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Women In Need -Hawaii

by Team Lally

Founded by Mary Scott-Lau who taught free classes in basic life skills to women who needed them in 1996.  It has since expanded to anger management, domestic violence management, parenting, and computer and job readiness skills.  Classes are now at the Women's Community Correctional Center and the Family Resource Center in Waianae, and also include spousal abuse centers, homeless shelters and residential substance abuse locations island wide.  Their client base has extended to men and to the young people being taught at teen homeless shelters.  More importantly, they care for women in transition, moving from incarceration and into civilian life at correctional half way houses on Oahu and Kauai.   

WIN's primary mission is to help the mothers and fathers of Hawaii to get off drugs, off the streets, and out of abusive relationships, enabling them to parent their children and to lead stable, fulfilling lives.  Doing everything they can to break the generational cycles of hopelessness, they serve approximately 350 clients per year.  Most are lifelong victims of domestic violence and narcotics addiction.  The primary focus is the homeless and low-income population but also extends well past these groups.  Having grown into a vast community made-up of those who have helped and inspired, many of their former clients now work on staff, or as volunteers to assist in furthering the organization's reach.

To learn more about Women In Need, go to: win-hawaii.org

Foreclosure Settlement Scammers

by Team Lally

Warning: Scammers are on the prowl, claiming to have your share of the foreclosure settlement — for a fee, of course.

    The next phone call you get might be from a crook eager to “help” you get your share of the recent $25 billion foreclosure abuse settlement attorneys general in 49 states negotiated with the big banks.

Reality check: This is a national settlement run by state employees. So the chance that a settlement official is calling you the week after the deal was struck because they’re ready to send you your share of $25 billion is about as likely as the possibility you just won the Nigerian lottery.

The attorneys general of several states warn that fraudsters claiming to be bank employees or settlement officials are calling consumers asking for bank account information, credit card numbers, or other personal information. If you give it to them, they’ll use it to steal your identity or run up fraudulent credit card charges as soon as you hang up the phone.

Don’t fall for that trick or for Internet sites promising to get you your share of the settlement — for a fee. Legit organizations never collect a fee for settlements like this or for helping you avoid
foreclosure.

Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/blog/facing-foreclosure/foreclosure-settlement-scams/#ixzz1p2yaQgoz

How to Be Energy Efficient at Home: It's Not What You Do, But ...
Article From HouseLogic.com

It's not just which energy efficiency projects you implement at home that will make a dent in your bills -- it's how many.

This is the second part of the Q&A with Suzanne Shelton, president and CEO of Shelton Group, a marketing agency specializing in sustainability and energy efficiency. Shelton Group's annual Energy Pulse research report tracks consumer attitudes toward energy-related topics. Read Part 1, "Looking for Energy Savings in All the Wrong Places (http://www.houselogic.com/blog/whats-really-green/energy-savings-at-home/)."

HouseLogic: A few days ago you told us why we're so disconnected from our home's energy use. Today, tell us what we should be doing differently to make our homes more energy efficient.


Suzanne Shelton: First, I want to mention that it matters how many energy-efficient things you do. Half of the population say they've done two to three things to make their homes more energy efficient - replaced incandescent lightbulbs with CFLs (http://www.houselogic.com/blog/lighting/cfls-light-bulbs/), bought an Energy Star appliance (http://www.houselogic.com/maintenance-repair/preventative-home-maintenance/appliances/), added insulation (http://www.houselogic.com/maintenance-repair/preventative-home-maintenance/insulation/) - but most people report that their bills have gone up.

HL: So more projects equal more results?

SS: Right. Once you get up to the level of making four or five energy-efficiency home improvements, you generally start seeing savings on your utility bill.

Depending on the activities you choose and the point you're starting out at, you can probably expect a four- or five-year time frame for return of your investment. Which means now is a great time to do it. How many of us are stuck in our homes now because of the market?

If you're potentially four or five years from selling, why not go ahead and make those improvements? You'll get yourself paid back and live more comfortably and frugally right now, and you can brag about your improvements when you sell your house.

HL: The economy is weighing on everyone. If a home owner has just $1,000 to spend on energy-efficient home improvements, what would you recommend he or she do first?

