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Sellers Seem To Want Last Year’s Prices And Buyers Want Next Year’s Prices

A report from Potomac Local News in Virginia. “The folks at the Fredericksburg Area Association of REALTORS just told Potomac Local News that home prices in our region hit an all-time high last month—even as sales slowed and homes took longer to sell. ‘As we’ve seen an influx of inventory available, the conversation with my sellers has shifted,’ states FAAR Board of Director Rachel Flynn. ‘We are discussing longer days on market to be expected and the need for flexibility and openness as we receive feedback.'”

From Realtor.com. “Perched on a prime piece of real estate on Miami’s picturesque Biscayne Bay waterfront, the Biscayne 21 condominium has been the subject of a legal tug-of-war between a developer intent on replacing the aging tower with luxury housing and a small group of residents determined to stop it. Despite facing pressure from the developer and real estate agents to sell, eight owners dug in their heels. ‘With the Florida Supreme Court, there’s no guarantee that they will hear a matter,’ attorney Glen H. Waldman, with the law firm Armstrong Teasdale, who represents the holdout condo owners,’ tells Realtor.com®. ‘It’s up to them, their discretion, whether they will hear this or not, and our expectation is they will not.’ According to Waldman, those who refused to part with their properties were motivated by a couple of interconnected considerations.”

“‘This is America. You pay for your home, you pay all your taxes, you pay your association fees, you pay your mortgage. You have a right to live there,’ says the plaintiffs’ attorney. ‘The problem is that the amount of money that Two Roads was offering—and this is the case in almost all termination cases— was far below what it would require for these people to relocate to another condominium on the water with a beautiful view like they had at Biscayne 21.'”

The Denver Gazette. “Following a report last week of declining prices in metro Denver, the Colorado Association of Realtors is tracking a similar drift in statewide data, according to its monthly Market Trends report. Despite the slower sales, the volume of active inventory remains well above the same time last year in most markets and product types. ‘This growing gap between supply and demand is making it easier for buyers to take their time and shop around — a clear sign the market has shifted,’ said agent Kelly Moye, who reports on The Boulder and Broomfield Counties markets for CAR. ‘Sellers seem to want last year’s prices and buyers want next year’s prices, and the disconnect is culminating in fewer sales.’ She added that sellers may be getting a false signal now from what agents refer to as the list-to-sales price ratio, which continues to show sellers getting most all of what they’ve asked for as a list price. ‘That doesn’t take into consideration the concessions sellers are paying to buyers to buy down their interest rate,’ Moye noted. ‘Sellers will need to cut prices to attract the serious buyers.'”

“Patrick Muldoon, who reports on the Colorado Springs market, reported that July proved to be a frustrating month for sellers. ‘What is normally a (good) summer selling season was lackluster at best,’ he reported. Muldoon said that buyers in the Springs area, where inventory climbed 21% over 2024’s level, have substantially more products to choose from. ‘But they didn’t show up to buy,’ he added. In La Plata County, where Durango agent Heather Erb reports, sales of condos and townhomes were down 56% during July over June. ‘We really did have an off-month,’ she told The Denver Gazette. Gunnison County and Crested Butte agent Molly Eldridge was another resort market analyst reporting variance between single-family and multifamily home performance. ‘Average prices in the larger area for residential properties are down, only 1% for condos and townhomes and 16% for single-family homes,’ she said. In Routt County and Steamboat Springs, single-family sales are up 5% year-to-date, while the median price has dropped almost 8% to just under $2 million, according to Steamboat-area agent Marci Valicenti.”

“Some of the lesser optimistic numbers from the resort markets were coming from Telluride and San Miguel County, where agent George Harvey reported sales down 24% year over year, off 34% from a 5-year July average. ‘While the luxury market still accounts for 86% of the residential dollar volume, it is showing signs of fatigue,’ Harvey said.”

The Los Angeles Times. “With California facing a critical housing shortage, accessory dwelling units now account for a significant portion of the state’s meager growth in new homes, data reviewed by The Times show. California has struggled to keep up with demand, increasing housing stock by only 0.84% in 2024, or 125,000 units. ADUs made up about one-fifth of those units, according to California Department of Finance data. Eric McGhee, a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California, said it’s hard to know whether new ADUs are being used to house people who wouldn’t otherwise be on the property, or whether they are just providing extra space for those already living there. As a result, it is likely that some ADUs do nothing to ease the housing shortage.”

“L.A. County is a hotbed for ADUs. A 2024 Times analysis showed the county permitted more accessory dwelling units per capita than any other county in the state. In a 2024 research project for UCLA’s Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies, master’s student Miles Austin Cressy studied the western San Fernando Valley — where more than 7% of single-family residence parcels had been granted ADU permits. He found that ‘ADU prevalence correlates with lower-income, renter-occupied, and younger households, denser populations, and areas with higher concentrations of non-white residents and registered Democrats.’ Finally, the verdict: ‘ADUs are usually priced at or above market rates and so they have limited viability as a solution to the housing crisis,’ the report said. The cheap, abundant housing that Californians crave might not be found in the backyard.”

The Globe and Mail in Canada. “28 Linden St., No. 1705, Toronto. Asking price: $828,000 (April 2025). Selling price: $800,000 (June 2025). These downsizing buyers spent six weeks this spring touring more than a dozen two-bedroom units in different neighbourhoods across Toronto, starting around Yonge Street and Eglinton Avenue and working south towards St. James Town. They settled on this 840-square-foot unit in a modern high-rise that rises above the heritage-designated James Cooper House at Sherbourne Street, just south of Bloor Street East. Negotiations trimmed $28,000 off the asking price. ‘[Units in this building] used to go for $1.1-million or $1.2-million,’ said buyer’s agent Ira Jelinek. ‘Prices peaked in February, 2022, so they’ve been going down since.'”

The National Post. “If housing costs too much, there must not be enough supply. That’s Ottawa’s simple take on the affordable housing crisis in Canada. And their simple solution? Impose policy. But, asks Patrick Condon, professor of urban design at the University of British Columbia: What if the feds are wrong? If increased density delivered affordability, he counters, Vancouver would be cheap by now. And what does the current glut of unsold small condo units in glass towers — in places like Toronto and Hamilton — tell us about Ottawa’s theory? ‘I think I’m considered a bit of a bête noire around here on the policy side,’ Patrick acknowledges, in a recent video conversation. ‘Certainly the B.C. provincial policies have moved in a very opposite direction to the ones that I’ve been recommending,’ he says with a grimace.”

