It’s Just Like In 2008 When The Market Tanked
A report from WINK News. “The Sunshine State faces a real estate slowdown that has hit some neighborhoods. ‘Unfortunately, the market is shifting,’ said Veronika Mykhaskiv, a real estate agent now trying to sell her home. ‘For Sale’ signs appear but moving boxes aren’t packed. Randall Burroughs, who lives next to a house listed since October 2024, wasn’t surprised by the situation. ‘You can already see the proof in the pudding, because you see houses dropping $30,000,’ said Burroughs. Burroughs attributed the trend to excessive building and a tight economy. Stephen Petty, a real estate agent with VIP Realty in Southwest Florida, noted that new developers are lowering prices, which is negatively impacting the market. ‘The new developers try to lower the prices, and then they kind of tank their market. So, people look elsewhere,’ said Petty. Petty pointed out that the high prices of 2021 are no longer. ‘There’s going to be some foreclosure short sales. I’ve already seen some short sales coming back,’ he said.”
My Fox 8 in North Carolina. “Some Greensboro condo owners said they’re paying their homeowners association fees, but their community’s conditions don’t reflect it. At Bramblegate Condominiums owners said they’ve been waiting years for basic maintenance. ‘It’s just hopeless complaining to them, because they don’t do nothing about it,’ said James Joyce, condo owner. At Bramblegate Condominiums, homeowners say their community has deteriorated, and their requests for help are going nowhere. Others, like Cindy Barnes, say years of trying to get help have led nowhere. Her condo was damaged in a 2021 fire. Barnes said insurance funds managed through the HOA are expected to help cover the costs. While she’s communicated with the HOA’s attorney, she said there is no clear path forward. ‘It gives all of the owners here a sense of anxiety. You can’t be as productive as you would like in life. Your home is your biggest asset. And if you’re an owner and this is all that you have, you know, to some people, this is all you have,’ said Cindy Barnes, homeowner.”
From InMaricopa in Arizona. “Homeowners in Rancho Mirage, a master-planned community on Maricopa’s East Side, say they are frustrated and anxious after learning that homebuilder K. Hovnanian Homes is halting construction and leaving remaining lots in the hands of an outside investor. An early Rancho Mirage buyer, who requested anonymity, said he first noticed trouble when a ‘Final Opportunities’ sign appeared at the sales office, despite dozens of empty lots in his neighborhood. Fellow Rancho Mirage developer Beazer Homes is also backing out of the neighborhood, according to local representatives. ‘They were listing these homes at over $600,000 when we bought. We paid $609,000. Now they’re closing out at $499,000,’ the homeowner told InMaricopa. ‘That’s a huge hit for those of us who bought early, and now we don’t even know what’s going to happen with the empty lots.'”
“A K. Hovnanian representative at Rancho Mirage explained the company’s limited role in the development, citing a ‘take down’ approach in which the builder buys land in phases rather than in larger swaths. They buy street-by-street. ‘We don’t own [the remaining lots],’ the employee said. ‘We buy one street at a time. The way the market is now, the builder didn’t want to buy more. So, it’s not like we sold it. We never owned it. An investor, a big company, owns it.’ They have five more homes to sell before an investor takes over the remaining lots. She wouldn’t say who that investor is. ‘It’s just like in 2008 when the market tanked: Builders didn’t finish their lots and they’d sell it to another builder,’ said the K. Hovnanian rep. ‘That’s usually what happens.'”
“For the Rancho Mirage homeowner, the uncertainty about this once master-planned community and what will become of these vacant lots has intensified fears about property values and neighborhood cohesion. ‘We feel abandoned,’ the homeowner said. ‘This was supposed to be a master-planned community, but now it feels like we’re just sitting with dirt lots between houses and no idea what’s coming next.'”
Bay Area Newsgroup in California. “The Bay Area has more homes on the market than during last summer, but buyers just aren’t biting. Sellers, getting desperate, are starting to lower their prices. In Contra Costa and Alameda counties, one in every three homes for sale saw a price drop in June. In San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, it was one in every two homes, according to Redfin data. ‘If you’re a seller and think the number your neighbor got in 2022 is what you’re going to get today, you’ll be disappointed,’ said Victoria Tseng, a real estate agent based in Berkeley. ‘Sellers are looking at where the market was a few years ago, and agents are warning them that the market isn’t there,’ said Jill Toler, a San Jose-based agent. ‘If we’re not getting offers, we need to put the home at a different price.'”
“For a buyer putting 20% down on the median Bay Area home, the 6.5% rate for a 30-year mortgage translates to a $7,439 monthly payment, versus $5,097 when rates were at just 3% during the pandemic. ‘Buyers are choosy — they want a home that’s move-in ready and cleaned up,’ Toler said. She advised buyers to be wary of the classic refrain used by real estate agents: ‘Marry the house, date the rate.’ ‘Buy the house you can afford,’ Toler said. ‘Don’t overspend.'”
The Ocean Beach Rag in California. “A year ago, after hearing countless stories about monstrous accessory dwelling units (ADUs), OB Rag staff wanted to find out how bad things were. So we launched a ‘Worst ADU in San Diego’ contest on August 9. One of the contest ‘dishonorables’ was back in the news this week. A two-story ADU, the largest in Crown Point, towers over the Promontory Street home of Cathie and Marc Umemoto. The sheer mass of the structure is bad enough. But a coastal zoning loophole allowed owner Heidi Martin, who had just bought the property, to build a large ADU just inches from her property line. The Umemotos were never notified that their home was about to be overshadowed by a giant bunker. ‘At the last second, the garage was torn down, and the foundation was jackhammered,’ said Marc. ‘We didn’t know what was happening until the yellow wall was pulled up into place.’ The ensuing war of attrition, covered by the Rag and the Union-Tribune, dragged on for a year until this week. The Union-Tribune reported July 29 that Martin’s crew figured out a way to finish off the remaining wall from the roof using a long pole with a roller paintbrush. So the war is over for now, or until Heidi Martin again needs to enter the next-door property for ADU repairs or maintenance. The Umemotos’ plight – living in perpetual shadow, their house devalued – has won them widespread sympathy.”
