.The law requires that the landlord show the tenant the rules and regulations before the tenant enters intothe rental agreement, and that a copy of the rules be prominently posted on the premises where it can beseen by everyone living there.22 These rules should include homeowner association or communityassociation rules or covenants.Tenants should read the rules carefully, and if they believe that they cannot live by the landlord’s rules,they should not rent the unit.The rules must be reasonable, must apply to all tenants equally, and must be clearly defined.Enforcing the rulesThe landlord’s rules may be enforced only if their purpose is to:promote the convenience, safety, health or welfare of the tenants,preserve the landlord’s property from abuse, ormake a fair distribution of services and facilities.The landlord cannot make rules that allow him to avoid his obligations. Once the tenant has seen therules and moved in, the tenant has agreed to abide by those rules. Failure to do so could mean aneviction. (See section o
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Comment on: Renters rights and the law

By alaskan_guy32 - on Jun 9, 2009
Posted in Discussing "Information & Referral" 

I have recently been able to get a deadbeat roomate out of my apartment. He wasnt paying his portion of the rent or the bills. He has left a few of his items behind and now wants to come get them. Do I have a right to hold them for unpaid past rent?

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Comment on: need help to pay my mortgage

By tried - on May 27, 2009
Posted in bh70116 

help pay my mortgage http://www.helppaymymortage.cc.cc/

the drum guru
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Renters rights and the law

By the drum guru - on May 27, 2009
Posted in Discussing "Information & Referral" 

  

Tenants Caught in Foreclosure: Who Gets the Rent?

Learn to whom tenants should pay rent when landlords fall into foreclosure.

Tenants who learn that their landlords are in default on the mortgage (or already in foreclosure) are often confused about who is entitled to the rent money. Residents are likely to hear demands from many quarters -- the desperate owner, a management company, or a bank. It’s important to know who is -- and who isn’t -- entitled to the rent check and who is obligated to maintain the rental during this period of time.

Before the Foreclosure: Who Gets the Rent After a Default?

Lending banks (the mortgage holders) typically attach a rider, or special agreement, to the mortgage or deed of trust documents when a buyer intends to use the building as a rental. This rider, called a 1-4 Family Rider (Assignment of Rents), is used by lenders in every state for properties that have one to four rental units. Its main purpose is to give the lender the right to receive the rent when the buyer has defaulted on the mortgage. (You can get a copy of the 1-4 Family Rider from the Freddic Mac website, at www.freddiemac.com. Search for “1-4 Family Rider.”)

To understand how the rider works, think like a banker for a minute. The property is generating income and the buyer is falling behind on his mortgage. In order to cut its losses as quickly and as thoroughly as possible, the lender wants to get its hands on the rent.

Once the lender gives the owner a written notice of default, the lender has the right (except in Michigan) to receive the rent directly from the tenants. Lenders have to give written notice to the tenants, and they typically do so by letter, posted notice on the property, or in person.

Repairs and Maintenance While Paying the Bank

Even though the bank is receiving the rent payments, all other rights and responsibilities that the owner/landlord has with respect to the tenants remain in place. Until the bank actually forecloses, the owner is still the owner. This leads to problems if the tenants need maintenance or repairs done on the rental unit.

Landlords are often unwilling to make repairs. Without a source of income from the rental property, most owners will be unable (or unwilling) to maintain it. For the tenant, however, the owner’s disillusionment is beside the point when it comes to safe and secure rental housing, because in every state but Colorado and Arkansas, landlords must maintain fit and habitable rental housing. How does a tenant enforce this right against a demoralized (and possibly broke) owner?

The lender is not obligated to help. According to the Family Rider, the lender must apply the rent money to property management costs, including maintenance, before it applies the money to the unpaid mortgage. But the Rider explicitly does not obligate the lender to assume the maintenance duties of the owner. Unless there’s a specific local or state law to the contrary, the lender’s right to receive rent money doesn’t turn that lender into the landlord for purposes of maintaining the property.

If conditions seriously deteriorate to the point where the home is not fit to live in, tenants may find themselves stuck between an owner who has no ability to take care of business, and a lender who has no obligation to do so.

Self-help remedies are tricky. Tenants may need to avail themselves of a tenant’s “self-help” remedy, such as rent withholding and repair-and-deduct (not all states give these remedies to tenants). (To learn more about self-help remedies, see Nolo’s Renter’s Rights: Repairs, Privacy & Safety area.)

 

If my building is sold, what happens to me?

 

But here is where things can get truly tricky: Rent withholding and repair-and-deduct work because they pressure owners to take care of repairs so that they can receive the rent. But banks are not familiar with property management and maintenance, and they have no legal obligation to maintain the property (the owner retains that duty). Not paying the bank is not likely to result in prompt attention to that leaking roof or broken water heater -- it’s more likely to result in a notice to vacate or, particularly in situations where tenants survive the foreclosure, continued inattention until conditions deteriorate further.

Help From the Government

In many cities, housing and health departments are charged with responding to unsafe and unsanitary conditions in rental housing. They typically have powers that range from ordering the owners to take care of business (under threat of contempt of court), to taking over the property altogether and running it until they’ve fixed the problems (and charging the owner for the privilege).

Although these government agencies can, and should, still do their jobs, their intervention may be ineffective. The agencies will be dealing with an owner who has no resources to contribute (and who may even be impossible to locate), and a bank who has no legal duty to step up. Results will differ when the government takes over because the efficiency of local and state agencies varies tremendously.

If you need to notify the landlord and bank of needed repairs in your rental, be as specific as possible. Nolo’s eForm, Tenant’s Notice of Needed Repairs, provides the format and instructions to make sure your demand is correct.

What to do if you are roommates?

Renting With Others

Learn to avoid disputes among roommates or with the landlord.

When two or more people sign the same rental agreement or lease -- or enter into the same oral rental agreement -- they are cotenants and share the same legal rights and responsibilities. However, there's a special twist. One cotenant's negative behavior -- not paying the rent, for example -- can affect everyone's tenancy.