“‘As the authorized use of land is increased,’ Patrick elaborates, ‘the value of the land is going up and up and up, and it, unfortunately, goes up more or less in measure to what the market is allowing for that built price. That’s what’s so tragic about it, about the whole thing,’ he contends, ‘the policy makers are saying (and I think many of them actually believe it), that this will help the community and it’s actually harming the community. It’s really helping the land speculators.’ Vancouver has tripled the number of housing units since the 1960s, Patrick reports. ‘We tripled the density. We tripled the number of housing units within the same footprint,’ he reports, ‘and as a reward for our heroic efforts, we have the highest home prices, when measured against average regional incomes of any place in North America, and the third highest home prices in the world.'”

Estate Agent Today in the UK. “The prime London property market is more split than it has been since Brexit, research suggests. Analysis by Knight Frank found that average prices fell 3% in prime central London (PCL) in the year to July, blamed on doubts around the Government’s treatment of wealthy foreign investors. Average prices in PCL are 20% below their last peak in August 2015, which compares to an equivalent decline in POL of 7% since mid-2016. Tom Bill, head of UK residential research for Knight Frank, said: ‘It is still a buyer’s market across most of the capital due to high levels of supply. An overhang from the stamp duty cliff edge, decisions put off due to last year’s general election and a growing number of landlords selling up are among the causes.'”

From I 24 News. “Israel’s housing market recorded its weakest June in more than two decades, with sales plunging amid ongoing conflict and tighter financing conditions. According to figures released Sunday by the Finance Ministry’s chief economist, just 5,844 homes were sold nationwide in June, a 29% drop compared to the same month in 2024 and down 13% from May. The ministry said this is the lowest sales figure for June since the early 2000s. The steepest decline came in new housing transactions. Only 1,954 newly built units were sold last month, marking a 46% year-on-year fall.”

From News.com.au. “Buying your own home is sold to most of us as the Aussie dream, but one woman has claimed purchasing her first property was the worst financial decision she’s ever made. Nicole Sherwin bought a small apartment in Melbourne in 2019. At the time, she felt relieved that she’d managed to crack Australia’s incredibly tough property market. She feared that if she didn’t buy in 2019, the property market would keep increasing and she’d miss out forever. ‘I felt like I needed to do it,’ she told news.com.au. Within a few short years though, Ms Sherwin was locked in a financial nightmare, and her apartment became more of a liability than investment. ‘I was pregnant, and once you have a baby and you’re on maternity leave, I knew it’d be harder. I figured it was now or never,’ she said. ‘We got to the point where we outgrew it,’ she explained.”

“The family decided to become rent investors. They rented out the apartment and then rented a bigger place to live, but this strategy didn’t work out because the property was negatively geared. ‘I got a tenant in and figured we’d be rent investors but that only works when properties appreciate and it wasn’t appreciating,’ she said. The apartment’s value had been decreasing because other apartment blocks were built around it after they purchased in 2019, and suddenly supply outweighed demand. The body corporate fees also went up by $200 a month. ‘My home loan had gone from 2 per cent to 6.8 per cent. Homeownership was hell for me,’ she said. The apartment finally sold this year for $30,000 less than Ms Sherwin paid for it. By the time the sale went through, the mum-of-two believes she lost around $65,000 all up. The $65,000 figure factors in the cost of maintaining an apartment that was losing value. ‘By the end I was just accepting of it,’ she said. Ms Sherwin claimed that she’s heard from plenty of friends and acquaintances who have made the same mistake, bought near the CBD to avoid the ‘outer suburbs’ and watched in horror as their property decreased in value.”

From Chosun Biz. “The Chinese real estate developer Evergrande, which triggered a real estate crisis in China, will have its listing canceled on the 25th. Following a court liquidation order, creditors have begun claiming debts, and shareholders face the risk of total loss. In this context, major Chinese real estate developers similar to Evergrande are sequentially receiving liquidation orders from the courts, following in Evergrande’s footsteps. Evergrande had extremely limited liquidity and resources, and its business activities were virtually halted, and it could not find an appropriate restructuring plan. Christy Hung, an economist with Bloomberg Intelligence (BI), noted, ‘Evergrande shareholders are highly likely to face the possibility of total loss,’ and ‘considering the massive claims of creditors who have priority over shareholders in the repayment hierarchy, shareholders are facing substantial risk of receiving nothing back.'”

This Post Has 70 Comments
  1. ‘She added that sellers may be getting a false signal now from what agents refer to as the list-to-sales price ratio, which continues to show sellers getting most all of what they’ve asked for as a list price. ‘That doesn’t take into consideration the concessions sellers are paying to buyers to buy down their interest rate,’ Moye noted. ‘Sellers will need to cut prices to attract the serious buyers’

    Interesting that you bring up the overinflated median statistic when yer getting yer a$$e$ kicked Kelly. It appears this whole sh$thole state is sinking like a turd in a well.

    1. Realtor claim (shot):

      The Denver Gazette. “She added that sellers may be getting a false signal now from what agents refer to as the list-to-sales price ratio, which continues to show sellers getting most all of what they’ve asked for as a list price.”

      Share of homes for sale with a price cut (chaser):

      https://www.fastcompany.com/91384931/housing-market-shift-this-map-shows-where-home-sellers-are-cutting-prices-most
      08-13-2025 | NEWS
      Housing market shift: This map shows where home sellers are cutting prices the most

      Denver, CO: “We’re #1! We’re #1!

      Like many things in the Deep Blue Socialist utopia of Colorado, they’re #1 in a lot of things, but not in a good way. I believe that Boulder and Broomfield Counties are part of the Denver MSA.

