Obama Unveils Aid for Mortgage Holders – FHA and VA Too!

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Tuesday unveiled two new housing initiatives intended to assist members of the military and Americans with government-insured loans.

In his first major news conference of 2012, Obama announced a new plan to cut refinancing fees for any loan insured by the Federal Housing Administration. The president also outlined a new agreement with banks to review foreclosures for members of the military that have taken place since 2006 and provide compensation to anyone who wrongfully lost a home.

Neither proposal requires congressional approval. But they are also more modest than an earlier proposal for a $10 billion refinancing plan that Obama asked lawmakers to pass in his State of the Union address.

Here’s how the FHA plan would work: Currently, the federal government offers a program to allow borrowers with loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration to refinance their loans at lower cost. But the fees for refinancing have kept many borrowers from taking up the government on its offer. The administration estimates that an additional 2 million to 3 million homeowners could end up refinancing under its program.

Under the old program, an FHA borrower who owes $175,000 on his or her mortgage could refinance into a 4 percent loan and whittle the monthly payments down to about $1,010 per month. Under the new program, with the lower fees, that same borrower could reduce his or her mortgage payments further, down to $915 per month.

Meanwhile, the administration has also struck an agreement with various banks and lenders to conduct a review of foreclosure practices for military members. Any service member or veteran whose home has been wrongly foreclosed on since 2006 will receive compensation equal to a minimum of $116,785 plus any home equity lost since the foreclosure. This compensation will come from the mortgage servicers who conducted the foreclosures. In addition, any service member wrongly denied the opportunity to refinance will receive a refund of money lost.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/mar/07/tp-obama-unveils-aid-for-mortgage-holders/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Cool and Heat Your House Naturally

Drive around suburbia and you’ll quickly notice that the trend in roofing is dark, dark, dark. Black. Charcoal. Woodland Grey, or for a touch of blue, Deep Ocean.

Red is definitely out, and has been for some time.

And we’ve been hearing for a while about a global push to paint roofs white, or at least light. If not light, then with reflective paint to help reduce the absorption of heat in summer.

This extends to building regulations such as BASIX, in NSW.

It makes perfect sense, especially in parts of Australia where the summers are hot (that’s most of Australia, although if you looked at this summer only, you’d argue that that doesn’t extend to Sydney), to think about making roof colours lighter.

However, the argument is never black and white. Or Ironstone and Dune. Just how much of an effect the colour of your roof will have on the comfort inside your home will depend on a number of factors, including insulation levels and ventilation.

For the past year or so I’ve been tossing up what to do with an existing red-roofed home. Back in September I visited a few homes for Sustainable House Day to see what other people were up to.

Some had rainwater tanks, north-facing windows, double-glazing and thick curtains. Many had polished cement floors for the high thermal mass they offer.

But one had something that seemed to make good sense. A solar roof collector. The home owner had installed a product called Solectair at the recommendation of his air-conditioning supplier.

read more at: http://news.domain.com.au/domain/blogs/talking-property/cool-and-heat-your-house-naturally-20120228-1u09h.html?s_cid=FDMedia:rainbow1_29_02_12

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Property Spotlight – Miller Ranch Porch House

Site Specific and Factory Sound: Lake | Flato joins the prefab party with an adaptable, modernist take on modular housing.

A couple of years ago, the team at Lake | Flato Architects got together to brainstorm ideas to help weather the recession. Even with a long list of design awards and a 2004 AIA Firm Award on their resume, the respected San Antonio-based practice was feeling the sting of the slowed-down economy. Associate partner Bill Aylor says the firm had long had a fascination with prefab, and living and working in Texas, where modular sheds and barns were common in the rural locations Lake | Flato often worked, it seemed a natural fit. “During our internal investigations we decided that if we did modular we wanted the designs to accomplish three things,” says Aylor. “We wanted to keep costs down, create a design that could have both prefab and site-specific elements combined without compromising design quality, and maintain a sustainable approach.”

Read more at: http://greensource.construction.com/green_building_projects/2012/1201-miller-ranch-porch-house.asp