When One Roommate Doesn't Pay Rent

Cotenants may decide to split the rent equally or unequally, depending on their personal wishes. However, such agreements don't affect the landlord. Each cotenant is independently liable to the landlord for all of the rent. Landlords often remind cotenants of this obligation by inserting into the lease a chunk of legalese that says that the tenants are "jointly and severally" liable for paying rent and adhering to terms of the agreement. If one tenant can't pay a share of the rent in a particular month, or simply moves out, the other tenant(s) must still pay the full rent.

Landlords often insist on receiving one rent check for the entire rent -- they don't want to be bothered with multiple checks from contenants, even if each contenant pays on time and the checks add up to the full rent. As long as you have been advised of this policy in the rental agreement or lease, it's legal for your landlord to impose it.

When One Roommate Violates the Lease or Rental Agreement

A landlord can legally hold all contenants responsible for the negative actions of just one, and terminate everyone's tenancy with the appropriate notice. For example, two contenants can be evicted even if only one of them seriously damaged the property or otherwise violated the lease or rental agreement.

In practice, however, landlords sometimes ignore the legal rule that all tenants are equally liable for lease violations, and don't penalize a blameless one. If the non-offending roommates pay the rent on time, do not damage the landlord's property, and can differentiate themselves from the bad apple in the landlord's eyes, the landlord may want to keep them.

Disagreements Among Roommates

For all sorts of reasons, roommate arrangements regularly go awry. If you have shared an apartment or house, you know about roommates who play the stereo too loud, never wash a dish, pay their share of the rent late, have too many overnight guests, leave their gym clothes on the kitchen table, or otherwise drive you nuts. If the situation gets bad enough, you'll likely end up arguing with your roommates about who should leave.

Can my roommate evict me?

However, as a general rule, you can't terminate your roommate's tenancy by filing an eviction action. Only if you have sublet a portion of your rental -- so that you become your roommate's (sublessee's) landlord -- can you control that roommate's tenancy.

Another exception involves rentals governed by rent control laws that allow a landlord to designate a "master tenant" -- usually a long-term tenant who was there first -- to perform many of the functions of a landlord (this is the rule in San Francisco). Master tenants have the right to choose -- as well as to evict -- tenants. If your municipality is subject to rent control, find out whether the scheme includes a provision for a master tenant.

Roommate Agreements

Roommates can make lots of informal agreements about splitting rent, occupying bedrooms, and sharing chores. Your landlord isn't bound by these agreements, and has no power to enforce them, but making an agreement can force you and your housemates to take your cotenancy responsibilities seriously.

Before you move in, sit down with your roommates and discuss major issues, such as:

  1. Rent. What is everyone's share? Who will write the rent check if the landlord will accept only one check?
  2. Space. Who will occupy which bedrooms?
  3. Household chores. Who's responsible for cleaning, and on what schedule?
  4. Food sharing. Will food, shopping, and cooking responsibilities be shared? How will you split the costs and work?
  5. Noise. When should stereos or TVs be turned off or down low?
  6. Overnight guests. Is it okay for boyfriends/girlfriends to stay over every night?
  7. Moving out. If one of you decides to move, how much notice must be given? Must the departing tenant find an acceptable substitute?

The more you can anticipate possible problems from the start, the better prepared you'll be to handle disputes that do arise. Be as specific as possible, especially on issues that are important to you. If dirty dishes in the sink drive you up the wall, write it down. If occasional guests are no problem, but you can't stand the thought of your roommate's non-rent-paying boyfriend hogging the bathroom every morning, make sure your agreement is clear on guests.

It's best to put your understandings in writing. (See the sample roommate agreement below.) Oral agreements are too easily forgotten or misinterpreted. Most of the agreement won't be legally binding -- that is, a judge won't order a tenant to clean the bathroom. Judges will, however, enforce financial agreements, such as how you’ve agreed to share rent.

To underline the roommates' commitment, it's wise to include a clause requiring cotenants to participate in mediation before one of you breaks the agreement by moving out or running off to court. Our sample roommate agreement, below, includes such a clause. (For more on mediation, read the Go to Court or Mediate section of Nolo's website.)

Sample Roommate Agreement

Alex Andrews, Brian Bates, and Charles Chew are cotenants at Apartment, 360 Capitol Avenue, Oakdale, Kentucky, under a year-long lease that expires on February 1, 200X. They have all signed a lease with the landlord, Reuben Shaw, and have each paid $300 towards the security deposit of $900. Alex, Brian, and Charles all agree as follows:

  1. Rent. The rent of $900 per month will be shared equally, at $300 per person. Alex will write a check for the total month's rent and take it to the manager's office on the first of each month (or the next day if the 1st falls on a holiday). Brian and Charles will pay their share to Alex on or before the due date.
  2. Bedrooms. Alex and Brian will share the large bedroom with the adjacent deck; Charles will have the small bedroom.
  3. Food. Each cotenant is responsible for his own food purchases.
  4. Cleaning. Charles will clean his own room; Alex and Brian will clean theirs weekly. The household chores for the rest of the apartment -- living room, dining room, kitchen, and bathroom -- will rotate, with each cotenant responsible for vacuuming, dusting, mopping, and bathroom maintenance on a weekly basis.