      “I can prove anything with statistics but the truth.” – Lord Canning, Governor General of India, 1856-1862

      “Who you gonna believe, me or your lying eyes?” – Chico Marx, “Duck Soup”, 1933

      See #1 in the chart. “Share of homes for sale with a price cut / 50 largest U.S. metros:”

      https://images.fastcompany.com/image/upload/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit,w_1024/wp-cms-2/2025/08/i-1-91384931-housing-market-shift-map-home-sellers-prices.jpg

      Methodology:

      “According to Zillow: “Share of listings with a price cut: The number of unique properties with a list price at the end of the month that’s less than the list price at the beginning of the month, divided by the number of unique properties with an active listing at some point during the month.””

  2. ‘an economist with Bloomberg Intelligence (BI), noted, ‘Evergrande shareholders are highly likely to face the possibility of total loss,’ and ‘considering the massive claims of creditors who have priority over shareholders in the repayment hierarchy, shareholders are facing substantial risk of receiving nothing back’

    Remember when this whole thing started and bloomscum said 3 times they had made a ‘last minute’ bond payment? In fact Evergrande hadn’t, they made that up and published it! Eat yer crows globalist scum.

    1. Interesting to note that the HBB and its readers called out Evergrande as a scam many (maybe 10 years ago. IIRC, red flags were raised here on the HBB way before covid.

      1. It was ten years ago that bloomscum made their infamous ‘last minute payment’ call. I knew they were a scam when they flubbed the ‘city’ that less than 1000 people moved into. Around 2009.It wasn’t in China though, I don’t recall exactly where off the top of my head. Malaysia maybe.

  3. Muldoon said that buyers in the Springs area, where inventory climbed 21% over 2024’s level, have substantially more products to choose from. ‘But they didn’t show up to buy,’ he added.

    The greedheads of Colorado Springs are clinging to the fiction that “everyone wants to live here.” That may have been true before the Biden regime & local Comrades of Proven Worth (D) flooded the Springs with “refugees” and illegals, with crime soaring and the quality of life deteriorating after the city – once a conservative bastion – went blue in the last mayoral election. So the piddly price reductions on insanely overvalued shacks that are going to be low-hanging fruit for the tax man are not enough to move buyers to Always Be Closing, and the exodus of the successful and productive is accelerating.

    1. FS – “…and the exodus of the successful and productive is accelerating.”

      Ahead of the curve.
      “THANK YA THANK YA VERY MUCH” – Elvis Presley

      “A society that chooses between capitalism and socialism does not choose between two social systems; it chooses between social cooperation and the disintegration of society.” – Ludwig von Mises

      https://krdo.com/news/2025/05/21/from-top-5-to-406-colorado-springs-takes-shocking-nosedive-in-best-places-to-live-ranking/
      News

      From top 5 to 406? Colorado Springs takes shocking nosedive in “Best Places to Live” ranking

      By Paige Reynolds
      May 21, 2025 10:16 PM | Published May 21, 2025 9:19 PM

      “COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – It’s a dramatic fall that has residents and city officials asking, what happened?”

      “Colorado Springs, ranked #3 in the nation just last year by U.S. News & World Report for “Best Places to Live, has plummeted to #406 in the latest release.”

      Oops!

  4. From what I have seen , An ADU is nothing but a shack out back , and legal in Calfornia, at that, it’s a strange world, indeed

    1. There’s two parts IMO. One it’s the commie urban living density virtue signalling crap. Two, the cities, politicians and their cronies are making a ton of money off it. No matter how ugly, where the heck are we all going to park, etc.

      1. The commies are even doing it in Knoxville TN. They cite a serious housing shortage and the need for infill. Just a few short years ago they couldn’t give houses away and the city had a special team that went around tearing them down. Now just down the street of mostly single story houses there is a lot of a previous home that they allowed to subdivide and build two skinny condo looking 3 story homes with roof decks! Zoning is supposed to approve something that matches the existing neighborhood. These are so off the mark it is comical. They stick up through the forest canopy and can be seen all over the city. We call them the middle fingers. First these a55hats create the problem with open borders then they offer to fix it by wrecking everything they touch.

    2. “…ADU is nothing but a shack out back…”

      It’s just another income stream to keep the primary overpriced property from going into default.

  5. He found that ‘ADU prevalence correlates with lower-income, renter-occupied, and younger households, denser populations, and areas with higher concentrations of non-white residents and registered Democrats.’

    No kidding.

    1. ADUs aren’t the problem. People have been renting out rooms or granny flats or in-law apartments for centuries. The problem is that we have gone from a high-trust society of people generally doing the right thing to a low-trust society of cheaters and shysters who skim the honest and dare the authorities to stop them.

      That said, properties can really only handle one ADU.

  6. ‘Sellers seem to want last year’s prices and buyers want next year’s prices, and the disconnect is culminating in fewer sales.’

    Buyers can wait until next year, or beyond. FBs with bags of borrowed cash are no longer being parachuted in.

  7. ‘This is America. You pay for your home, you pay all your taxes, you pay your association fees, you pay your mortgage. You have a right to live there,’ says the plaintiffs’ attorney. ‘The problem is that the amount of money that Two Roads was offering—and this is the case in almost all termination cases— was far below what it would require for these people to relocate to another condominium on the water’

    I saw this movie before Glen. When the airbox market first cratered someone here said, ‘oh they’ll just sell their beachfront land and sail off happily.’ They will be forced to do it somehow, but ‘market value’ will be greatly reduced as this all plays out. And it will only get worser cuz anyone buying this sand will have to wait years for the market to stand up on it’s legs. And for Florida, it may not ever come back. Next up, the really predatory ‘investors’ will move in and hammer the FBs with under market value offers.

  8. She feared that if she didn’t buy in 2019, the property market would keep increasing and she’d miss out forever. ‘I felt like I needed to do it,’ she told news.com.au.

    How’d that emotion-based decision-making work out for ya, sweetie?

  9. ‘ADUs are usually priced at or above market rates’

    ‘‘As the authorized use of land is increased,’ Patrick elaborates, ‘the value of the land is going up and up and up’

    Which is exactly what we are seeing in California with the ADU’s. Investors are forming groups and buying lots in San Diego and starting 100+ unit stacked plywood boxes with rents at $3,000 a month! And because of the now well known Californian stupidity, they are automatically approved by statute.

  10. ‘We tripled the density. We tripled the number of housing units within the same footprint,’ he reports, ‘and as a reward for our heroic efforts, we have the highest home prices, when measured against average regional incomes of any place in North America, and the third highest home prices in the world’

    This article is worth reading in full.

  11. Oakville’s detached market is bleeding out.

    Avg. price in July: $1,783,617 — down 11.4% from last year.

    120 detached homes sold — a volume in line with typical years, meaning this plunge isn’t from thin trading.

    The cracks aren’t just showing — they’re widening.

    If this is Oakville, what does the rest of the GTA look like?

    https://x.com/ShaziGoalie/status/1955478831415873705

    1. Comps are showing $340-$350K for similar sized houses. Maybe drop $25K, but after that a complete reno could be feasible. 1.35 acres is nothing to sneeze at.

      1. I went to the MTV Spring Break at Panama City Beach back in the late 90’s. The hotels along the beach frontage drive were packed with the college-aged from all over the country.

  12. After the 1.0 bubble collapse, this huge neighborhood only had two or three houses built. No other houses were even under construction. I used to take our young son there to ride our bicycles. We rode miles and miles and had great times. I also used this neighborhood to practice riding my motorcycle. I now wish I had purchased this house in 2017 for 188K. However, it has an HOA so perhaps I should be glad I didn’t.

    6/25/2025 Listed $360,000
    7/19/2021 Sold $259,500
    6/15/2020 Sold $221,000
    7/5/2019 Sold $210,000
    6/30/2017 Sold $187,900

    https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/6372-Ladera-Trl-Pace-FL-32571/241754713_zpid/

    1. ** “ After the 1.0 bubble collapse, this huge neighborhood only had two or three houses built. No other houses were even under construction. I used to take our young son there to ride our bicycles. We rode miles and miles and had great times.”

      PenJoe, your post reminded me of another regular on here named AZ Slim, years ago, who also took bike rides around her Arizona neighborhood w/housing observations.

      Both of you have similar ez-going narrative styles, very enjoyable.

      Keep ‘em coming. Good links, too!

  13. DHS contract reviews creating uncertainty, causing layoffs

    The impact of the Homeland Security Department’s requirement for all contract awards and modifications worth more than $100,000 to get approval from the secretary’s office is having real world consequences.

    Vendors are laying employees off and at least one is considering closing down altogether. DHS components are in danger of having services turned off because approval is taking too long.

    The entire review effort, kicked off in June, is causing a level of uncertainty rarely seen in the Homeland Security Department in the last 20 years. For some vendors, especially small businesses, this uncertainty has turned into languishing and pain.

    One small business executive whose company worked with DHS for the last two decades, and requested anonymity for fear of retribution, said they have already laid off more than 10 people out of a staff of 55 because of the agency’s delays and lack of communication about its plans. The executive said if things don’t turn around soon, they may be shutting their doors and laying everyone off by the end of 2025.

    “We are under $10 million in revenue, so where mid-sized and large businesses can fare better, small businesses like us in the DHS space, it’s literally killing us,” the executive said. “It would be better if they just said we will scrap 50% of the expected procurements and told us to go away. But they aren’t saying anything, and I don’t know where to focus.”

    The executive, whose company does business with FEMA and the Transportation Security Administration, said it’s not just the lack of awards, but the entire acquisition process, including requests for information or sources sought notices, have all but stopped.

    “We’ve seen maybe one RFI from FEMA where we expected to see about 30. At TSA, we’ve seen maybe two RFIs where we expected to see about 15,” the executive said. “The bigger issue is the unknown. The DHS acquisition forecast, which is normally the most reliable, is unpredictable and unreliable. What we see there we can’t trust, and the procurement folks aren’t talking, so the unknown is killing us because we don’t know where to put our attention. This is supposed to be the busiest time of the year. I was thinking given the flux in the spring, I figured the summer would be extra crazy, but it’s not.”

    Krista Sweet, vice president of civilian agencies for the Professional Services Council, said the delays are introducing unnecessary risks into the procurement process and creating a challenging business environment for companies.

    “The delays in contract approval and invoice payments have real consequences to the companies trying to deliver mission-critical services and innovative solutions to DHS. Although the memo references a five-day turnaround for review, we are hearing from members that the process often takes significantly longer,” she said in an email to Federal News Network. “One small business, for example, has waited more than 30 days for a previously planned and budgeted funding addition to a current DHS contract. The company has had to stop work, lay off employees and estimates $1 million in lost revenue per month. These disruptions risk a delay in the delivery of mission essential solutions.”

    Another small business executive, who also requested anonymity for fear of retribution, said with any new awards, even including contract continuations, that are all stuck in a black box, DHS is just making the environment untenable for small firms.

    “As a small business, I’m getting crushed because keeping people on the bench and incurring heaving overhead costs every day is a crippling business state to maintain, as you can imagine,” the second executive said. “And the DHS program customers are also suffering because many are losing their support teams overnight when one period of performance (PoP) ends and the next option period is supposed to begin the next day. Instead, everything comes to a screeching halt exposing these applications and systems to security breaches and causing costly technical and programmatic debt.”

    https://federalnewsnetwork.com/acquisition-policy/2025/08/dhs-contract-reviews-creating-uncertainty-causing-layoffs/

    1. awwwwwwwwwwwwww their useless supplies of overpriced “contractors” who don’t really do anything is grinding to a halt. I feel bad.

      we supply mission critical services to these departments. Why would you ever outsource “mission critical services”? That makes zero sense. Grifters one and all.

    2. Contracting is absolutely awful. Bad software, multiple signatures, months to move money around. And $100K might sound like a lot, but it buys almost nothing, and DHS staff knows it. You can barely run a dozen deportation flights on $100K. There must have been a LOT of small-dollar grift if DHS felt they had to set the upper limit as low as $100K.

  14. Las Vegas tourism faces 18% drop in Canadian visitors amid tariff tensions

    The Las Vegas tourism industry is grappling with a decline in Canadian visitors, a trend attributed to tensions over tariffs between the U.S. and Canada.

    Before the COVID-19 pandemic, international tourists made up 20% of Las Vegas’s visitors, with a significant portion coming from Canada.

    However, recent data from Harry Reid International Airport indicates that the average number of inbound seats on flights from Canada has decreased by more than 18% compared to last year.

    Julia Chasson, a Canadian tourist who visited Las Vegas in March, said, “I love coming to the states… obviously there’s a lot of fun stuff to do that we don’t get to do in Canada.”

    Despite the tariff dispute, Chasson and her companion decided not to cancel their trip to see the Grateful Dead.

    https://news3lv.com/news/local/las-vegas-tourism-faces-18-drop-in-canadian-visitors-amid-tariff-tensions

    From the comments:

    You honestly think tariffs are going to keep people away and not the tight slots, resort fees, refrigerator fees, bed bugs, hotel room burglaries, food and drink price gouging, strip violence, and the aggressive strip hustles from the buskers. And the fact that you can gamble almost anywhere now. People can go on cruises and gamble and eat for free and enjoy free entertainment, free refrigerator included, for the price to come to LV.

    It’s not tariffs , it’s the hotel casinos overcharging for everything and ripping people off ..Surprised there isn’t a total boycott from tourists from everywhere.

    You do realize that Florida’s actual Canadian tourist numbers have gone up! Hmm! Absolutely nothing whatsoever that has to do with tariffs! Which, by the way, Canada has been having the upper hand for decades now. Dairy products 100% tariffs and up. Maybe, just maybe, it has to do with the absolutely ridiculous new check in and other price change regulations. Early check-in $60 – causing hours long wait to check-in that is actually past the actual check-in time.

    News Flash: Its the unions. The unions killed the golden goose. Get rid of the unions and everyone makes money.

    1. They just announced last week that the entire strip is now unionized. It’s going to make things extra interesting when they start firing them all soon.

  15. Boston residents talk plan to end ’22-hour food buffet for the rats’

    Bostonians sounded off Tuesday on the city’s plan to root out all its rats.

    At a community meeting, people from Back Bay, Beacon Hill, the North End and more shared concerns and questions about Boston’s rodent action plan, announced last year and being rolled out now.

    “I have seen the trash pick up go till 3 p.m. the next day. That is a net 22-hour food buffet for the rats,” one woman said on the Zoom meeting.

    https://www.nbcboston.com/news/local/boston-rat-plan-food-buffet/3789184/

    Loveland Struggles to Find the Right Response to Homelessness

    The City of Loveland is wrestling with how to solve homelessness after deciding to eliminate nearly all of its city-funded shelter space. Last week, Loveland City Council voted to keep a ban on encampments — but continued to prohibit sweeps unless there’s empty shelter space.

    “It’s a growing issue,” says Michael Stein, lead pastor at the First Christian Church in Loveland and a member of the city’s now-defunct Loveland Homelessness Task Force. “You’ve got people who are close to the streets themselves.”

    “We had a large number of business owners come into the chamber talking about how the homeless were affecting their businesses, people, employees and customers being afraid to go into stores, vandalism,” Mayor Jacki Marsh told Loveland City Council at an August 5 meeting, describing why the city passed the 2022 ordinance banning encampments and allowing sweeps if shelter spaces were available. “We had a huge encampment. There was a reason this code was put in there.”

    “You had these budget cuts and ‘Why are we giving money to the homeless when we can’t have a fireworks display or we have to close this swim beach,'” Stein recalls. “If we have to start choosing what our priorities were for more limited resources, there was a feeling that spending $2 million a year on homelessness wasn’t the best use of money.”

    https://www.westword.com/news/loveland-looking-for-homeless-solution-closing-shelter-25243466

    1. “talking about how the homeless were affecting their businesses, people, employees and customers being afraid to go into stores”

      Larimer County, welcome to the Doom Loop.

  16. Unhoused people, advocates protest upcoming sweep of San Jose’s Columbus Park

    Chanting “sweeps are not the solution,” more than 50 unhoused people and supporters marched through downtown San Jose to City Hall Tuesday to fight back against a scheduled encampment sweep of Columbus Park.

    Starting next Monday, crews are expected to begin clearing an estimated 300 unhoused people living at the park. Some say the city is giving them few immediate alternatives.

    “We have a lot of people that are disabled, have walkers, wheelchairs, canes. Some people are blind. They have nothing set up for us,” Katherine Davis said.

    Many people at Columbus Park question why the city won’t delay the sweep until those new units become available.

    “They want to push us out,” Nicole Jackson said. “They don’t treat us like human beings. They don’t. They really treat us like animals, like we don’t matter.”

    https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/protest-sweep-san-jose-columbus-park/3932589/

    Homeless DC resident reacts to Trump’s crackdown

    “Give us a home, how about that? How about just giving people that need a home, inside. And then we’d be inside. You just want to just throw us to the rats.”

    “I don’t know this man. I don’t want to know him. All I know is he’s a rich man pushing people with no money around.”

    “I don’t want to be homeless. I don’t want to crowd anyone. I don’t want to use anyone. I just want to be in a place to live.”

    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/homeless-dc-resident-reacts-trumps-034248197.html

    1. “Give us a home, how about that?”

      I have been paying for my home every month for over 30 years. Give you a home? Yes, you get a bed in a dorm-style shelter, or at best a hotel room on the outskirts of the city. If you want more you’ll have to clean up.

      [That said, I really hope 47 can do something for the salvageable working homeless who live in cars and RVs.]

  17. he added that sellers may be getting a false signal now from what agents refer to as the list-to-sales price ratio, which continues to show sellers getting most all of what they’ve asked for as a list price.

    yeah that doesn’t take into consideration that the property started 14 price cuts ago at a way higher price. It’s only off the last price listed, not the first (which is incorrect)

  18. Fear and uncertainty push some Charlotte immigrants to consider self-deporting

    Isabel is one of millions who fled Venezuela because of political persecution, hoping for a better life in the U.S. But her fear of deportation has grown since Trump took office. After living in the U.S. for two years, she is now considering returning to Venezuela.

    “With God’s help, we plan to return in February of next year,” Isabel said.

    Isabel, her husband and her daughter came to Charlotte by way of Panama, Central America, and Mexico. When they arrived, the family received temporary political asylum. However, their court date isn’t until 2027, and in the meantime, Isabel says she fears being detained by ICE.

    “The truth is, this country gave me a lot, it caused me a lot of anxiety,” Isabel said. “I’m even taking medication for depression.”

    Isabel and her family join other Charlotte immigrants who are contemplating self-deportation. Jose and Nancy from Honduras, came to the U.S. last October. They hoped for better job opportunities and better health care for their 8-year-old son, who has a terminal diagnosis of hydrocephalus. However, they are struggling to find work.

    “Honestly, we haven’t found what we expected here,” Jose said. “I don’t have a steady job, and life is getting harder and harder.”

    Jose and Nancy say they feel stuck, with no clear path forward in the U.S.

    “We’re making the decision because we have nowhere to live here,” Nancy said. “If no one pays, they will throw us out onto the street.”

    The family is using the CBP Home app, which began offering free travel and a $1,000 exit bonus for immigrants who self-deport. This family says it’s their only hope to leave on their own and avoid detention and deportation.

    “We’re waiting through the CBP Home app for instructions on how to return,” Jose said. “It’s our only option to leave here and find something better in another country.”

    Charlotte immigration attorney Jamilah Espinosa says self-deportation is gaining traction among immigrants. ICE hasn’t been able to keep up with the Trump administration’s detention quotas, and self-deportation is a way to reach that number.

    “[Immigrants] have a real fear of the risk of being deported and not just being detained here in the U.S., but possibly taken to a third-world country,” Espinosa said.

    Espinosa said some immigrants are looking to leave the U.S. for a different country than the one they left. For example, Isabel, from Venezuela, is hoping to move to Colombia.

    Some immigrants came to the U.S. legally but are now losing their work authorization, as the Trump administration ends humanitarian parole for some countries.

    “At the time the program ended, they lost their work authorization,” Espinosa said. “Employers immediately fired them, and now they do not have a means to legally work in the United States.”

    Espinosa also says that, in some cases, immigrants who self-deport could be prevented from reentering the U.S. in the future. Her biggest advice for immigrants is to consult an immigration attorney. However, Isabel, Nancy and Jose are set in their decision.

    “We came with the American dream, and we came with great faith that we would come here to achieve those dreams, but we can’t,” Nancy said.

    Now, they believe the dream may lie elsewhere.

    https://www.wfae.org/race-equity/2025-08-12/fear-and-uncertainty-push-some-charlotte-immigrants-to-consider-self-deporting

    1. “They lost their work authorization,” Espinosa said. “Employers immediately fired them.”

      Which means that employers also fear being fined or jailed. Last Sunday I drove past a Home Depot at 7:30 am. A year ago there were a couple dozen guys waiting for work. On Sunday, I saw … one.

      1. Hardly fear. I work for a club which has many rich people as members, like the Gov of Illinois and we have about a third illegals and another third are legal immigrants. They work for less but still get good pay

    2. That these “refugees” are willing to take the money and run home kind of shows that they really were economic migrants to begin with. As has been pointed out here, some when they had the parole status would even go home on vacation.

  19. Blountsville man faces deportation, leaving fiancé and son behind after being detained by ICE

    BLOUNTSVILLE, Ala. — A father and groom-to-be who’s called Alabama home for most of his life is now in an ice detention facility waiting to learn his fate.

    Alfonso Andrade’s family said he came to the United States when he was just a year old. He moved to Blountsville at the age of 3, but his legal trouble began when he was arrested for possession of marijuana a few years ago.

    Family and friends of Andrade said he’s made mistakes like any other kid, but he turned his life around. He’s even the father of a 1-year-old boy and a high school football referee. On Thursday, he went to check in with his probation officer, and his friend, Donald Nation, told WVTM 13 two ICE agents were waiting for him. Now, he’s being detained in a Louisiana ICE facility.

    “It’s just hard,” Bralie Chandler, Andrade’s fiancé, said. “I try to stay as strong as I can, but there’s been so many nights that I just crying cry when my little boy goes to sleep. I’m doing as much as I can out here, but at the end of the day it’s going to be the justice system.”

    Andrade is facing being deported back to Mexico.

    “He knows nothing about Mexico,” Nation said. “Absolutely nothing. He’ll be lost. They could just drop him at the border. He speaks Spanish a little bit, but not really well. He can’t read it or write it. It’ll be a hard loss for him. It’ll be hard loss for his wife and child.”

    https://www.wvtm13.com/article/alabama-blountsville-immigration-deportation-ice-detention/65669838

    He’ll get used to the outhouse Bralie.

      1. He was probably also dealing.

        The fact that so many of these DACAs did stuff like that shows that they believed they were untouchable.

        I suppose that his baby mama is in the Free Sh!t Army.

      2. It’s possible but only after you have been on probation before. I have had cases where you could get a few months of probation for possession but after years and years of a “few months,” a judge sees the lengthy rap sheet and puts the on probation for like five years.

        The issue is then everyone screams “five years,” but it’s doesn’t happen for one time offenses.

        The other exception is if the offense involves a child under 12 somehow.

    1. First they report he is not married then they cite his infant as turning his life around. How much are we paying for his bastard? GTFO.

  20. Dehumanising migration policies leave people abandoned in the Americas

    During its first six months in office, the current administration of the United States (US) has implemented the most restrictive and dehumanising migration policy the Americas has seen in years. This has left hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom were hoping to seek asylum in the US, abandoned in Mexico and across Central America, says a new report by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

    “These policies, combined with the drastic reduction of aid and the humanitarian footprint along the migration route, have had a devastating impact on the wellbeing of people trying to seek safety,” says Franking Frías, deputy manager of operations for MSF in Mexico and Central America.

    “We feel abandoned and unprotected,” says a Honduran woman who is stuck in Reynosa, in northern Mexico. “We never wanted to enter the United States illegally. We ask for benevolence for cases like mine: mothers who have been waiting for a long time with children, who want to give them a better life.”

    “We have already gone through a process; we already had a right,” she says. “We have been victims of scams, the cartels, we have been deceived, we are traumatised.” This woman had secured an appointment through CBP One, scheduled for three days after the app was shut down and all appointments were cancelled.