The Globe and Mail in Canada. “Address: 6 Dawnridge Tr., Brampton, Ont. Asking price: $1,399,000 (June, 2025). Previous asking price: $1,599,000 (May, 2025). Selling price: $1,365,000 (June, 2025). Between 2021 and 2023, Toronto-based agent Luke Dalinda would have priced this four-bedroom house at roughly $1.9-million. But this spring, the value was closer to $1.6-million for this property across the street from Conservation Drive Park in Brampton. The owners, disappointed only two buyers emerged over four days, cut their price by $200,000 and saw their guest list rise tenfold over the following week. ‘There’s intense pressure here, more so than Toronto, to lower prices, and it’s a bit concerning,’ said Mr. Dalinda. ‘Had [the sellers] put more time on the market at that higher price, they’d be facing the same decision in a month, but by then, they’d be burnt out and people know that.’ The buyer pushed for an additional discount, then another after completing a home inspection, despite already reviewing one provided by the owners. ‘People use a home inspection to push down the price, even by a few more thousand [dollars], so in this case, we did ours, and there was nothing wrong with the house,’ said Mr. Dalinda. ‘[The buyers] basically used that condition to get about $5,000 in extra savings.'”
From CBC News in Canada. “Residents in an Essex mobile home community say they feel ‘trapped’ living in the Hidden Creek mobile home community, after they say large increases to land lease and maintenance fees are scaring off potential buyers. Facing the loss of her home and inching toward bankruptcy, Sarah Battersby says she had to surrender her mobile home in McGregor to the bank after being unable to sell it since September. ‘Me and my kids, we built this home together and it feels strange not being able to just go in,’ she told CBC standing outside her former home, trying to withhold her tears. ‘It’s just really upsetting. It’s sad and has taken quite a toll on me.’ The single mother of two bought her modular home in April 2022, leasing the lot it is on for about $675 a month. Following health conditions and long-term disability, when Battersby went to sell last fall she said the lot rent went up to $895 and that potential mobile homeowners were looking at a new maintenance fee of $140 a month.”
“‘My realtor had people calling and just hanging up as soon as they heard the amount of land rent because no one can afford it,’ she said. Consequently, she lowered her asking price ‘several times’ from $219,900 to $149,000 before eventually surrendering it to the bank in July. Battersby and others CBC spoke with in the community say they feel the park is not properly maintained, with crooked pavement, potholes in the road and unkept grass, despite their maintenance fees. ‘Where is the money going? Because it doesn’t seem like they’re putting it back into the park where it should be going,’ Battersby said. Reg Major, who has lived there since 2018, said there are 240 deeded residents who own their land and 242 who, like him, lease their land. He said many of those 242 who have been trying to sell their mobile homes have been struggling with the lot rent increases. ‘I’m trapped. I can’t sell the place. It won’t sell,’ he said. ‘When we pass on and my daughter takes possession, she’s gonna be stuck with the hell, instead of being stuck with a benefit.'”
The Derbyshire Times in the UK. “Residents of a north Derbyshire housing development are up in arms over the unfinished state of the neighbourhood, with companies working on the estate appearing to have ceased work. When homeowners moved into the Williamthorpe Fields estate, in Holmewood, they were expecting to see the public realm around their houses well maintained – with a charge for upkeep included in mortgage agreements. But as time passed, residents feel they are entering an abandoned wasteland every time they step out the front door – and their complaints have gone unanswered in a tangled web of companies and councils which might be expected to take some responsibility.”
“Speaking anonymously, one mum-of-two who has lived in a £238,000 house on the development for more than two years said: ‘When we first looked at the site plan, it was something that really attracted us. There was plenty of open space, it wasn’t like a rabbit hutch. We’ve had no issues with the house itself, and last year it all looked lovely when the builders were still maintaining their areas and they were paying contractors to look after the green spaces. Then this year they all left site and that’s when the issues started. There’s an electrical box that’s just been left wide open, broken streetlights. It doesn’t feel safe to let the children out on their bikes. It’s a death- trap waiting to happen. It’s not so bad for us to look at because we’re tucked at the back in cul-de-sac, but other people are looking out their windows at five-foot weeds. We paid good money for this house and if we wanted to move into a dump we would’ve moved into a dump. It makes us feel like we don’t want to live here anymore.'”
‘Petty, a real estate agent with VIP Realty in Southwest Florida, noted that new developers are lowering prices, which is negatively impacting the market. ‘The new developers try to lower the prices, and then they kind of tank their market. So, people look elsewhere,’ said Petty. Petty pointed out that the high prices of 2021 are no longer. ‘There’s going to be some foreclosure short sales. I’ve already seen some short sales coming back’
The article doesn’t say but I looked up the UHS and he’s in Fort Myers.
‘A K. Hovnanian representative at Rancho Mirage explained the company’s limited role in the development, citing a ‘take down’ approach in which the builder buys land in phases rather than in larger swaths. They buy street-by-street. ‘We don’t own [the remaining lots],’ the employee said. ‘We buy one street at a time. The way the market is now, the builder didn’t want to buy more. So, it’s not like we sold it. We never owned it. An investor, a big company, owns it.’ They have five more homes to sell before an investor takes over the remaining lots. She wouldn’t say who that investor is. ‘It’s just like in 2008 when the market tanked: Builders didn’t finish their lots and they’d sell it to another builder’
I usually don’t post this early, but I wanted to get this out there before some lawyer calls and the article gets taken down or edited, which does happen. The builder may say this but the sign at the link says ‘Final Opportunities’ on their sign. You can also see the unfinished shanties and empty lots.
https://www.inmaricopa.com/rancho-mirage-buyers-react-to-builder-pull-out/
One can only find such gems in a relatively obscure paper by picking through dozens of web searches. Which I do in the wee hours. (It’s 68 degrees right now – in August!) Puddle watchers won’t do the work and newsweak will probably claim they discovered it later today. I despise those thieving bashtards.
Anyone who buys the shoddily-constructed, defect ridden shacks thrown up by cowboy contractors and illegals in these “planned communities” built by publicly-traded builders and developers has no excuse for claiming they were unaware of the schlonging they signed up for.
If you think about it, Hovnanian did fook their recent buyers. They must have sold lots so cheap this ‘investor’ could finish more shanties and make a profit 100k less than what the FBs paid. Hovnanian knew this would happen. This is late cycle bubble stuff.
To be fair, it was named Mirage. It’s like naming a development Potemkin village.
Maybe the Great Blue Lake Land and Development Company would be more fitting.
Arizonas history is littered with many such grandiose land scams as Rancho Mirage.
“Schlongville” would be too un-subtle from a marketing standpoint.
‘They were listing these homes at over $600,000 when we bought. We paid $609,000. Now they’re closing out at $499,000,’ the homeowner told InMaricopa. ‘That’s a huge hit for those of us who bought early, and now we don’t even know what’s going to happen with the empty lots’
It makes sense this sh$thole would crater early, it did in 2006 too. It’s really remote, crappy roads to jobs and empty land as far as you can see. But when it happened in the 2000’s, prices were bumping up in the 300ks. So it is different this time.
long ago I lived in Ahwatukee and Maricopa was surrounded by Res Land and probably still is.