    Each cotenant will promptly clean up after himself in the kitchen. No one will leave dishes in the sink for more than 24 hours, and everyone will promptly clean up when asked.
  5. Utilities. Everyone will pay an equal share of the electricity and gas bills. Alex will arrange for service and will pay the bill. Within three days of receiving the bill, Charles and Brian will each pay Alex one-third of the total.
  6. Cable. Alex will arrange for cable service and will pay the monthly bill. All roommates will share the cable bill equally.
  7. Guests. Because of the apartment's small size, each tenant agrees to have no more than one overnight guest at a time and to inform the others in advance, if possible. Each cotenant agrees to no more than four guests overnight in a month.
  8. Exam Periods. During mid-term and final exam periods, no cotenant will have overnight guests or parties.
  9. Violations of the Agreement. The cotenants agree that repeated and serious violations of one or more of these understandings will be grounds for any two cotenants to ask the other to leave. If a cotenant is asked to leave, he will do so within two weeks, and will forfeit any outstanding pre-paid rent.
  10. Leaving Before the Lease Ends. If a cotenant wants to leave before the lease expires on February 1, 200X, he will give as much notice as possible (and not less than one month) and diligently try to find a replacement tenant who is acceptable to the remaining cotenants and the landlord.
  11. Security Deposits. The cotenant who leaves early (voluntarily or involuntarily) will get his share of the security deposit returned, minus costs of unpaid rent, repairs, replacement, and cleaning attributable to the departing tenant, when and if an acceptable cotenant signs the lease and contributes his share to the security deposit. If an acceptable cotenant cannot be found, the departing tenant will not receive any portion of his share of the security deposit until the tenancy of the remaining cotenants is over and the security deposit is refunded, in whole or in part, by the landlord.
  12. Dispute Resolution. If a dispute arises concerning this agreement or any aspect of the shared living situation, the cotenants will ask the University Housing Office Mediation Service for assistance before they terminate the cotenancy or initiate a lawsuit. This will involve all three tenants sitting down with a mediator in good faith to try to resolve the problems.

_______________________________
Alex Andrews

___________________
Date

_______________________________
Brian Bates

___________________
Date

_______________________________
Charles Chew

___________________
Date

When a Roommate Leaves

What to do if a roommate moves out before a lease ends.

A co-tenant in a month-to-month tenancy who wants to leave is legally responsible for giving the landlord proper written notice and paying rent through the end of the notice period. If there's a lease, the tenant should either get permission from the landlord to leave early or, if this is impossible, find a new tenant who is acceptable to the landlord. If a co-tenant simply leaves without the landlord's okay or without an acceptable substitute, the fallout can be serious.

What to Do If You Want to Stay

The unauthorized departure of a co-tenant gives the landlord the option of evicting the rest of you, even if you are able to pay the full rent. The landlord has this option because breaking the lease or rental agreement by even one tenant is a violation of a key lease term (the length of stay), for which all tenants are liable.

In practice, however, your landlord will probably let you stay if you can keep a steady stream of rent money coming in and keep the place occupied by stable, nondestructive tenants. So if you want to stay after a co-tenant has broken the lease and left, the landlord will probably not evict you and other tenants unless:

  • you are a troublesome tenant, and this is a golden opportunity to be rid of you, or
  • your income doesn't appear sufficient to cover the rent in the future. In this case, if you can assure the landlord that you can promptly bring in a good, law- and lease-abiding new co-tenant, you might be able to salvage your tenancy. In the meantime, you may need to ask permission to pay the rent late or in installments.

 


 

Always get your landlord's approval before moving in a new roommate. If a co-tenant takes off and leaves you facing the entire rent, you may be tempted to simply move in another roommate, bypassing the landlord's application process. Don't! Your lease or rental agreement probably prohibits unauthorized sublets. If it does, bringing in a new tenant -- even a great one -- without your landlord's okay violates your agreement and gives your landlord a watertight reason to evict you. Instead, keep your relationship on an honest footing and get your landlord's approval for a replacement tenant. (For more information, see Adding a Roommate to the Lease or Rental Agreement.)


How to Deal With a Departing Roommate

Remaining roommates need to cover their legal flanks with respect to the departed tenant as well as the landlord. If your housemate has left during the middle of a lease or without proper notice in a month-to-month tenancy, leaving you responsible for all the rent, your personal relations will be rocky at best. Probably the last thing you want is to have your errant roommate reappear expecting to move back in.

To avoid such surprises, try to get your former roommate to sign an agreement, making it clear that the departing tenant:

  • Will pay a stated amount of rent and utilities. If you rent under a written rental agreement, this will normally be rent and utilities for 30 days from the date the departing tenant gave written notice (or left without notice), unless a new roommate comes in earlier and covers these costs. If you rent under a lease, the amount owed will depend on when a new co-tenant, acceptable to the landlord, is ready to take over. If, despite your best efforts, you cannot find an acceptable replacement, the departing tenant will be liable for the rent for the balance of the lease.
  • Will pay for any damage she caused to the rental unit.
  • Will pay for rent and damage no later than a stated date.
  • Has moved out for good and gives up any claim to be a tenant.

 

But what if you and the departing roommate can't work things out, and the departed co-tenant shows no signs of paying? If your roommate is long gone or out-of-state, you may want to grit your teeth, pay his share and forget it, since trying to find him, sue him, and then collect the judgment is likely to be more trouble than it's worth.

On the other hand, if your ex-roommate is still in town and has a source of income, consider taking the time to sue him in small claims court for unpaid rent, damage to the rental unit, unpaid utilities, and your costs to find a replacement co-tenant, such as advertising. Then, if your ex-roommate still doesn't pay up, you can collect what you won in court from his bank account or wages. For more information, see the Small Claims Court section of Nolo's website.

What to Do If You Want to Move Out, Too

If your co-tenant skips out, leaving you in the lurch, you may decide that it's not worth the hassle of trying to stay and rustle up another roommate.

To ease your departure and forestall the landlord from keeping your security deposit to make up for unpaid rent, or listing you as a deadbeat at the credit bureau, follow these steps:

  • If you are a month-to-month tenant, give the required amount of written notice (usually 30 days) immediately. Don't wait until you can't pay the next month's rent and receive a termination notice.
  • If you have a lease, let the landlord know in writing that you plan to move because you cannot afford the rent without your co-tenant. Before you move, be extra accommodating when it comes to showing the unit to prospective renters. Facilitating a quick re-rental is not just a courtesy to your landlord, but to your advantage as well, since the sooner a new tenant takes over, the sooner your liability for the balance of the rent due under the lease ends. In addition, do your best to find an acceptable replacement tenant yourself.

 

Adding a Roommate to the Lease or Rental Agreement

Get your landlord's approval before a new person moves in.