SS: 5 things:

1.Caulk and seal all penetrations into the home. I'll tell you, I had a home energy audit done three years ago, and even though I do this for a living, I was astonished. When the guy walked me down into my basement and showed me all the penetrations from plumbing lines and electricity wires, I couldn't believe all the gaping holes in my house. Buy a few cans of Great Stuff and take a weekend to go around and seal everything, filling around windows, too. It takes time and it's a pain, but it works.

2. Hire an HVAC contractor to take a hard look at all your ductwork - are there any ducts leaking that need to be re-sealed (http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/home-thoughts/houselogic-new-years-resolutions-home/2/)? - and give you an HVAC tune-up (http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/heating-cooling/hvac-maintenance/). You might spend a couple hundred bucks, but you can save significantly depending on how old or out of shape your HVAC system is.

3. Replace all your lighting (http://www.houselogic.com/home-improvement/lighting/) with CFLs (http://www.houselogic.com/blog/lighting/cfls-light-bulbs/) or LEDs. Most people tell us they've replaced all their incandescents, but it just isn't true. The DOE says that only about 13% of sockets are filled with CFLs right now.

4. Program your thermostat. Most people who buy programmable thermostats don't program them. If we actually programmed them not to heat the furniture while we're away, that would be smart.

5. Reduce the temperature on your water heater. The Department of Energy recommends 120 degrees (http://www.energysavers.gov/tips/water_heating.cfm). If you have a tank water heater, it keeps a certain amount of water hot and ready to go all day, so lowering the temperature reduces the energy you use to heat the water.

If, after you've done all those relatively low-cost things, you want to make a little bit more of an investment, consider adding insulation (http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/insulation/save-money-with-insulation-upgrade/) to your house.

No one wants to do these things because they're not sexy, and they're kind of a pain, and windows seem more appealing. But I'd do all these activities before I replaced my windows.

HL: If you could spearhead an ad campaign to motivate home owners to make more energy-efficient improvements, what would it say?

SS: You have to do five things to see the savings you want. That's actually something we're working on right now, so stay tuned.

Which energy-efficient projects have you implemented? Have you seen a reduction in your bill or an increase?

442 tips to keep your house in tip-top shape

by Team Lally

 

 
The following article covers a topic that has recently moved to center stage--at least it seems that way. If you've been thinking you need to know more about it, here's your opportunity. 
 
The more authentic information about  you know, the more likely people are to consider you a  expert. Read on for even more  facts that you can share. 
This is yet one more way in which buying a home has parallels to birthing -- and raising -- children. Years before they ever buy, when they've barely begun padding their down-payment nest eggs, buyers-to-be report tossing and turning, waking up with night sweats, concerned about all the calamities that might befall their home.
What if a hurricane hits? An earthquake? What if they've been completely spoiled by apartment living, neglect to spend 10 hours every weekend working on their house and let the place fall into ruin?
What about all the more mundane, and more-likely-to-arise events that go along with homeownership: Will their effort to unstick a window send them to the hospital, or their do-it-yourself efforts to replace a single roof shingle spiral into a bigger leak than they had before?
These nightmarish concerns of homebuyers everywhere are precisely the issues addressed in the meaty little tome, "What's a Homeowner to Do?" by DIY Network star/contractor Stephen Fanuka and co-author Edward Lewine.
If you've ever bought one of those little gift books that has a year's worth of daily inspirational messages, this book will remind you of one of those -- on steroids. It's a small-format book filled with 442 tips, diagrams, and easy-to-use, bite-sized tutorials for do-it-yourself home improvement, maintenance and safety projects.
Fanuka, the star of the show "Million Dollar Contractor," teams up with Edward Lewine (who writes a couple of home improvement columns for The New York Times Magazine) to comprehensively catalog and address precisely the sorts of items that keep buyers and homeowners awake at night, offering their insomnia-soothing home improvement knowledge in a highly digestible format.
Throughout, they flag items that homeowners need to maintain on a regular basis to avoid disasters, parse out which items owners can do themselves (and which they should refer to the pros), empower them to ask the right questions and have the right conversations with those pros, and walk them through simple instructions for doing it themselves, where applicable.
The book starts out with a "green manifesto" that briefs readers on all the ways in which their homes impact the environment by offering them a long bullet point list of choices they can make to green their homes. It then moves on to cover the down-and-dirty, do-it-yourself tutorials with a chapter on how to assemble and use a basic toolkit, including what not to do (e.g., get "mesmerized by fasteners").
Then, the book proceeds to offer hundreds of mini-lessons categorized by area of a home, from the exterior, to windows, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and such subjects as carpentry, doors and locks, walls, basements, garages, yards, and safety and security issues.
Many of these lessons, which run from how to locate a roof leak to how a door lock works, come complete with the authors' "Tricks of the Trade," pithy one-liners with uber-handy suggestions, workarounds, troubleshooting, insider secrets for handling common issues and even warnings for avoiding common complications.
And the range of topics the authors cover maps directly to the range of concerns real homeowners have, from maintaining their roofs to installing baseboards, cabinet doors, landscape lighting and supports for adjustable shelves.
Often, these sorts of tips books can be tough to use for readers who have a high need for information -- those who want to know why they should do things a particular way, or why they should trust the proffered advice.
But interspersed throughout the book's tips on what to do to your home are highly interesting briefings on "how" things in your home work. In short-and-sweet plain English, Fanuka and Lewine answer questions like "What's so important about rain gutters?" and "How are wooden stairs constructed?"
If you own a home and feel at loose ends when it comes to knowing what you should be doing to keep it in tip-top shape, "What's a Homeowner to Do" is an accessible, yet smart, primer and reference guide you'll turn to time and time again. If you're still in house hunt mode, definitely put it on your housewarming registry -- it'll save you some sleepless nights, and maybe even some money! 
Now might be a good time to write down the main points covered above. The act of putting it down on paper will help you remember what's important about .

 

442 tips to keep your house in tip-top shape

Book Review: 'What's a Homeowner to Do?'

 

The following article covers a topic that has recently moved to center stage--at least it seems that way. If you've been thinking you need to know more about it, here's your opportunity. 

If you've ever bought one of those little gift books that has a year's worth of daily inspirational messages, this book will remind you of one of those. It's a small-format book filled with 442 tips, diagrams, and easy-to-use, bite-sized tutorials for do-it-yourself home improvement, maintenance and safety projects.

Fanuka, the star of the show "Million Dollar Contractor," teams up with Edward Lewine (who writes a couple of home improvement columns for The New York Times Magazine) to comprehensively catalog and address precisely the sorts of items that keep buyers and homeowners awake at night, offering their insomnia-soothing home improvement knowledge in a highly digestible format.

Throughout, they flag items that homeowners need to maintain on a regular basis to avoid disasters, parse out which items owners can do themselves (and which they should refer to the pros), empower them to ask the right questions and have the right conversations with those pros, and walk them through simple instructions for doing it themselves, where applicable. The book starts out with a "green manifesto" that briefs readers on all the ways in which their homes impact the environment by offering them a long bullet point list of choices they can make to green their homes. It then moves on to cover the down-and-dirty, do-it-yourself tutorials with a chapter on how to assemble and use a basic toolkit. Then, the book proceeds to offer hundreds of mini-lessons categorized by area of a home, from the exterior, to windows, plumbing, electrical,  and such subjects as carpentry, doors and locks, walls, basements, garages, yards, and safety and security issues.

Often, these sorts of tips books can be tough to use for readers who have a high need for information -- those who want to know why they should do things a particular way, or why they should trust the proffered advice. But interspersed throughout the book's tips on what to do to your home are highly interesting briefings on "how" things in your home work. In short-and-sweet plain English, Fanuka and Lewine answer questions like "What's so important about rain gutters?" and "How are wooden stairs constructed?"

If you own a home and feel at loose ends when it comes to knowing what you should be doing to keep it in tip-top shape, "What's a Homeowner to Do" is an accessible, yet smart, primer and reference guide you'll turn to time and time again. If you're still in house hunt mode, definitely put it on your housewarming registry -- it'll save you some sleepless nights, and maybe even some money! 

Rent or Buy?

by Team Lally

Rent or Buy?
Helping consumers make informed choices

It still looks to be a buyer's market rather than a rental one, according to the latest data released by HotPads.com. The rental price for 2-bedroom units jumped 3.75% in 2011, compared to a 1.83% fall in sale prices across the top-20 most populated metros in the U.S.  For many consumers, the decision to purchase a home or continue paying rent has come under closer scrutiny. It's not because home ownership is no longer attractive.

According to "National Association of Realtors magazine", eighty-eight percent of homeowners indicated that owning a home has been a positive experience, whereas only half of renters (51 percent_ say the same about their experience. Most homeowners (95 percent) and renters (72 percent) believe that over a period of several years, it makes more sense to own a home than to rent.

But the current economic climate has shaken consumer confidence. And when people are nervous about the future, it's more difficult to sort through the facts and decide to proceed on a major decision like buying a home. 

Here's an interesting statistics reported by the U.S Censuus Bureau that in 2010 Census shows second highest home ownership rate on record despite largest decreasesince 1940.

Property Tax Assessments for 2012

by Team Lally

Every Dec. 15th, the City & County of Honolulu mails out to Homeowner's their new property tax assessed values for the next year, which they use to base the Homeowner's property tax on. If they over assess your Home's value by more than 10%, you can appeal through the mail.

We wanted to drop a line to offer assistance:  If you feel you can successfully appeal based on your new assessed value being too high, we can assist and provide the low comparable sold data to include in your appeal.

Don't let the word "appeal" sound daunting, the appeal process is pretty easy and takes about 15mins.

Quick Summary:

-there is a $25 appeal fee, though refundable if you win your case, and appeals are due by January 15th

-if you are able to reduce your assessed value by $100k, that will save you $350 in 2012 on propertytax

-the City bases your Home's tax assessed value on comparable sales in your neighborhood mainly considering a) interior home sq. ft. and b) lot sq. ft.

-the City's website offers an online appeal option, though I suggest sending it via mail, that way you can include comparable sales with your initial request and hopefully get an approval quickly

Learn more at: http://www.realpropertyhonolulu.com/portal/rpadcms?parent=HOME

Hoakalei Marina deleted from Ewa Beach resort

by Team Lally

Plans for a marina have been replaced with a lagoon in Ewa Beach.

The recreational lagoon in Ewa Beach is planned to be completed by 2015 and will feature many activities.

Plans to convert its 54-acre Ocean Pointe/Hoakalei marina site between White Plains Beach and Oneula Beach Park into a recreational lagoon with no surface connection to the ocean.

Tesha Malama, a 41-year Ewa Beach resident, said some boaters will be disappointed along with fishers who looked forward to slips and a public boat launch ramp that were planned along with the marina, but that the conversion to a lagoon is beneficial to the broader community.

“Intention to provide extensive public access to its lagoon, promenade, cultural and archaeological sites and to integrate its shoreline reaches with a continuum of beachfront park and recreational opportunity stretching from Oneula Beach Park in Ewa Beach to White Sands Beach in Kalaeloa is uniquely an attempt to privately produce a public good, for the benefit of the community and for the enhancement of the resort’s commercial and activity-oriented businesses,” Brewbaker wrote in the report.

The lagoon’s brackish water circulates naturally through porous rock below but would be enhanced by pumping ground water into the lagoon from a new well to refresh the lagoon four times a day, Saito Tam said.

Read the full article online at Star Advertisement

CONNECT WITH US!

by Team Lally

We bring you updated news about our community, housing market and many many more! Subscribe to our facebook page today! Click the facebook logo below to like our page. Please enjoy this week's article. New Weekly Article - A Colorful Canvas

THE TRUTH ABOUT THE AMERICAN REAL ESTATE MARKET

by Team Lally

 

  If you watch the news or read the newspaper, it can be difficult to keep up with the state of the economy. Over the last century, the real estate market has had its share of ups and downs, none as dramatic as the highs and lows experienced during the past decade. However, the pendulum is on its way back, signaling the recovery of the housing market. Although the housing slowdown has fostered anxiety among investors and homebuyers alike, real estate has been, and will continue to be, a good long-term investment. Feel free to share this information with your family or friends who are looking to buy a home.

Is the Mortgage Debt Relief Act Safe?

by Team Lally

Homeowners need to think hard
Banks can keep homeowners on the hook paying if they face serious taxes.
They can foreclose if homeowners can’t pay.

Homeowners, who go past 2012 with no loan mod and have to short sale, could have a huge tax bill. Some short sales take a year. Homeowners who wait until 2012 may have a short sale close in 2013 and face a huge tax bill.

Expert Home Solutions Inc. says “Be Concerned.” Here’s how the 2007 Act works. If your lender forgives any of your loan, it is reported to the IRS as ordinary income. That income could add over $100,000 to your taxable income. The 2007 Act forgives that tax.

Read the rest of the article here!

Displaying blog entries 1-10 of 19

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