Also I remember johnson Ranch out past Queen Queen being half finished in 2008.
‘If you’re a seller and think the number your neighbor got in 2022 is what you’re going to get today, you’ll be disappointed,’ said Victoria Tseng, a real estate agent based in Berkeley. ‘Sellers are looking at where the market was a few years ago, and agents are warning them that the market isn’t there’
This is a sponsored article, meaning UHS paid to throttle greedy sellers!
‘At the last second, the garage was torn down, and the foundation was jackhammered,’ said Marc. ‘We didn’t know what was happening until the yellow wall was pulled up into place’…So the war is over for now, or until Heidi Martin again needs to enter the next-door property for ADU repairs or maintenance. The Umemotos’ plight – living in perpetual shadow, their house devalued – has won them widespread sympathy’
Lots of photos of these plywood monstrosities at the link. It’s hard to believe this is a modern city.
Looks like Brazil
awful
This is the fault of the city. They should have put limits on the ADUs: one per property, one floor only, 600 sq ft max, something like that. These are not ADUs. They are clearly shanties for third-world invaders. One of those shacks alone would house 12 serfs.
‘This is the fault of the city. They should have put limits on the ADUs’
I am starting to think this isn’t about policy in California. It is increasing apparent to me that these people are stupid. Obviously not those present and not everybody. But this whole sh$tshow has been going on long enough that I think we can all agree that a significant number of people that haven’t fled this sh$thole state are dumber than a box of rocks.
Like the proverbial frog in the pot that is slowly brought to boiling, people can get used to sh!t if it doesn’t happen all at once.
And I kid you not, when I ask people I know why they haven’t fled, they say “I would miss the weather and the beaches”.
In 2003 when I first first got to Sedona I became friends with a UHS from Santa Barbara. His dad was a shack builder and had done well putting his money into shacks and such. He was very proud of SB outwardly, lots of rich people! On and on about that and how they would throw money around. So I asked him, half the people I’ve met in Sedona are ex-Californians and he agreed. So why did you sell up and leave? It was crime. 2003 in Santa Barbara from a guy who was born and raised there in a successful real estate family.
‘Barnes said insurance funds managed through the HOA are expected to help cover the costs. While she’s communicated with the HOA’s attorney, she said there is no clear path forward. ‘It gives all of the owners here a sense of anxiety. You can’t be as productive as you would like in life. Your home is your biggest asset. And if you’re an owner and this is all that you have, you know, to some people, this is all you have’
Insurance doesn’t work if they have to pay out Cindy. But I want to thank her for today’s HBB Pitfalls of Commie Urban Living™. Which is saying something because there are several above.
‘she told CBC standing outside her former home, trying to withhold her tears. ‘It’s just really upsetting. It’s sad and has taken quite a toll on me.’ The single mother of two bought her modular home in April 2022, leasing the lot it is on for about $675 a month…‘My realtor had people calling and just hanging up as soon as they heard the amount of land rent because no one can afford it,’ she said. Consequently, she lowered her asking price ‘several times’ from $219,900 to $149,000 before eventually surrendering it to the bank in July’
Just like that Sarah, you gave it away?
‘Major, who has lived there since 2018, said there are 240 deeded residents who own their land and 242 who, like him, lease their land. He said many of those 242 who have been trying to sell their mobile homes have been struggling with the lot rent increases. ‘I’m trapped. I can’t sell the place. It won’t sell,’ he said. ‘When we pass on and my daughter takes possession, she’s gonna be stuck with the hell, instead of being stuck with a benefit’
Well it was still way cheaper than renting Reg. It’s a chilly FB Saturday!
mobile homes and their lots and crap are a scam top to bottom.
Imagine being able to live with yourself after suckering people to buy those things? complete loss after 20 years (or less) Built like paper airplanes and then paying lot rent on top?????? complete scam
Realtors are liars.
Recent alleged Bigfoot sightings lost all credibility when they claimed he was accompanied by an honest realtor.
‘Unfortunately, the market is shifting,’ said Veronika Mykhaskiv, a real estate agent now trying to sell her home.
“Unfortunately”? Au contraire. The implosion of Housing Bubble 2.0 will mark a return to sanity in the housing market, while the wipeout of FBs and speculators will be a cautionary tale for the hazards of rushing lemming-like into speculative manias created by the gold collar criminals at the Fed.
‘It gives all of the owners here a sense of anxiety. You can’t be as productive as you would like in life. Your home is your biggest asset.
As a bitter renter I’m tryin’ to relate, but am just not feeling it.
An early Rancho Mirage buyer, who requested anonymity, said he first noticed trouble when a ‘Final Opportunities’ sign appeared at the sales office, despite dozens of empty lots in his neighborhood.
Call it a hunch, call it an intuition, but by the time FBs smell a rat in developer marketing, it’s already BOHICA time.
“One of two suspects wanted for allegedly ramming a vehicle into U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents near Colorado Springs Thursday afternoon has been arrested, a spokesperson with the federal agency said Friday.
Francisco Zapata-Pacheco was arrested “at approximately 2 p.m.” Thursday, an ICE spokesperson said in a news release.
The second suspect, identified as Jose Mendez-Chavez, remains at-large. Mendez-Chavez, a Mexican national, is a convicted child abuser who also has convictions for domestic violence and for entering the country illegally at least six times, the ICE spokesperson said.
In announcing the arrest, ICE officials lambasted the Colorado Rapid Response Network (CORRN), calling the group “despicable” for reportedly showing up in defense of a suspect “who has abused children and attempted to injure our officers.”
https://www.denver7.com/news/crime/one-of-two-suspects-who-reportedly-rammed-vehicle-into-ice-officers-near-colorado-springs-arrested
Where does CORRN get their money?
More foreign child rapists….. another worthy cause for the America hating liberals to rush in to defend.
They used to pretend to be against child abusers. Not anymore.
At least it makes it clear what you are supporting when you register your party alliance.
“Rage Against The Regime” protests around the country today in support of child r@pists.
Low energy boomers in the daytime (with their phony American flags) then Antifa at night.
“They’re not sending their best”
“Rage Against The Regime”
Sounds insurrectiony.
Funny, how when J6 protestors, many who never even approached the capitol building, were detained by federal agents during the FJB years without due process, were never described in the media as “kidnapped”. And we’re talking about US citizens, not illegal alien invaders.