Whether it's time to live with the one you love or you just need to replace a departing roommate, check with your landlord before letting a new person move in. Most landlords will insist that the new roommate become a co-tenant, having the same rights and responsibilities as you do.

Getting the Landlord's Approval

Obviously, you want to be sure that your new roommate is financially stable and compatible with you.

But even if you are satisfied with your intended co-tenant's stellar qualifications, it doesn't mean the landlord will take your word for it. To increase your chances of getting an official okay, consider these questions before approaching the landlord:

  • Will adding a roommate exceed the occupancy limit? Landlords are entitled to set reasonable limits on the number of occupants per rental unit. As a general rule, that's two persons per bedroom plus one more, though some localities (such as New York City) allow more.
  • Will the new roommate meet your landlord's good-tenant criteria? Many landlords subject prospective tenants to a thorough screening process, checking credit, employment, rental history, and references. Ask your prospective roommates to request a credit report on themselves. If the credit report is good, you'll want to hand it to the landlord with your proposed new tenant's application. Since the landlord will almost surely do this as well, doing it first gives you the opportunity to develop a plausible explanation for any negative information -- for example, a prior eviction or bankruptcy.

Unless you are on fairly close personal terms with your landlord, it's usually a good idea to write your landlord a note about your desire to add a roommate. This gives the landlord an unpressured opportunity to think about it. It is also your chance to sell your proposal by pointing out that your rental is big enough for another tenant and, assuming you already have someone lined up, that your new roommate will be a great tenant.


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Mckinney-Vento Reauthorization And Renters Rights and the law.

By the drum guru - on May 27, 2009
Posted in Discussing "Information & Referral" 

McKinney-Vento Reauthorization

On April 2, U.S. House and Senate introduced the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing Act (or HEARTH Act)—a bill to reauthorize HUD's McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance programs. The Senate bill (S. 808) was introduced by Senators Jack Reed (D-RI), Kit Bond (R-MO), and 11 other Senators. The House bill (H.R. 1877) was introduced by Representatives Gwen Moore (D-WI), Judy Biggert (R-IL), and 5 other House Members. The House and Senate bills are nearly identical to a version that passed the House last year, which itself was a compromise between a bill that passed the House Financial Services Committee in July 2008, and one that passed the Senate Banking Committee in September 2007.

The HEARTH Act will provide communities with new resources and better tools to prevent and end homelessness. The bill:

  • Increases priority on homeless families with children, by providing new resources for rapid re-housing programs, designating funding to permanently house families, and ensuring that families are included in the chronic homelessness initiative.
  • Significantly increases resources to prevent homelessness for people who are at risk of homelessness, doubled up, living in hotels, or in other precarious housing situations through the Emergency Solutions Grant program.
  • Continues to provide incentives for developing permanent supportive housing and provides dedicated funding for permanent housing renewals.
  • Grants rural communities greater flexibility in utilizing McKinney funds.
  • Modestly expands the definition of homelessness to include people who are losing their housing in the next 14 days and who lack resources or support networks to obtain housing, as well as families and youth who are persistently unstable and lack independent housing and will continue to do so.
  • Latest News:
    On May 19, both houses passed S. 896, the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act, which included the HEARTH Act as an amendment. President Obama signed the legislation into law on May 20. Click here to watch the Signing Ceremony.

    Do you rent? Do you know your rights and how you can protect them?

     Ten Tips for Tenants

Know your rights when you rent a house or apartment.

1. Bring your paperwork.
The best way to win over a prospective landlord is to be prepared. To get a competitive edge over other applicants, bring the following when you meet the landlord: a completed rental application; written references from landlords, employers, and colleagues; and a current copy of your credit report.

2. Review the lease.
Carefully review all of the conditions of the tenancy before you sign on the dotted line. Your lease or rental agreement may contain a provision that you find unacceptable -- for example, restrictions on guests, pets, design alterations, or running a home business. For help reviewing your lease or rental agreement, see Signing a Lease or Rental Agreement FAQ.

3. Get everything in writing.
To avoid disputes or misunderstandings with your landlord, get everything in writing. Keep copies of any correspondence and follow up an oral agreement with a letter, setting out your understandings. For example, if you ask your landlord to make repairs, put your request in writing and keep a copy for yourself. If the landlord agrees orally, send a letter confirming this.

4. Protect your privacy rights.
Next to disputes over rent or security deposits, one of the most common and emotion-filled misunderstandings arises over the tension between a landlord's right to enter a rental unit and a tenant's right to be left alone. If you understand your privacy rights (for example, the amount of notice your landlord must provide before entering), it will be easier to protect them. For more information, see Tenants' Rights to Privacy and Repairs FAQ.

5. Demand repairs.
Know your rights to live in a habitable rental unit -- and don't give them up. The vast majority of landlords are required to offer their tenants livable premises, including adequate weatherproofing; heat, water, and electricity; and clean, sanitary, and structurally safe premises. If your rental unit is not kept in good repair, you have a number of options, ranging from withholding a portion of the rent, to paying for repairs and deducting the cost from your rent, to calling the building inspector (who may order the landlord to make repairs), to moving out without liability for your future rent. For more information, see the article Renters' Rights to Minor Repairs

6. Talk to your landlord.
Keep communication open with your landlord. If there's a problem -- for example, if the landlord is slow to make repairs -- talk it over to see if the issue can be resolved short of a nasty legal battle. Resolving Landlord-Tenant Disputes FAQ provides some advice.

7. Purchase renters' insurance.
Your landlord's insurance policy will not cover your losses due to theft or damage. Renters' insurance also covers you if you're sued by someone who claims to have been injured in your rental due to your carelessness. Renters' insurance typically costs $350 a year for a $50,000 policy that covers loss due to theft or damage caused by other people or natural disasters; if you don't need that much coverage, there are cheaper policies. For more information about renters' insurance, see the article Renters: Protect Yourself From Crime.

