San Diego County Seeks Expanded Rooftop Solar

Solar rooftop

Solar rooftop

Efforts to expand use of rooftop solar panels in unincorporated San Diego County took another step forward Tuesday.

In an ongoing initiative to remove some of the cloud over financing for such systems, county supervisors ordered a report on options for expanding the pool of commercial and residential lending programs.

Supervisors Dianne Jacob and Dave Roberts are leading the effort to grow the county’s public-private solar financing, which has been stymied because of a Federal Housing Financing Agency ruling that effectively blocks homeowners from repaying solar loans through annual property tax bills.

Does solar add value to your home? Did you not get credit on your appraisal for your solar?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value and appraisal questions.

Supervisors said the county program — known as Property Assessed Clean Energy, or PACE — can’t get regulatory or legislative relief from the restriction.

The report is expected to examine adding a variety of financing alternatives but still limit the residential program to homes with no Federal Housing Administration loans and those with no outstanding loans whatsoever.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/jun/19/tp-county-seeks-expanded-rooftop-solar/

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Deducting Losses Due to Disaster

femaMany people reeling from the impact of hurricanes, super storms, fires, floods and other disasters this year may be wondering what, if any, relief they can get on their taxes.

In many cases, the answer will be disappointing. Congress generally has erected high barriers to deducting casualty losses.

But some victims of nature’s savagery may benefit from a little-known—and somewhat counterintuitive—tax-law twist designed to help those with losses in places that were declared as federal disaster areas by the president.

If you have questions regarding the value of your property contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com; they are certified FEMA inspectors.

First, here is a refresher course on deducting casualty and theft losses on personal-use property.

The big hurdle facing taxpayers is known as “the 10% rule.” Also watch out for the $100 rule. Here is how the Internal Revenue Service summarizes these rules in Publication 584:

“If the loss was to property for your personal use or your family’s, there are two limits on the amount you can deduct for your casualty or theft loss.

“1. You must reduce each casualty or theft loss by $100 [$100 rule].

“2. You must further reduce the total of all your losses by 10% of your adjusted gross income [10% rule].”

Read more at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323401904578158963567403752.html

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

New Housing Bubble? Corporate Buyers Boosting Prices

bubbleDouble-digit home-price gains from San Francisco to Detroit to Miami have some aspiring home buyers racing back into the market.

But buyers, beware.

The housing market may not be as strong as you think.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your home value questions.

Sure it’s tempting to want to lock in a low interest rate and take advantage of lower home prices before they rise further.

But it may make sense to take a breather before you buy a home and wait for prices to drop, as institutional investors might be inflating home prices.

Namely, Wall Street investors are scooping up homes in bulk, and there’s considerable concern this is inflating prices in certain areas of the country—and pricing individuals out of the market in general.

These institutional investors have been spending billions of dollars buying up single-family homes en masse. In 2012, institutional buyers purchased about 138,540 of both distressed and non-distressed homes in the U.S., or about 3% of all sales, according to RealtyTrac. It estimates institutional buyers purchased 32,355 homes in the U.S. in the first quarter of this year, or about

Read more at: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324299104578531132265680630.html?KEYWORDS=House+Sales

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes