Instant Solar Energy Analysis for your home – Google Sunroof

solar

Have you ever wondered whether your house or commercial building has what it takes to go solar? Now you can estimate the solar potential and economics of a photovoltaic system with a few clicks. All you need to know is your street address and how much you spend in the average month for electricity. Google Sunroof will calculate how much space is available on your roof, how much energy you could produce and how much a PV system might cost, including incentives. For homeowners, it’s a great way to get a quick estimate of solar feasibility. Remember, this is just an estimate based on broad national averages.

Will it add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com they are Southern California’s forerunners in green real estate appraisal.

How it Works – When you enter your address, Project Sunroof looks up your home in Google Maps and combines that information with other databases to create your personalized roof analysis. Don’t worry, Project Sunroof doesn’t give the address to anybody else unless you ask it to.

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Six small space solutions

bed

1.Your furniture can multi-task for you

When you’re living in a small space, there’s bound to be limited room for furniture. Luckily, these days, there are plenty of cleverly designed furnitures that serve multiple purposes. Such as a coffee table that’s also a secret place to stash all your stuff, or a bed that converts to a full-sized sofa when folded up.

2. It’s okay to have a bed on the floor

If you don’t have a base frame for your bed, but you don’t have a lot of money to spend for a new one, save yourself a dreaded trip to IKEA by going without. The good news is, this look is actually on trend, you just have to make sure to get it right.

read more at: http://www.domain.com.au/advice/six-small-space-solutions-i-wish-id-known-in-my-20s-20160726-gqdx0q/

Real Estate Agents: New Housing rules aimed at saving widowers from foreclosure

Consumer advocates say widows and widowers nationwide are falling into a bureaucratic black hole.

Although servicers will generally accept their loan payments, surviving homeowners who are not on the mortgage face significant resistance when they seek loan modifications once they’ve fallen behind on payments — often because they’ve lost their spouse’s income.

“They are being told they can’t do anything to prevent foreclosure,” said Charles Evans, an attorney with pro bono law firm Public Counsel, which is assisting Sequeira.

The problem is growing, advocates say, and has caught the attention of federal regulators and state lawmakers.

In just the first three months of this year, the Housing and Economic Rights Advocates, a statewide advocacy group, had handled 16 such cases.

In a 2013 survey, conducted by the California Reinvestment Coalition, 44% of housing counselors said that servicers “always” or “almost always” declined to discuss loan modifications with widowed clients when they weren’t on the loan. Last year, housing counselors across the country surveyed by the National Housing Resource Center gave servicers a poor rating for communication with widows, widowers and others in similar circumstances.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is preparing to release regulations this summer that will assist widows and other so-called successors-in-interest. And the state Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote Tuesday on a bill designed to give surviving spouses, domestic partners and children the same protections borrowers have in the Homeowner Bill of Rights, including the right to sue to stop a foreclosure or for economic damages after one occurs.

The bill, SB-1150, by Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) and Sen. Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton), would prevent servicers from moving forward with a foreclosure before requesting “reasonable” documentation of the borrower’s death and the identity of the survivor.

Dual tracking would be barred and servicers would be required to give accurate information about mortgage assumptions and foreclosure-prevention programs, while appointing a single point of contact for survivors.

Although the bill doesn’t require a modification be given — applicants must be able to show they can afford even the smaller loan payment — the intent is to give survivors a fair shot at getting one. It would, for example, allow delinquent survivors to get a loan modification without first getting current on payments.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is preparing to release regulations this summer that will assist widows and other so-called successors-in-interest. And the state Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote Tuesday on a bill designed to give surviving spouses, domestic partners and children the same protections borrowers have in the Homeowner Bill of Rights, including the right to sue to stop a foreclosure or for economic damages after one occurs.

The bill, SB-1150, by Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) and Sen. Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton), would prevent servicers from moving forward with a foreclosure before requesting “reasonable” documentation of the borrower’s death and the identity of the survivor.

Dual tracking would be barred and servicers would be required to give accurate information about mortgage assumptions and foreclosure-prevention programs, while appointing a single point of contact for survivors.

Although the bill doesn’t require a modification be given — applicants must be able to show they can afford even the smaller loan payment — the intent is to give survivors a fair shot at getting one. It would, for example, allow delinquent survivors to get a loan modification without first getting current on payments.

read more: http://www.latimes.com/business/realestate/la-fi-widow-foreclosures-20160503-story.html

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only