8. Protect your security deposit.
To protect yourself and avoid any misunderstandings, make sure your lease or rental agreement is clear on the use and refund of security deposits, including allowable deductions. When you move in, do a walk-through with the landlord to record existing damage to the premises on a move-in statement or checklist. For more information, see the article Protect Your Security Deposit When You Move In.

9. Protect your safety.
Learn whether your building and neighborhood are safe, and what you can expect your landlord to do about it if they aren't. Get copies of any state or local laws that require safety devices such as deadbolts and window locks, check out the property's vulnerability to intrusion by a criminal, and learn whether criminal incidents have already occurred on the property or nearby. If a crime is highly likely, your landlord may be obligated to take some steps to protect you. For more information on this subject, see the article Renters: Protect Yourself From Crime.

10. Deal with an eviction properly.
Know when to fight an eviction notice -- and when to move. If you feel the landlord is clearly is the wrong (for example, you haven't received proper notice, the premises are uninhabitable), you may want to fight the eviction. But unless you have the law and provable facts on your side, fighting an eviction notice can be short-sighted. If you lose an eviction lawsuit, you may end up hundreds (even thousands) of dollars in debt, which will damage your credit rating and your ability to easily rent from future landlords.

How Evictions Work: What Renters Need to Know

Landlords can't just lock you out, even if you are behind on rent. They must get a court judgment first.

Your landlord can't evict you without terminating the tenancy first. This usually means giving you adequate written notice, in a specified way and form. If you don't move after proper notice (or reform your ways -- for example, by paying the rent or finding a new home for the dog), the landlord can file a lawsuit to evict you. (This type of lawsuit is sometimes called an unlawful detainer, or UD lawsuit.) In order to win, the landlord must prove that you did something wrong that justifies ending the tenancy.

State laws have very detailed requirements for landlords who want to end a tenancy. Each state has its own procedures as to how termination notices and eviction papers must be written and delivered to you ("served"). Landlords must follow state rules and procedures exactly.

Notice of Termination for Cause

Although terminology varies somewhat from state to state, there are basically three types of termination notices that you might receive if you have violated the rental agreement or lease in some way:

  • Pay Rent or Quit Notices are typically given to you when you have not paid the rent. These notices give you a few days (three to five in most states) to pay the rent or move out ("quit").
  • Cure or Quit Notices are typically given to you if you violate a term or condition of the lease or rental agreement, such as a no-pets clause or the promise to refrain from making excessive noise. Usually, you have a set amount of time in which to correct, or "cure," the violation.
  • Unconditional Quit Notices are the harshest of all. They order you to vacate the premises with no chance to pay the rent or correct a lease or rental agreement violation. In most states, unconditional quit notices are allowed only if you have:
    • repeatedly violated a significant lease or rental agreement clause
    • been late with the rent on more than one occasion
    • seriously damaged the premises, or
    • engaged in serious illegal activity, such as drug dealing on the premises.

 

Notice of Termination Without Cause

Even if you have not violated the rental agreement and have not been late paying rent, a landlord can usually ask you to move out at any time (assuming you don't have a fixed term lease) as long as the landlord gives you a longer notice period.

Can our landlord kick us out so a family member can move in?

A 30-Day Notice to Vacate or a 60-Day Notice to Vacate to terminate a tenancy can be used in most states when the landlord does not have a reason to end the tenancy. (The length of the required notice can be slightly longer or shorter in some states.)

Rent Control Exceptions. Many rent control cities, however, go beyond state laws and require the landlord to prove a legally recognized reason for termination. These laws are known as "just cause eviction protection." (Tenants in only a couple of states -- New Jersey and New Hampshire -- also enjoy just cause eviction protection.)

Eviction Lawsuit

Following receipt of a termination notice, if you haven't moved out or fixed the lease or rental agreement violation, the landlord must properly serve you with a summons and complaint for eviction in order to proceed with the eviction.

Possible Defenses

If you do get hauled into court, you may be able to diminish the landlord's chances of victory. Perhaps you can point to shoddy paperwork in the preparation of the eviction lawsuit. Or maybe the landlord's illegal behavior, such as not maintaining the rental property in habitable condition, will serve as a good defense, as would a claim that the eviction lawsuit is in retaliation for your insistence on needed, major repairs.

Sheriff's Escort

Even if the landlord wins the eviction lawsuit, the landlord can't just move you and your things out onto the sidewalk. Landlords must give the court judgment to a local law enforcement office, along with a fee. A sheriff or marshal gives you a notice that the officer will be back within a few days to escort you off the property. At that point, it's best to acknowledge defeat and leave on your own steam.

Renters in Foreclosure: What Are Their Rights?

The sub-prime mortgage industry meltdown is now affecting renters whose landlords have lost their rental properties through foreclosure.

The mortgage industry crisis that started in 2006 has resulted in thousands -- no, make that millions -- of foreclosed homes. Most of the occupants are the homeowners themselves, who must scramble to find alternate housing with very little notice. They’re being joined by scores of renters who discover, often with no warning, that their rented house or apartment is now owned by a bank, which wants them out in a matter of days. For most of these renters, their options are bleak.

Who Are the Renters?

Renters who lose their homes to foreclosures don’t fit a single profile. Many of them live in smaller buildings, condos, and single-family homes. They’re located in cities and surrounding suburbs, in low-income and upscale neighborhoods. In short, foreclosed homes are everywhere, and they're rented by people with widely varying incomes, including some with “Section 8” (federal housing assistance) vouchers.

Who Are the Defaulting Owners?

The typical foreclosed home may have originally been owner-occupied, but more often it’s owned by investors and speculators who were hoping to profit from the rents. During the heyday of sub-prime mortgages -- when practically anyone who breathed and could sign their name could get a loan, usually with an adjustable rate -- these owners easily bought-up rental properties. They counted on rising rents and low interest rates to cover their mortgage payments. Caught between the slump in housing values and the rise of their mortgage interest rates, these owners could not feasibly sell nor extract enough rent to cover their monthly costs. In droves, they lost their investments. For example, in Minneapolis and its surrounding suburbs, 38% of the 2006 foreclosures involved rental properties; in Minneapolis alone, 65% were rentals.