They used to pretend to be against child abusers. Not anymore.
That’s because they are child abusers
You noticed that too? Hard to not see a pattern here and it’s probably much more widespread than even we realize. I did jury duty about 25 years ago in Commiefornia, guy was accused of molesting a young child, maybe under 3. During the selection process the Judge asks if there are any questions, I see the scumbag has a translator and I ask if he’s illegal as that’s a big deal to me. Scumbags attorney has a meltdown and scumbag judge says that’s not Germaine to the case but they kick us out of the courtroom only to call us back a half hour later to tell us he took a plea and to thank us for our service. Probably got a slap on the wrist and molested more kids.
They toss the “p3do” label around pretty freely with 47. But if it’s a dem, well, that’s just a minor attracted person.
An investor, a big company, owns it.’
That should’ve been yer first red flag, FBs.
And behind it all, the behemoth known as Blackstone. Backed up with unlimited money printing of Free fed bux. The fiat flowed to the richest hundred or so Americans with no MFing strings attached. Parties ending now, ha ha. How long before we begin hearing the word bailout? Too big too fail. anyone?
‘This was supposed to be a master-planned community, but now it feels like we’re just sitting with dirt lots between houses and no idea what’s coming next.’”
I’ll tell ya what’s coming next, FBs: regret.
And a lot of dust! As someone who has lived next to empty lots in the desert I can tell ya to be prepared for dunes in the window sills.
And piles of tumble-weeds. The first big trash out I did was half of those things. You could barely see the yard. It was 2008 and there were hundreds of foreclosures in Kingman AZ, so when the wind picked up they would stack up against everything.
FWIW, dust and tumbleweeds are regular features in the Columbia Basin. I change our HVAC air filter monthly.
Sellers, getting desperate, are starting to lower their prices.
Gosh, I fear we could see a vicious cycle where desperate sellers compete with each other in a race to the bottom, while savvy buyers sit on the sidelines content to let the carnage play out before they make their move. I fear that such a “shift” could become a real bloodbath of Yellen Bux “wealth” destruction – this is my “gravely concerned” face.
“….but now it feels like we’re just sitting with dirt lots between houses….”
Personally, the more dirt between my house and the next, the better.
The problem is the builders are done. So those lots are going to be going for peanuts if they can find a buyer. The half finished shacks will probably sit for a few years before the city will tear them down. But loanowners won’t find any toenails in the carpet! Remember that pitch?
For those who don’t remember them bulldozing new and half built homes in master planned communities, YouTube Apple Valley/Hesperia/Adelento in So Cal during the last bust. It’s a scene man.
BAck in the early 90s’ I was doing sprinkler repair for a big commercial firm (lawn sprinklers) and almost all the condo/townhome developments had either empty lots or empty foundations just there, some even had empty buildings from when Denver went bust. IN THE EARLY 80’S (so more than 10 years past).
She advised buyers to be wary of the classic refrain used by real estate agents: ‘Marry the house, date the rate.’ ‘Buy the house you can afford,’ Toler said. ‘Don’t overspend.’”
Anyone who trusts lying realtors (redundant) or the REIC shills in the garbage legacy media purely and simply deserves the schlonging such misplaced trust is going to bring down upon them.
‘They were listing these homes at over $600,000 when we bought. We paid $609,000. Now they’re closing out at $499,000,’ the homeowner told InMaricopa. ‘That’s a huge hit for those of us who bought early, and now we don’t even know what’s going to happen with the empty lots.’”
It would take a heart of stone to read these FB tales of woe, and not laugh.
She wouldn’t say who that investor is. ‘It’s just like in 2008 when the market tanked: Builders didn’t finish their lots and they’d sell it to another builder,’ said the K. Hovnanian rep. ‘That’s usually what happens.’”
Gosh, it’s almost like the lessons learned from the 2008 housing bubble bust and subsequent Great Financial Crisis weren’t really learned at all.
Go woke, go broke: Jaguar edition. This brand is now so radioactive it can never be salvaged. See also: Bud Light.
https://www.foxbusiness.com/media/jaguar-ceo-steps-down-after-woke-rebrand-sparked-massive-social-media-firestorm
“Owner has never been to the property.” Perhaps the out of state speculator, JD CASH INVESTMENTS, should have personally inspected their property before purchasing it for 80K in 2022 and then sinking more money into it. Now, they just want out and are looking for a greater fool. The property still has a long way to go before its completed. The tough-looking guys in the street view image don’t look like the Welcome Wagon committee.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/248-S-Booker-St-Crestview-FL-32536/46010093_zpid/
Wrought iron security screens covering every opening. Vibrancy!
Unusual San Francisco apartment listing goes viral
An unusual San Francisco apartment listing on the SF Bay Area Craigslist page has become a topic of debate on Reddit. The listing, $1,500 for a one-bedroom in Lower Nob Hill, at first glance might look pretty good.
The listing goes on to say that the unit includes a private entrance and access to the yard, but after that, it goes downhill pretty quickly. There’s no sink or kitchen, although there is access to a “shed private refrigerator.”
While that might not be a dealbreaker, the photo accompanying the listing clearly shows that the unit features what could politely be called en suite facilities. Put less politely: There’s a toilet in the room.
Yes, you read that correctly. It’s located under the loft bed. The room also features a shower, which from the photo, looks as if it might have been installed in what was formerly a closet.
In a subreddit titled, “Serious question, is this legal?”, Reddit commenters were quick to make light of the spartan arrangements.
“Looks like the ‘you’ve been a good boy reward room’ at San Quentin,” wrote one commenter.
“Is that a prison cell?” asked another.
“Once you’ve moved in, just have to decide which prison gang you’re going to run with,” chimed in another.
“$1500 for a prison cell???” someone else balked.
“Well, it’s still like 60 square feet more than a minimum security prison cell,” another Redditor wrote.
“I think it is a bathroom honestly,” commented another.
“I’m taking it this was originally a bathroom since there is no way they got the plumbing for shower/toilet in a random room…technically I don’t think it’s illegal to rent a bathroom and it’s the roommate’s prerogative to sleep next to or above a toilet,” opined another poster.
https://www.wkrg.com/national/1500-for-a-prison-cell-unusual-san-francisco-apartment-listing-goes-viral/amp/
They included the listing but it’s been ‘flagged for removal.’
Tents line Barrie street despite hike in homeless funding
BARRIE – A half-dozen tents housing homeless people sit near the entrance/exit to the local courthouse, across Mulcaster Street from the Busby Centre in downtown Barrie.