    Several countries across the Latin American migration corridor have also strengthened deterrence measures. Law enforcement agents and immigration authorities in the region have forcefully returned migrants, restricted people’s movements, and dismantled urban camps where people with nowhere else to go were sheltering. They have closed migration reception stations, dissolved gatherings in public spaces, carried out raids, arbitrarily detained people, increased patrolling, and complicated and reduced access to bureaucratic procedures, including asylum processes.

    “We were held captive for 60 days,” says a Venezuelan man stranded in Ciudad Juárez, northern Mexico. “[Criminals] hit me on the head, pulled a tooth, and shoved a gun in my mouth to take pictures and call one of my sons in the United States. My son and son-in-law paid the ransom, and we were released.

    “The plan was to go to the United States,” he says. “The rest of my family is there waiting for us. But with this US government, we don’t know what to do.”

    Carmen López, MSF manager for mobile health activities, shares the story of a Venezuelan patient she assisted in Guatemala. The man and his son were deported earlier this year from the US, despite having entered through CBP One.

    “First, they were held in a detention centre in the United States, separately for about 20 days,” says López. “Later, they were deported to Mexico. During the transfer to the Mexican authorities, his backpack containing personal items and savings was stolen. They were left in Villahermosa [a town in southeastern Mexico]. They had to start their return [to Venezuela] without money. He was very frustrated because he had gone through the legal process, and it had all been a lie in the end.”

    With seeking asylum at the United States southern border now close to impossible, tens of thousands of people are seeing Mexico as the only alternative option. But MSF teams have witnessed how asylum procedures in Mexico have become lengthier and more complex in several cities.

    In parallel, violence perpetrated by organised crime groups and others remains alarming, including kidnappings, extortion, robberies, sexual violence, and exploitative labour.

    “Violence is much more evident now,” says Ricardo Santiago, who coordinated MSF programs in northern and southern Mexico. “Before – given the large number of people on the move – some would be spared, whereas today most of the people I’ve spoken with have been victims of violence. There is no escape.”

    “Today, migrants are less accessible and the humanitarian system is unprepared to effectively address their vulnerabilities and complex needs,” says Frías. “Behind every policy is its impact on real people: survivors of torture, families escaping danger, and children navigating border crossings alone.

    “Their health, safety, and dignity are legal and moral obligations,” she says. “All governments in the region must act now to protect, not punish, people in search of safety, and create safe immigration pathways.”

    https://www.msf.org/dehumanising-migration-policies-leave-people-abandoned-americas

    Why are we expected to solve the worlds problems?

    1. Several countries across the Latin American migration corridor have also strengthened deterrence measures. Law enforcement agents and immigration authorities in the region have forcefully returned migrants, restricted people’s movements, and dismantled urban camps where people with nowhere else to go were sheltering. They have closed migration reception stations, dissolved gatherings in public spaces, carried out raids, arbitrarily detained people, increased patrolling, and complicated and reduced access to bureaucratic procedures, including asylum processes.

      Amazing what happens when the USAID money goes bye bye.

  21. Social media post documents Steamboat Springs ICE arrests, community concerns grow

    Amid growing concerns around increased U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement activity in Steamboat Springs, a Tuesday morning social media livestream documented officers arresting two men on Alpine Mountain Ranch & Club property.

    The video posted on Facebook shows Enforcement and Removal Operations officers — or arresting officers working under ICE — forcibly taking two people into custody.

    The driver in the video drives onto the property, then stops next to three vehicles, including two large grey Ford SUVs. The officers are seen urging the driver to go away.

    The driver gets out of the vehicle and says, “Why are you stopping my guys?” as one officer escorts a man with his hands behind his back.

    As the confrontation continues, one ICE officer tells the driver that he is “impeding a federal investigation” and that the officers will arrest him, too.

    “They’re my workers, they’re my workers,” says the driver in the video. “They didn’t do anything for you guys to stop them. They didn’t do anything.”

    The situation escalates as two officers pull the passenger out of the stopped vehicle and pin him to the ground on his stomach.

    The video later shows the two SUVs driving out of the property, with the two people in custody inside.

    Property Manager at Alpine Mountain Ranch and Club Audrey Williams noted that she had seen the video and confirmed that it was on the ranch’s property, but she was not at work when the arrests occurred.

    Williams added that the ranch gates open around 6:45 a.m. each morning and remain open during business hours for the public to access various construction sites across the property.

    According to Jerry Hernandez, the executive director of the local organization Integrated Community, ICE activity has also been seen at a construction site in town and at a bus stop on 7th Street, where three people were said to have been arrested.

    While Hernandez did not have an exact number of people who were taken into custody, he confirmed that two people in custody were currently en route to Denver.

    “One of the things that we had confirmed was that ICE could not and did not engage in traffic stops,” said Hernandez. “So we were telling our clients, ‘Don’t worry, they can’t pull you over.’ But apparently, that’s not the case because of this branch (Enforcement and Removal Operations).”

    Hernandez said one of the men arrested in the video was issued an “order of removal,” which was most likely the reason for the traffic stop. However, Hernandez noted that the man had been “compliant” with his court dates.

    Police Chief Mark Beckett said law enforcement has not recently communicated with ICE about an increased presence or recent arrests, but noted that this isn’t unique to Steamboat Springs.

    “We’re hearing from different sheriffs and chiefs across the state … ICE and (Enforcement and Removal Operations) are operating without any notification,” said Beckett. “We haven’t been approached. Our policy is still what it was (earlier this year), which is we’re not going to participate in enforcement action. That’s probably why they aren’t notifying any local agencies anymore.”

    “What they told us originally was they were going to focus on those who were actually wanted criminally, like gang members,” continued Beckett. “But, you know, all I have to go on is the same thing you’re seeing.”

    Routt County Sheriff Doug Scherar also said he was unaware of an increased ICE presence in the county, and noted that the sheriff’s office does not participate in any immigration enforcement.

    “Unfortunately … (ICE) has put themselves in a silo right now, so we don’t hear anything at all,” Beckett said. “And frankly, I don’t think we’re going to. I think that’s going to be how they will continue to move forward. They’re just going to do whatever they’re going to do.”