Who Are the New Landlords?

When an owner defaults on a mortgage, the mortgage holder, often a bank, either becomes the new owner or sells the property at a public sale. If the bank becomes the owner, it may pay a servicing company to handle the property. But don't expect close attention -- these companies are focused on financial matters, not mundane things like maintenance.

Some renters find themselves with a new owner even before the foreclosure. Lawyers in Massachusetts, for example, contend that many new rental property owners are investment trusts that specialize in purchasing troubled loans directly from banks, then foreclosing, evicting, and selling.

Renters in Foreclosed Properties Lose Their Leases

Most renters will lose their leases upon foreclosure. The rule in most states is that if the mortgage was recorded before the lease was signed, a foreclosure will wipe out the lease (this rule is known as “first in time, first in right”). Because most leases last no longer than a year, it's all too common for the mortgage to predate the lease and destroy it upon foreclosure.

That doesn't always mean the lease-holding tenants have to leave immediately -- but those who remain join the ranks of month-to–month renters, all of whom can be terminated with proper notice, usually 30 days. And the new owners tend to move quickly to terminate, giving as little notice as is legally possible (sometimes no more than three days).

Tenants who refuse to leave face an eviction lawsuit, for which they usually have no legal defense. The impact of an eviction on a tenant's ability to find future housing can be devastating. No law prevents a future landlord from automatically rejecting tenants with evictions on their record, even when those tenants were the innocent victims of a foreclosing bank.

There are some notable exceptions, however, to this grim scenario. Tenants who participate in the federally financed Section 8 program will see their leases survive, as will tenants in New Jersey, New Hampshire, the District of Columbia, and, as of the end of November 2007, Massachusetts. In these states, new owners cannot evict lease-holding tenants unless the tenants have failed to pay the rent or violated any other important lease term or law. Tenants in other states who live in cities with rent control “just cause” eviction protection may also be protected.

Does It Make Sense to Evict Tenants?

New owners evict existing tenants because they believe that vacant properties are easier to sell. Common sense suggests otherwise. In many situations a building full of stable, rent-paying tenants will be more valuable (and command a higher price) than an empty building. Emptied buildings are also prone to vandalism and other deterioration – after all, no one is on site to monitor their condition. When entire neighborhoods become a wasteland of empty foreclosed multifamily buildings, their value drops even further. It’s hard to understand why new owners choose to pay lawyers to start eviction procedures instead of paying a modest fee to a management company to collect rent and manage the property while they wait to sell.

What Can a Foreclosed-Upon Tenant Do?

Renters whose states follow the “first in time, first in right” rule, where a lease can be wiped out by a foreclosure if the mortgage was recorded before the lease, will not be able to convince a court to change that rule. But tenants who learn that their new landlord is a bank can at least lessen the financial consequences by suing the former owner. Here’s how it works.

After signing a lease, the landlord is legally bound to deliver the rental for the entire lease term. In legalese, this duty is known as the “covenant of quiet enjoyment.” A landlord who defaults on a mortgage, which sets in motion the loss of the lease, violates this covenant, and the tenant can sue for the damages it causes.

Small claims court is a perfect place to bring such a lawsuit. The tenant can sue for moving and apartment-searching costs, application fees, and the difference, if any, between the new rent for a comparable rental and the rent under the old lease. Though the former owner is probably not flush with money, these cases won’t demand very much, and the judgment and award will stay on the books for many years. A persistent tenant can probably collect what's owed eventually.

Press for Legislative Reforms

Why should hapless tenants suffer the consequences of risky lending practices engaged in by others? States besides those mentioned above can enact legislation to protect tenants. On the federal level, some action is already under way. HR 3915, The Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007, would not only tighten up the mortgage industry, but provide that tenants’ leases would survive foreclosure, and that month-to-month tenants would be entitled to 90 days’ termination notice.

thelingers09
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Need help before i lose my house

By thelingers09 - on May 20, 2009
Posted in thelingers09 

I am about to lose my house if i dont come up with $2180 in 30 days. Any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks and God Bless

Riverstone
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Comment on: 18 hours left

By Riverstone - on Dec 3, 2008... modified on Dec 3, 2008
Posted in Riverstone 

my husband went and talked to the landlord's bank and managed to buy us 10 days grace. If anyone knows any way i can make some money in a hurry please tip me off. thank you.

Riverstone
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18 hours left

By Riverstone - on Nov 30, 2008
Posted in Riverstone 

I have only 18 hours to come up with $600 for the rent on my 3br home. its snowing, i dont know if I can send my kids to school tomarrow or if i will have to drag them with me in my last deprate attempt to stop the forclosure on my house. My older daughter's 6th  birthday is saturday, im not going to be able to give her anything. And now im afraid im going to have tell her that her puppy has to go to the animal shelter..... 

Its so sad how many people are in the same boat, or worse. blessing to all of you out there who dont know where your going to be sleeping next week. 

mickey5
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Comment on: need help to pay my mortgage

By mickey5 - on Oct 16, 2008
Posted in bh70116 

sell your body

Trisha29
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Comment on: I Am So Ashamed

By Trisha29 - on Sep 29, 2008
Posted in weffa 

Weffa, I cant offer much but someone to talk too. I do understand what you are going through with the increase in bills. But its when I got to you being in behavioral evaluation is when I lost it. I know with my 4 year old being autistic, I look up to everyone who helps him, just always remember in you job you make a huge difference in the lives of those you care for.

Im not sure if you have a local heap program, innerchurch, Goodwill.... i know it id VERY embarrassing to go to these places. I have to go tomorrow to see if innerchurch will help with our elec. disconnect notice.

Trisha29
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1st post "Why the roof is falling in on us"

By Trisha29 - on Sep 29, 2008
Posted in Trisha29 

Well this is my first post.And i forewarn you it will be long. just posting past history too, It is what got us into what we are in now, I found this page when looking for help in Ohio.