Pamela Moon, sitting in the Busby’s shade Tuesday morning, says she’s lived in one of the tents for a month and cannot find housing or other shelter, in part, because she has Blue, her two-year-old service dog.
“If the city comes along and tells me to move … where do I move to?” asked Moon, who has a hearing disorder. “I’m completely stranded and it’s just brutal.
“It’s not right,” added Moon, who said she’s been a Barrie resident, on and off, for more than 30 years. “It shouldn’t be this hard to secure housing. It’s just awful.”
Mark Hayday says he’s visually impaired and lives in a roach-infested house in Barrie.
“We have an affordable housing shortage,” said Hayday, also sitting outside the Busby. “It needs to be dealt with.
“It’s too expensive. They are driving the poor people out,” he added. “We’re looked down at.”
Mayor Alex Nuttall said it’s “unacceptable” that tents sit on either provincial Crown Land or on the municipal right-of-way in front of the former Barrie jail or the Busby Centre, a not-for-profit organization which helps individuals and families who are experiencing or at risk of homelessness.
“There’s been a ton of funding that’s been announced by the province to help create more shelter beds, and shelter beds that are aimed at helping individuals get out of homelessness,” he said.
An Ontario Superior Court ruling has deemed local bylaws prohibiting homeless encampments on municipal property unconstitutional, if indoor shelter is not available.
Mina Fayez-Bahgat, the county’s general manager of social and community services, says homelessness prevention faces many challenges — some of the basic variety.
“It’s important to note that people are more willing to come inside during the colder months,” he said. “We recognize the growing concern around homelessness across the province and within our communities.
There’s a $217-million housing project at 20 Rose St., near Highway 400. Being built are approximately 220 mixed-income residential units designed for seniors, families and individuals. It will also include a mixed-use building, outdoor amenity area, parking structure and greenspace.
https://www.villagereport.ca/village-picks/unacceptable-tents-line-mulcaster-st-despite-hike-in-homeless-funding-11015283
1M a unit for bum housing. That’s more expensive than California. Check out the top photo.
‘A man holds up a crack pipe as he and others lay on the sidewalk across the street from Busby Centre on Mulcaster Street in Barrie.’
Peoria’s homeless move out of LULA’s motel project as city funds run dry
PEORIA, Ill. (25 News) – The nearly $400,000 in taxpayer money spent to put Peoria’s homeless population in motel rooms has now run out, and move-out day is Friday, August 1.
Over the winter, the nonprofit LULA rented nearly 50 rooms at a local motel to take people off the streets as the city’s encampment ban began taking effect. The goal was to point people down the right path to find permanent housing.
Since then, LULA has served over 140 people. But, as the motel project comes to an end, 50 people will have to look to their cars, friends, or the streets for a place to sleep.
Two people who have been unable to find housing in Peoria for at least one year showed measurable and progressive change over the last seven months with the help of LULA and its co-founder, Kshe Bernard. Marcie Franks and Wesley Ramirez both have all the documents to apply for housing with Phoenix Community Development Services and the Peoria Housing Authority.
“When I first started [with LULA], I didn’t think I was going to make any progress on it, but then I got ahold of Kshe and she helped me get my birth certificate, social security card, everything I need,” Ramirez says.
The only problem is that no housing units became available for Ramirez and Franks before the end of LULA’s motel project.
Ramirez says he has some friends who agreed to let him stay with them until housing opens up. On the other hand, Franks has nowhere to go and will likely find a quiet place in the woods; despite the city’s encampment ban, which could result in jail time.
“It’s illegal now. You can’t camp, can’t put a tent up, you can’t lie your head down in any abandoned building; somebody will call the cops. You’re going to get a ticket, you’re going to get fined, and possibly go to jail, just for being homeless,” Franks says.
But, Franks won’t be the only person from the motel project who will have to go back to the streets. Bearett Quast says it’s either camping or continuing to live in his girlfriend’s Dodge Dart with her.
Quast says the biggest way others can support people in his situation is by having compassion and trying to understand that they have nowhere else to go, have no food, and don’t have access to showers.
“It’s sometimes just a series of unfortunate events. It’s like you do everything that you’re supposed to do to not end up here, and then you’re like, ‘Oh my god, I’m here,’” Quast says.
https://wmbdradio.com/2025/08/01/peorias-homeless-move-out-of-lulas-motel-project-as-city-funds-run-dry/
What yer doing isn’t ‘camping’ Marcie. It’s a city, who the heck camps in a city?
Boulder City latest to criminalize homelessness with anti-camping ordinance
Boulder City is the latest community in Nevada to enact an anti-homeless camping ban, which took effect in June.
Susan Reams, a Boulder City resident who is currently experiencing homelessness, filed a lawsuit in late July seeking to make the ordinance “more humane” and prevent the law from being enforced, especially in the triple digit heat.
“Because of rising rent costs and (the) unemployment rate, a lot of people, including myself, are unhoused,” Reams said. “I just think there’s more that Boulder City could be doing. There’s nowhere for people to go. Boulder City doesn’t have safe camping zones or even a shelter.”
The council unanimously passed the ordinance May 27 that prohibits camping, sleeping, and storing personal property in a public place. Violating the ordinance is a misdemeanor and people could face up to six months in jail.
City Attorney Brittany Walker told council members in May that the bill would “provide the city with the tools it needs in order to ensure that individuals aren’t camping in the public places and are seeking services.”
Boulder City joined Reno, Las Vegas, Henderson and Sparks along with Clark, Washoe and Nye counties in being among localities across the state that have passed or expanded various punitive measures in recent years to restrict where those experiencing homelessness can sleep or camp.
Among the number of those entering into homelessness is Reams, who was evicted last year.
“I didn’t realize that you could be evicted even though your rent was paid,” she said, adding that her eviction stemmed from having two dogs in the apartment.
Though she has been able to get an occasional room at weekly motels, most of the time she has been finding discreet spots to sleep around Boulder City.
https://nevadacurrent.com/2025/08/01/boulder-city-latest-to-criminalize-homelessness-with-anti-camping-ordinance/
Former Feds Share Hardships, Concerns After Trump’s Mass Layoffs
MCLEAN, VA — Eleven former federal employees who lost their jobs earlier this year due to President Donald Trump’s move to shrink the size of the government’s workforce shared their stories during a roundtable discussion at the McLean Government Center.
Jake Cross worked as a contractor for NOAA’s satellite and technology division for several years before joining the federal service at the end of last year. Ironically, he became a federal employee for the job security it promised. He was laid off Feb. 27.