    “I know the community is very, very afraid and concerned,” said Hernandez. “We have families that are not sending their kids to school or that are not going to work because of this.”

    https://www.steamboatpilot.com/news/social-media-post-documents-steamboat-springs-ice-arrests-community-concerns-grow/

    1. That’s probably why they aren’t notifying any local agencies anymore

      Why would they bother telling you when you will just sabotage them?

    2. NOtice what the local guy is saying here. Laws only apply to americans, the illegal invaders, we won’t enforce any laws, look the other way, no matter what the law says

      And clearly they are actively working for the invaders as ICE isn’t talking to them at all “anymore” because clearly some operations blew up because people blabbed (local guys).

      1. The Colorado AG has made it clear he will make an example of any LEO who helps ICE.

        According to estimates about 1.6 million have self deported so far, plus those who have been apprehended would guess it’s 2 million who are gone. Keep up the good work lads.

  22. ICE arrests Anchorage asylum seeker after disputed DWI claim

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – An Anchorage immigration attorney says federal immigration officers arrested one of her clients, a 30-year-old asylum seeker from Mexico, based on what she calls false information about a prior conviction.

    Santiago Ortiz Martinez was taken into custody Monday by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement when he arrived for work at a sushi restaurant, according to attorney Margaret Stock.

    She said Martinez has never been charged or convicted of driving while intoxicated, despite ICE claims indicating otherwise. There is no record of Martinez facing DUI charges in Alaska’s District Court system.

    “He’s got a very strong asylum case but they decided to grab him and it was apparently based on false information that they had that he had been convicted of a DWI. He hasn’t been charged with DWI or convicted of DWI, but that’s the government’s excuse for grabbing him,” Stock said.

    Martinez, Stock added, has lived in the United States for more than eight years and is awaiting a decision on his asylum application. Court records show he was cited earlier this year for driving without proof of insurance, a case that has since been closed.

    Martinez, according to Stock, had been granted a work permit while his case was pending. He was previously released on bond in 2019.

    His employer, who asked to not be identified out of fear of retaliation, said the arrest hurts her business.

    “If I can support him, whatever I can do I will do it,” the employer said. “Because he’s a good person, and he’s working hard, and I think he deserves to stay in the United States.”

    https://www.alaskasnewssource.com/2025/08/13/immigration-attorney-ice-arrests-anchorage-asylum-seeker-after-disputed-dwi-claim/

    Santiago will get used to the outhouse employer.

  23. 21-year-old writes letter on deportation to Honduras from Richmond

    Around 100 anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) protesters rallied outside of Richmond City Hall on Monday, August 11. Their message is clear: they want ICE out of Richmond.

    A detailed letter obtained by the Virginia Defenders for Freedom, Justice and Equality, and read at the rally, provided more insight on the arrest of Ricardo Martinez-Cantarero, the 21-year-old taken by ICE on July 30. He has been deported to his home country of Honduras.

    Martinez-Cantarero wrote that the morning of July 30 started like any other, with his mother preparing his breakfast and lunch before he went to work at the Facebook construction site in eastern Henrico County.

    He said it wasn’t unusual for police to patrol the neighborhood, but it was an unmarked car that pulled him over as he headed to work.

    “I stopped the car thinking this was a traffic stop,” he wrote. “When the two officials came out of the car I realized they were actually ICE agents and honestly at that moment I felt like the weight of the world was on top of me.”

    He said he believes the officers turned off their body cameras as they approached him. He said he asked if the officers had a warrant but they didn’t present one. He said he then tried to show his drivers license and called his mom. He said one of the officers then went around the car and punched and broke the passenger window.

    Martinez-Cantarero said once he got out of the car, the officers “shoved me around, holding me in ways that hurt me.” They told him he “didn’t have a right to call [his] mom” and that’s why they broke the window.

    His mother said he’d come to the United States at 16 years old seeking asylum. She believes the arrest may have been linked to a missed court date for an asylum hearing that he was unaware of.

    Martinez-Cantarero was taken to the ICE office in Midlothian and was put in a cell with “19 other workers that they had arrested that day.” Hours later they were taken to the Riverside Regional Jail.

    Martinez-Cantarero said the next day they were taken from Riverside back to the Midlothian facility. They each had a turn to talk to an ICE employee which is when he was told he’d be deported. He said he was asked to sign documents and have his fingerprints taken to begin the deportation process. He refused both, saying his life would be in danger if sent back to Honduras.

    “Two officers came, grabbed me, and physically forced me to put my fingerprints on the document anyway,” Martinez-Cantarero said. Martinez-Cantarero said the men were then moved to the Caroline Detention Facility, shackled at the feet, hands and hips.

    “I felt so much shame to be treated this way,” he wrote. “It’s hard to go through the city where you grew up in such condition.”

    Once booking was completed in Caroline, Martinez-Cantarero said the men were taken to the cells and the officers yelled out “fresh meat.” They spent one night there. They were then taken back to Midlothian again.

    “It makes sense why my family couldn’t find me,” Martinez-Cantarero said. “I was moved around so much in that matter of three days.”

    They were then taken to the Richmond International Airport to the back where the private planes are, Martinez-Cantarero wrote.

    Still shackled, Martinez-Cantarero said they were put on a plane that was headed to Houston, Texas. Some people were dropped off there — he believes people from Mexico, El Salvador and Guatamala — while those from Honduras were left on the plane where they then headed to a military base in Louisiana.

    Martinez-Cantarero wrote that they stayed the night there and then early in the morning on Saturday, August 2, they got back on the plane that made another stop in Houston to pick up more people. He was then taken back to Honduras, seven hours away from the town he was born in.

    “If it wasn’t for the program in place by the government of Honduras to support people who are deported, I would’ve been stranded,” he wrote. “Now that I am in Honduras, I don’t go outside. I feel alone and afraid. Just a few days ago, a 17 year old boy was killed. I don’t feel safe. I miss my mom and little brother. I miss my home.”

    Martinez-Cantarero said the 19 other men he was deported with were all detained on their way to work. “All we want to do when we migrate is to work hard and to find stability to be with our families,” he said.

    https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/i-miss-my-home-21-year-old-writes-letter-on-deportation-to-honduras-from-richmond/

    ‘I miss my mom and little brother. I miss my home’

    I bet what you really miss is the toilet paper Ricardo. How are those banana leaves working out?

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