For the past 3 years my husband and i have been able to keep afloat., Its been stressful but we have done it. Just a few years ago when my sons lead test can back at 32, We tried to get help trough the state in removing lead from our home. Yes we new when we bought it, it was a older home and they said it had lead. No one told us the damage lead could cause in a child or for a family. The state health department couldn't offer any help but giving us deadlines to get this removed, and Noe we were told we couldn't do it by ourselves, well we did.. we couldn't afford 10,000 + dollars to have someone remove it or even more for someone to come paint it with a certain paint. Our son now has issues, they say he has aspergers a high functioning autism. 

  Life was going better and my husband and i got pregnant. I had a very rough pregnancy. I was suppose to be on bed rest over 1/2 of it but my husband was laid off in feb. And we were going on unemployment (not much) and my 48(min) hours a week. well i fought with the dr about this and won telling him I had more stress not working, was admitted to the hospital over 3 times. well may 12 our little boy was boy very healthy. at 7 15lbs. the hospital scared us when leaving they didn't think he would make it past the first weekend because he was droping weight we had a home nurse come and show us how to force feed him every 2-4 hours 3-4 oz to make him gain the weight back. @ months in we was the same weight as other babies his age...so we get over that block in our path then, I notice a trend going on in my job. All older employees there were being fired.... I watched all my co workers leave, I confronted my boss the owner one night on the phone telling him I see a pattern and I am next. All he did was laugh at me telling me that I was crazy. I would be labeled #9. that everyone being paid 10 or over and full time with benefits were being let go, i was 9 and I know who is next. But he was on med leave when I was let go. sure enough the next day I was told there was a man. full staff meeting. I text another employee to see if she heard it yet, to see if they were firing me like they did a few others, a set up meeting not a full staff. Well their was a meeting. BUT i got fired for asking another employee told i was gossiping...

Now here I sit because i was on leave when pregnant and 12 weeks after and my husband laid off feb-june. We are being foreclosed on. Never in our lives did we think this would happen.We just don't know where to turn from here. My aunt has a place we can move into because she is disabled and ha to move to another state to be looked after by her sister and her family. But the shape the house is in. it needs soo much tlc. while i was working we saw we were loosing out home, so we did working my aunts house Ive spent over $500. in just dumpsters, and have to get a HUGE one for 495. next coons put a hole in the roof and destroyed everything upstairs.  and now with it being like that for so long and all the rain we have to do a new roof.  and we need to figure out how to get the smell out of the house we have tried everything, also water leak in basement so we have musty smell there.

I'm in dire need of help so if there is anyone in Ohio that knows about roofing or anything else that could help us out please let me know.I don't know how much longer we will be in our home, I know we cant move into my aunts with our children in the shape it is in right now, Also checking into habitat for humanity too.. I have no problem with work min 48 hours a week and i had worked 10 days 12 hour shifts right before i was let go. was suppose to work 13, 12 hour shifts in a row, off 1 day then back for 6 more. Because of the firing they did a week before.  

Matthew10
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Matthew10 - on Sep 14, 2008
Posted in cathy066 

Our organization,  Foreclosure Associates will do a full RESPA/compliance audit on your current mortgage. Nationally, our team finds mistakes which renders the mortgage document not enforceable. Our customers have often been able to then hold title free and clear! Our fees are very reasonable and we will have an audit completed in under 24 hours. Call me Matthew Dunnahan anytime 602-918-3055 for a free phone consultation! You may also drop us an email to: matthew29732@yahoo.com

This is you chance to delay foreclosure (thus your chance to save up) OR cancel the foreclosure permanently!

good2morrowswillcome
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Comment on: Grants, are they real or just a ploy to purchase cd's that you have to find the grant or foundation that a person needs.

By good2morrowswillcome - on Aug 21, 2008
Posted in Margie61 

Margie61, I don't have any foundations in mind...but I can tell you that those grant things are ALL scams.  Grants and foundation money are given to non profits, research, and business programs that aid others.  Check with your church, AARP, VETs, and other groups that may have but not advertise different types of aid.  My daughter was born with crossed eyes.  We had no insurance.  The doctor told us that the Lions Club take on the charity that deals with eyesight, glasses, etc.  We wrote a letter, presented it to the Lion's Club, interviewed with them, and our daughter recieved her operation!  It is worth digging a little, Good Luck.

QUEENOFDOUBLEWIDE
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Comment on: need help to pay my mortgage

By QUEENOFDOUBLEWIDE - on May 24, 2008
Posted in bh70116 

CALL 211 FROM YOUR PHONE, THEY CAN HELP.

Caroline
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Caroline - on Mar 31, 2008
Posted in cathy066 

 in response to Kasmere...   

You must tell the renters the truth--they have been fair with you.  They will understand; everyone knows about the troubled real estate market, so you're in good company.   Give them an extra month free in the house until they can find a place.  That way, you'll feel you did everything you could.

Kasmere
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Kasmere - on Mar 31, 2008
Posted in cathy066 

I have renters in my property and it's going into foreclosure what should I tell them or what shall I do, they pay rent on time, I just have many other properties that are going in default and it's an domino effect...

Agent/owner

Arabian
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Comment on: losing my house to foreclosure

By Arabian - on Mar 3, 2008
Posted in cathy066 

Many of us are having the same problem.  My father's house is worth over $200,000 and he owes $112,000.  The bank sold the mortgage to a third party who seems to be collecting a lot of property, (we think they are going to resell it to developers at a later date.)  We were told to speak to our local politicians.

msface2u
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foreclosure

By msface2u - on Jan 30, 2008
Posted in msface2u 

I have been searching for grants or grant writers. If the money is from the government how come it is so hard to get when one needs this money.  I have hopes and dreams of opening up my own business.  Now I'm about to loose my house.  Does anyone know anybody out there that can save me and my sanity?

r6redrr
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Please Help, I need 60 day 2500.00 Loan to stop me form Losing my Home.