“It was particularly rough for my family because my wife and I, we have a 2-year-old, because of the stability of the government and the benefits and everything, and made the decision to try to have another kid,” Cross said. “So literally, the week before I got fired, I found out that my wife was pregnant, so we also lost our benefits.”
Cross started a new job with a government contractor in June, but he had to take a 36 percent pay cut. The job also did not offer any benefits.
“We had to clear out our savings to cover expenses,” he said. “We’re trying to figure out how to scrape things together.”
Tiffany Price was notified by email that she was one of the thousands of people laid off April 1 as part of a mass reduction in force at the Department of Health and Human Services, where she worked for nearly a decade.
Price didn’t receive the official email until July 14, because the day she was laid off, the agency cut off her access to her email account. Without the letter, she had no way of showing prospective employers her job status or why she was let go.
“Losing my job was devastating,” Price said. “It was not just a job loss, it was a mission loss, a team loss, a promise loss, a future loss. I fully intended to retire from the federal government. I loved my agency. I loved the work that I did. I loved my team. To just be unceremoniously cut, as much as this administration loves a thank you, I was not given a thank you.”
https://patch.com/virginia/mclean/former-feds-share-hardships-concerns-after-trumps-mass-layoffs
the week before I got fired, I found out that my wife was pregnant, so we also lost our benefits.”
Federal employees have a program like COBRA, so you can keep your coverage through the pregnancy at the very least. Why lie about it?
Of course these people never think of the A word….you know women’s choice. ( sorry if i offend anyone but i dated women who had them)
He was at the FedGov for less than a year, probably a probationary hire. I honestly don’t know if they get COBRA after being there for so short a time.
It might be cheaper to get an Obamacare plan than COBRA.
Hit back or leave it alone? Canadians respond to new Trump tariffs
To catch up with how all of this is being processed in British Columbia, and some other topics, KUOW’s Kim Malcolm talked to Vancouver-based journalist Michelle Eliot, who hosts the CBC weekday call in program BC Today.
Kim Malcolm: Tariffs on Canadian goods that are not covered by the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) have now gone from 25% to 35%. There are some exemptions, but steel and aluminum are facing 50% tariffs. Ontario premier Doug Ford said this today:
“We buy more products off the US than Japan, Korea, China, the UK and France combined. So, I wouldn’t roll over. And I told the Prime Minister, do not roll over. Hit that guy back as hard as we possibly can. And that’s what we need to do.”
Then you heard this from one of your listeners:
“Well, hopefully we don’t impose tariffs again against him, because they only hurt the people of Canada. These tariffs he’s put on hurt the people the United States. They pay for it, not us. So just leave it alone.”
Michelle Eliot: I would say Doug Ford probably had the strongest words out of the leaders we’ve heard from so far today. Some people resonate with that. Some of our callers certainly did, who feel that anger, over the way they feel Canada is being treated.
We’ve talked before about Canadian support for boycotting US products and visiting the United States. How would you gauge how strong that sentiment is now?
According to the reporting I’ve seen, it’s still going strong. We hear about grocery products, people still demanding more Canadian goods, and demanding that the labeling be accurate, that products are actually Canadian when they say they are. When it comes to travel, we heard from a commenter today who said, ‘Okay, maybe it’s not about retaliatory tariffs, because there is some debate around that. But, continue the boycott, don’t travel to the United States.’ So that sentiment, I think it’s something that people can latch on to. They feel like this is the way that they can stand for Canada.
https://www.kuow.org/stories/hit-back-or-leave-it-alone-canadians-respond-to-new-trump-tariffs
so, it’s ok for Canadians to only buy protected Canada products, but not ok for Americans to only buy American products.
What is Canada’s complete lack of self-awareness?
They believe we have a duty to but their cr@p
buy
the home was purchased in 2010 by Dimitry Epelboym, a dentist born in Ukraine, from Blondie keyboardist Jimmy Destri for $1.3 million. The home was then torn down, followed by eight years and millions of dollars spent on construction.
Pix Pix Pixturez
https://brooklynreporter.com/2025/07/bay-ridge-house-on-the-market-for-25-million/
Inside the tariffs: what Trump’s latest moves mean for B.C. businesses
And one thing is now clear to Canadians and the rest of the world: the era of global trade liberalization is over.
“It’s never going to be the same again,” said Andrew Wynn-Williams, B.C. divisional vice-president of Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, an industry association representing small and mid-size businesses.
Coquitlam’s Ampco manufacturing is one of these companies. Owner Dann Konkin said switching to local sources increases costs, taking a chunk out of profit margins.
“We’re being ground down,” he said.
Werner Antweiler, an international trade expert at the University of British Columbia’s Sauder School of Business, gave the example of steel. If imported steel becomes more expensive, then U.S. steelmakers will raise prices to match, simply because they can.
Antweiler argues that Carney should play for time and set clear boundaries. Trump probably wants to implement at least some level of tariffs to gain revenue to pay for tax cuts, so zero tariffs is unlikely. At the same time, Canada can also put tariffs on American goods or take other retaliatory measures to get a better deal.
“We have significant strength in these negotiations, and I’m pretty sure Carney’s team will have made it clear that we’re not going to be a complete pushover,” he said.
He also cautions that giving Trump too much might be counterproductive.
“We know Trump is a bully,” Antweiler said. “Once he gets what he wants, he wants more.”
https://www.keremeosreview.com/news/inside-the-tariffs-what-trumps-latest-moves-mean-for-bc-businesses-8169510
the era of global trade liberalization is over.
Translation: no more guaranteed trade surpluses with the USA.
Livermore father deported to Mexico struggles to find work, worries about losing Bay Area home
CHIMALHUACAN, Mexico (KGO) — Miguel Angel Lopez did not expect to celebrate his 47th birthday the way he did, with his children 2,000 miles away.
Lopez, who lived in the San Francisco Bay Area for 29 years, was deported June 7. He now lives with his father in Chimalhuacán, an underdeveloped city in the outskirts of Mexico City.
“I never thought this was going to happen but I am trying to be strong for my family,” said Lopez.
His wife, Rosa, flew to Mexico to visit him.
“I am not used to this,” said Lopez with a dry chuckle. “I am used to get up every morning and go to work and hang out with my family.”
Miguel emigrated illegally to the U.S. in 1996 when he was 18.
He met Rosa a few years later. They married Rosa in 2001 and she applied for his legal residency. But ICE rejected it because he lied about being a U.S. citizen when he crossed the border.
Later, he was granted a temporary green card but the government revoked it. He’s been fighting to stay in the U.S. ever since.
“It was like 17 years that I was reporting to immigration. At the beginning it was every month, then every three months, then every year until the last time I went and they detained me,” he said.
He had a routine appointment at the San Francisco immigration office on May 27.
“As soon as I got in the elevator he told me that I was going to be detained.”
Within hours, Miguel was taken to an immigration detention center in McFarland then to the Mesa Verde ICE Processing Facility in Bakersfield. Ten days later, he was first detained then deported to Tijuana.
Miguel’s deportation has upended the entire family. Up until his deportation he was a welder and machinist at Wente Winery, the family’s sole wage earner.
Now, he is searching for a job in Mexico to help pay the bills in the United States.
“It’s kind of hard to survive here with the pay they get here to have to support my family,” said López.
Lopez said he has started looking for side jobs but has not found anything promising.
As a certified welder, Miguel made $44 an hour. An equivalent job in Mexico earns less than $3 an hour. Lopez said that is barely enough to support himself.
“We have our house, something he’s worked really hard for to have for our family. And I’m scared of losing my home,” said his wife Rosa.
Lopez said the family is living off savings and he’s thinking of cashing out his 401k account to pay the mortgage and other bills if he is not able to return to the U.S. and return to his job.
It’s difficult for him. Adjusting is very hard,” said Lorenzo López Santiago, Miguel’s father. “It’s hard to find work and what there is is not well paid.”
Low wages are just one worry. Miguel is living with his father in a rough neighborhood. His younger brother, Julio, was killed in October of 2023 outside the family home by robbers who wanted to steal his vehicle. Lopez said the home was shot at in another location by people trying to intimidate his father.
The insecurity Lopez faces has his wife developing anxiety.
“There’s times I can’t control myself of how I feel, and I try to be strong in front of my kids, but I just break down. I can’t go to sleep at night just thinking that we’re so far away from each other,” said Rosa.
Miguel was deported hours before a District Court judge issued an order that allowed to remain in the country as he fights removal orders.
That case is moving forward. The next hearing is on October 7. The family remains hopeful he can return to the Bay Area.
For now, Lopez just dreams about planning a fishing trip with his youngest son.
“Tomorrow, I will bring you back tomorrow,” said his son. “I wish,” is all Lopez could reply.
https://abc7news.com/post/livermore-father-deported-mexico-struggles-find-work-worries-losing-bay-area-home/17396405/
‘As a certified welder, Miguel made $44 an hour’
Doing the job Americans won’t do. You’ll get used to the outhouse Miguel.
“His younger brother, Julio, was killed in October of 2023 outside the family home by robbers who wanted to steal his vehicle. Lopez said the home was shot at in another location by people trying to intimidate his father.”
And babies come with the scenery.
I’m sure they can sell their bay area shanty for a tidy profit and purchase something fairly nice in Mexico, in a safer neighborhood than where his father lives.
$90K a year of wages stolen from an American worker.
And almost certainly a guberment backed loan to an illegal to buy a California shanty. Now he can only make $3 an hour, sound lending!
39 Bangladeshi citizens deported on US C‑17 arrive Dhaka; some allege restraints
Dhaka: A group of 39 Bangladeshi citizens, including a woman, were deported from the United States and arrived in Dhaka on Saturday.
Bangladesh’s leading daily, Dhaka Tribune, reported that some of the deportees claimed they were handcuffed throughout the flight.
“We’re not criminals, we just sought asylum. But we were treated as if we were dangerous offenders,” one of them was quoted as saying by the daily.
Shariful Hasan, Associate Director of Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) Migration Programme and Youth Platform, explained that many of the deported individuals had either sold family assets or borrowed heavily, often up to Tk 30–40 lakh to reach the United States through irregular channels, passing through Mexico and South America.
They had applied for asylum upon their arrival in the US. However, their requests were denied by immigration officials and the courts, leading to the decision to deport them, Hasan said.
https://www.siasat.com/39-bangladeshi-citizens-deported-on-us-c%E2%80%9117-arrive-dhaka-some-allege-restraints-3253908/
to reach the United States through irregular channels, passing through Mexico and South America.
The word was spread far and wide during the FJB years: just show up at the border and we’ll let you in and even let you apply for asylum.
Mexican migrant recounts her painful self-deportation process after 12 years in the US
At just 23 years old, Yokari Villagómez was forced to make one of the most difficult decisions of her life: to voluntarily leave the United States, the country where she grew up, studied, married, and considered her true home.
Yokari arrived in the United States when she was just 11 years old, crossing the border from Mexico with her family. Like many other migrant children, she quickly adapted to her new reality: she learned English, graduated from high school, and then studied fashion design. Years later, she married a U.S. citizen and settled in California, where she lived a peaceful and stable life.
Despite being fully integrated into American life, her immigration status remained irregular. Instead of being channeled toward a legal status through her marriage, her legal process was hampered by multiple errors made by her lawyer, who failed to submit the necessary documentation in a timely manner. This omission would seal her fate.
One day, without warning, immigration agents detained her and took her to a detention center. They didn’t allow her to communicate with her husband and handcuffed her as if she were a criminal. “They didn’t give me the opportunity to speak to my husband. I was handcuffed without explanation and taken to a detention center,” said the young woman, who had no criminal record and had committed no infractions, except for having been in the country without papers during her childhood and youth.
During her confinement, Yokari reported suffering inhumane conditions. A facial fracture caused by a fall went untreated, and her nutrition was poor. The isolation, uncertainty, and fear rapidly deteriorated her mental health. “In there, time stops, you lose track of who you are, and you feel discarded,” she recounted with anguish.
After weeks of detention and a lack of clear answers from immigration authorities, Yokari opted for the only option that offered him some control over his fate: requesting self-deportation. Although this alternative has been presented by ICE and CBP as a “voluntary” option to forced deportation, in practice it is often the only possible solution when migrants lack the resources to face long, uncertain, and costly processes.
Her departure from the country was finalized on June 25, 2025. Her husband, her budding professional career, and more than a decade of life were left behind. Returning to Mexico, a country she barely remembers from her childhood, was a profound emotional blow. “It was invaluable help, since immigration authorities were making it difficult for me to leave. The Mexican consulate was instrumental in getting my application processed,” she said.
After her deportation to Rosario, Baja California, the young woman was grateful for medical attention, but she can’t get over the bitter experience. “It’s hard to accept that everything I dreamed of in the U.S. is over there. I lost the opportunity to complete my studies, and now I have to start over,” she said.