By r6redrr - on Jan 27, 2008
Posted in r6redrr 

If there is anyway someone could help me with a 2500.00 loan. Just for 60 day'still my workers compensation settlement is paid. I have worked at the same company for 24 years (Lockheed/Martin) I was injured on the job and can't work now. Then the insurance company refused to pay, and I had to get an attorney. I am now waiting for my funds, which my attorney say's will be within the next 30 days. I am asking for 60 day's just to be sure. Right now I am right at 3 months behind on my mortgage , and if I don't make a payment by 31st of january they will start forclosure, plus my other living cost. I will pay back with intrest. Please Help if you can my email is r6redrr@bellsouth.net or phone me Mark at 404-579-3553 

   

Greenlee143
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Please Help Me

By Greenlee143 - on Jan 8, 2008
Posted in Greenlee143 

I want to start by saying I dont usually ask people for help. This is a very humbling expierence for me. Here is my story. I was dating a guy for about 2 years. completely trusted this man(bad idea!) Long story VERY short, he ended up buying a house in my name and taking $14,000.00  in loans out in my name. After finding out that I owned the house I turned him into the cops and proceeded to evict him off of the property. After being evicted he trashed house and put a Lis Pendance on the property. He tried to claimed I was a Straw borrower. I had to hire an attorney to get the Lis Pendance removed and prove that his claim was bogus. He did end up in prison, but I ended up with the house, Attorney fees, unpaid property taxes, pass due association and about $10,000.00 worth of damages to the property. In an attempt to save my credit I asked my parents to help me fix up the house and help me pay the $4000 a month mortgage while I tried to sell it. I had hoped to be able to pay my parents back once the house sold. As it turns out the market crashed and my house went into forclosure. Unfortunantly, the credit line my parents took out on thier house to help me out did not forclose with the house. After 2 years of hell and trying to do the right thing I am now stuck with the horrible memories of what my ex did to me, a forclosure on my credit and $40,000.00 debt to my parents. It kills me that I am paying, what I consider my ex's debt. Which brings me to this site. I am looking for any help anyone is able to give. Every dollar helps so much! I want to thank you for taking the time to read my very long story and for any help you are able to give. Even if it is just prayer!

weffa
offline
I Am So Ashamed

By weffa - on Jun 27, 2007
Posted in weffa 

      Hello all I am not feeling good about being here, but I feel I have nowhere to turn. My home has been dated to be sold at auction for forclosure. I have not been able to work with my mortgage company. I have turned to many who have said they could help but really just took my money. We were late in our payments because of the sudden hike in oil prices. Our house runs on oil for both heat and hot water. We do conserve quite a bit, but heating our home costed us 50% more ths year over last year and we wren't prepared for it. I have two children who love thier school, friends, and community. Losing our home would be heart breaking, and embarresing. I just want to stay where we are and make this go away. Assistence form anywhere would be great. I work as a behvioral evaluator with autistic children, I would be willing to give advise or programming ideas in return. I am also an avid gardner and could answer many how to questions about that. Please I need money or a loan or just help.

cathy066
offline
losing my house to foreclosure

By cathy066 - on Mar 17, 2007
Posted in cathy066 

I am about to lose my house to foreclosure.

Not quite sure what to do.  I am in arrears about $9,000.00 (with lawyers fees).

Everywhere I turn, there is no help...its quite complicated: My father is on the deed to the house with me, but I have recently had to put him in a nursing home due to dementia. My husband is not on the deed, and he has been disabled for 2 years, so now I am the only one with true "income". I work full time and my husband receives only a small amount monthly for him and my son. And with my father out of the house, I have that much less income.

I have been in this house for 34 years. (on and off...) We moved here on my 7th birthday.  My mother made this house our home and passed away here.

I personally suffer from depression and anxiety, and this has made it so much worse. 

I am reaching out to anyone who has any knowledge of what to do....Im at wits end. County agencies will not help because there is no guarantee that I could keep current with the mortgage due to the fact that my husband is still diabled. (diabetic with foot ulcers- has had 3 toes removed)

Thank you for your time.

LittleBigMama
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Comment on: need money to live

By LittleBigMama - on Feb 15, 2007... modified on Feb 15, 2007
Posted in Bad back 

Hi there, There's no shame in letting your wife work and support the family financially. You can take care of the family as well by offering support, taking care of errands that don't require physical strain, sitting at the table, peeling veggies, that sort of thing. A good wife will do her part to take care of the family, even if it means working outside of the home. In this day and age, it is not only the 'man's duty' to be the bread winner. Once you are healed, you can go back to traditional roles if you like.

ekikaseven
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Comment on: need money to live

By ekikaseven - on Feb 15, 2007
Posted in Bad back 

hi 'badback, Move to a smaller home. That would take some of the financial stress off of you. I pray that God will heal your back. Take care.

soulight
offline
Comment on: need money to live

By soulight - on Feb 15, 2007
Posted in Bad back 

Have you thought of downsizing ? You could get a smaller/less expensive house and still care for your family. soulight

caige_d2
offline
Comment on: need money to live

By caige_d2 - on Feb 15, 2007
Posted in Bad back 

Are you for real?Its not nice to offer help and get someones hopes up.People that are really weathy generally don't advertise the fact.Please dont't try to play someone who probally has already been dealt a bad card.Caige_d2

Bad back
offline
Comment on: need money to live

By Bad back - on Feb 15, 2007
Posted in Bad back 

I feel sorry for you I am a wealthy oil tycoon and will email. i think I can help

Bad back
offline
need money to live

By Bad back - on Feb 15, 2007
Posted in Bad back 

permantly injured my back in a car accident. i was an innocent passenger and can no longer work. i am the married father of an infant baby girl and I am scared cause I cannot support my wife or daughter due to my injury. i am at risk of losing my home and my wife and daughter because of financial stress. Please help me if your are wealthy. I owe 360k on the house I bought when I was well and a good provider. Pleadge as much as you can as I cant sleep thinking about this stuff. Im in need of serious help and desperate. please email me at

alfigz@hotmail.com with PLEDGE in the subject line

Thanks so much 

Injured forever

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