Today, Yokari Villagómez is trying to rebuild her life in Mexico. Far from her husband, her friends, and everything she knew, she faces the challenge of starting over. Even so, she remains hopeful that one day she will be able to legally return to the country she feels is her own.
https://www.cubaenmiami.com/en/migrante-mexicana-relata-su-doloroso-proceso-de-autodeportacion-tras-12-anos-en-ee-uu-no-me-dieron-la-oportunidad-de-hablar-con-mi-esposo/
You’ll get used to the outhouse Yokari.
I lost the opportunity to complete my studies, and now I have to start over,”
Start over after graduating High School?
One of my daughters thought about getting into “fashion design”, but when looked more closely into it she realized it was a sham, much like most “art” schools. The probability of of landing a job after graduation was close to nil.
How quinceañera dress sellers are trying to stay in business amid ICE sweeps
For decades, Pacific Boulevard in Huntington Park has been the place where people across Southern California flock to buy dresses for quinceañera celebrations.
About 20 dress shops on and off the boulevard display their bright dresses and the aspirations that go along with them through storefront windows.
The stores may look the same as ever — but since the ICE raids, business is certainly not.
“The first weekend after the raids, sales went down to zero,” said Sandra Rodriguez, manager of Reinas Events, which sells quinceañera dresses and party planning services.
Rodriguez has been doing this kind of work for a decade. The business district used to teem with families on the weekends, she said, but all that changed in June when federal agents began detaining people across Southern California.
“Many people are afraid, regardless of whether they’re documented or undocumented, because they’re afraid of being confronted by an agent who doesn’t respect their rights,” she said.
The quinceañera is a girl’s coming of age party, celebrated when she turns 15, mostly by Latin American immigrant families and Latino families.
The event can appear like a wedding, sans groom, including a church mass and a big party with music, a DJ, food and drinks. Dresses sell from about $400 to $5,000. And the dress’s tailoring makes the quinceañera look more like a movie princess than a bride.
Fear of federal agents is one big reason for the downturn in sales — but so is the fear of losing work. It means people are cutting down on unnecessary expenses, like fancy quinceañera parties. The change has been leading people who run the stores to try new strategies.
Rodriguez and managers at other shops here say that in recent years a good weekend would mean 15 to 20 families stepping into their stores to look at dresses. Now, a weekend with four to five families is considered a good weekend.
Manuela Rivera, manager at Morteza Boutique, said she’s having to find ways to sell dresses without customers having to physically come into the store.
“To sell a dress, I don’t need the client to be in the shop or for the dress to fit her. I can help them use a measuring tape,” she said.
She’s also offering to deliver the dress when it’s ready. Storefront business has been these shops’ bread and butter, but Rivera has also recently created Instagram and TikTok videos to drum up sales. Some have received thousands of likes, but she said she’s only racked up three sales from that effort.
To address customers’ fear of coming face to face with federal agents, some stores are getting creative.
“We’ve created a policy we’re calling ‘Closed Door,’ so people can make their appointment and we lock the store’s doors so they feel safe,” said Rodriguez of Reinas Events.
Two to three clients can be in the store at the same time, she said, when the doors are locked. She’s using social media to let people know about the practice.
“People like it because they don’t like leaving their house, but need to get their errands done,” she said.
There’s a lot at stake for her business and others along this Huntington Park district. Rivera of Morteza Boutique said she doesn’t know whether her store can continue through the fall with so few sales.
When they do get customers on the phone, managers reassure customers that it’s OK to come in.
“There may not be many people on Pacific Boulevard, but the street is safe… the street is empty because of fear, [not because agents are here],” Rodriguez said.
https://boyleheightsbeat.com/quinceanera-dress-sellers-business-ice-raids/
weird how when there isn’t endless free $hit, they can’t go buy some expensive dress and party for their kid.
‘If we’re not getting offers, we need to put the home at a different price.’”
Not a different price, Jill. A LOWER price. C’mon, you can say it. L-O-W-E-R.
The Democratic Party’s Daddy Warbucks, George Soros, is being subpoenaed to appear before a Congressional hearing looking into election interference against Trump.
https://x.com/liz_churchill10/status/1951337941793645061
How much longer can Satan keep that creep alive?
His evil ideology and malign agenda will live on after his demise thanks to his Democrat-Bolshevik standard-bearers.
China’s real estate downturn is worsening:
New-home sales by China’s 100 largest developers fell -24% YoY in July, the largest decline in 10 months.
Month-over-month sales fell -38%, marking the steepest monthly drop this year.
This comes after June marked the biggest monthly decline in prices of new homes in 8 months.
Meanwhile, demand for new homes in cities is estimated to stay ~75% below its 2017 peak levels over the next several years, according to Goldman Sachs.
China’s 2008 is happening now.
https://x.com/KobeissiLetter/status/1951665421892923835
Worse Than Evergrande! 2.6 Billion Clears 147 Billion Debt, Leaving Unfinished Buildings for Chinese
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSLtFKj6_XU&t=13s
‘For Sale’ signs appear but moving boxes aren’t packed’
That would have made a good title.
‘The owners, disappointed only two buyers emerged over four days, cut their price by $200,000 and saw their guest list rise tenfold over the following week. ‘There’s intense pressure here, more so than Toronto, to lower prices, and it’s a bit concerning,’ said Mr. Dalinda. ‘Had [the sellers] put more time on the market at that higher price, they’d be facing the same decision in a month, but by then, they’d be burnt out and people know that.’ The buyer pushed for an additional discount, then another after completing a home inspection, despite already reviewing one provided by the owners. ‘People use a home inspection to push down the price, even by a few more thousand [dollars], so in this case, we did ours, and there was nothing wrong with the house,’ said Mr. Dalinda. ‘[The buyers] basically used that condition to get about $5,000 in extra savings’
That’s the spirit!
“Speaking anonymously, one mum-of-two who has lived in a £238,000 house on the development for more than two years said: ‘When we first looked at the site plan, it was something that really attracted us. There was plenty of open space, it wasn’t like a rabbit hutch. We’ve had no issues with the house itself, and last year it all looked lovely when the builders were still maintaining their areas and they were paying contractors to look after the green spaces. Then this year they all left site and that’s when the issues started. There’s an electrical box that’s just been left wide open, broken streetlights. It doesn’t feel safe to let the children out on their bikes. It’s a death- trap waiting to happen. It’s not so bad for us to look at because we’re tucked at the back in cul-de-sac, but other people are looking out their windows at five-foot weeds. We paid good money for this house and if we wanted to move into a dump we would’ve moved into a dump. It makes us feel like we don’t want to live here anymore’
Dang mum-of-two, normally I’d say it was cheaper than renting. But the way you tell it yer fooked.