New Homes in Loudoun County, Virginia, Buyer REBATE

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BUILDER IN LOVETTSVILLE REVITILIZED NEW CONSTRUCTION IN NEW TOWN CENTER.

THE NEW HOMES IN LOVETTSVILLE ARE NEW SELLING.  THIS IS WHAT RESIDENTS OF LOVETTSVILLE HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR.  We've been waiting for construction to begin again on these wonderful lots in the New Town Center.  What's next?  Commercial development?  Let's hope so.

HOMES ARE SELLING FAST AND CONSTRUCTION IS VIGOROUS. 

Construction underway on another lot.  About 3 months to delivery.

New Construction just beginning

Home is almost complete.  About 45 days from delivery.

New Homes in Lovettsville 

Ready for a new family.  About 2 weeks from delivery.

New Home in Lovettsville

CHECK OUT THESE PRICES.  THEY CAN'T BE MATCHED in NORTHERN VIRGINIA. 

City ListPrice   Type Style BR BathsAll # Gar
Lovettsville $287,990   Detached Colonial 3 3 2
Lovettsville $307,990   Detached Colonial 4 3 2
Lovettsville $277,990   Detached Colonial 3 3 2
Lovettsville $297,990   Detached Colonial 3 3 2
Lovettsville $297,990   Detached Colonial 4 3 2
Lovettsville $297,990   Detached Colonial 4 3 2
             

THESE HOMES ARE ELIGIBLE FOR 100% FINANCING FOR QUALIFIED HOME BUYERS. 

With Seller Closing help and the Homefinders.com New Home Buyer REBATE,

your acquisition cost for these homes may be  $ZERO.

LOVETTSVILLE NEW TOWN CENTER MAP

Lovettsville New Town Center Map

LOUDOUN COUNTY VA MAP

Lovettsville Virginia is in the rural area of Western Loudoun County, Virginia.

Demographics for Lovettsville
-Population Approx. 1200 (recent new home sales)
-Land Area .91 Square Miles
-Growth Rate (last 5 years) 5.9%%   (Loudoun County)
-Average Income Families W/Children  $80,000
-Average Age 34 years
-High School Graduates 87%
-Average Age Homes 27 years
-Owner Occupied 80%

Loudoun County VA Map

Courtesy, Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-mail.

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"NEVER A FEE TO BUYERS"

Lovettsville Virginia Homes in Rural Loudoun County
Homes for Sale in Lovettsville
Facts about Real Estate in Lovettsville

CALIFORNIA AGRIBUSINESSES "TOO BIG TO FAIL"? Says Who??

William Johnson of San Diego writes passionately about the crisis in the water supply of his beloved area in California.  William just returned from a trip east and commented about the "green" that he observed here.   There's more to the  "green" in the east than what we enjoy in 2009.

WILLIAM:  The green here this year and for the past couple of years is all part of a cycle.  We go in cycles of about 7-8 years.  I've watched it for quite a few 7-8 year cycle repeats. 

When this cycle is completed, which, if I can predict accurately from memory, will be about 2 years.  Then we in the east should enter into a dry cycle and our grass will be brown, the corn will grow to only about 2 feet, the folks in Frederick County MD will have water trucked in to many areas because the wells will be dry and the city water drastically low, etc. 

In areas that are overbuilt for the existing infrastructure of the towns, mandatory water restrictions are in place even in this year of water abundance.  In Purcellville, a builder wanted to add another 240 town homes to the water supply.  Thank goodness the town council rejected the application.  It would have meant that the existing already low supply would have been reduced to every resident that depended on the local water supply.

Typical Farm in Northern Virginia in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountain Range. 

Farm in Purcellville VA

Our farms are not massive agribusinesses that we see in California, but farmers with truck farms who have no product to sell in our dry cycles.  California relies on full fruited trees and plants because they sell to huge suppliers and have to have "super market ready product".  In dry cycles, our truck farmers sell fruits and vegetables that are small and not attractive.  I still buy them because I know they are local and our farmer families hard working neighbors.  We don't have the vast water dependant development that they have in California.  Here, when it doesn't rain, the fields are dry. 

So, we can enjoy the green forests this year, but for how long???  Perhaps the agricultural enterprises in California can be deemed to be "too big to fail" and qualify for some massive federal aid from tax payers across the country.  Makes sense to me.  I'd rather subsidize food for our nation than the Wall Street Gangs.  Of course, there might be some spill over.

Frederick County Parcipitation averages Jan.-Dec. **

Avg. Precip. 2.8 in 2.7 in 3.3 in 3.3 in 4.3 in 3.9 in 3.7 in 3.5 in 3.6 in 3.1 in 3.3 in 2.9 in

That's about 40 inches of rain fall annually.  Enough to grow significant crops.  Yet, in dry years, the fields produce little to nothing to market because the farms don't have artificial water supplies that we see in California.  In the east, if the rain falls, the crops flourish.  If the rain doesn't fall, there are no crops. 

Rainfall in San Diego appears to be quite low based on historical data.  Yet, California is where the massive agribusinesses are located and the massive water supplies needed.  Nature is opportunistic and plants only grow naturally where the conditions are friendly.  When mankind moves the plants to an unfriendly location, producing an engineered environment, it could eventually fail simply because the need to maintain the engineered environment far exceeds the profit from the plants growing there.  Unless, the massive businesses that provide these artificial environments are deemed "To Big To Fail".  It is clear to many that California cannot subsidize these massive engineered environments for crops.  California has deficits/debt the likes of which we can only imagine, yet they are real.  The country, all of the country to some extent has become dependant on the produce from California.  Does that make the California agribusinesses "To Big To Fail"?  Could be. 

Normal Percipitation for Leesburg, VA.

MonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnua
Inch 3.29 2.47 3.64 3.48 4.45 4.21 3.68 3.82 4.16 3.38 3.52 3.11 43.21

The message here is not the water supply.  It's the water usage. 

**  I've used Frederick County, MD as the example of our area simply because it's an area that suffers crisis in water supply in our dry cycles. 

 

 

 

SIGNS OF SUMMER, VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL IN LEESBURG

SUMMER ACTIVITIES FOR CHILDREN ON SUMMER BREAK.

More signs of summer in Virginia.  Many local churches offer Vacation Bible School for local residents for a week or two during the summer vacation months. 

Moms and Dads walking little ones to Vacation Bible School in Leesburg this a.m. 

vacation bible school

Sign up folks.  The children will enjoy the games, activities and bible stories.

Vacation Bible School

Some locations in Loudoun County this year include:

Vacation Bible School VBS in Loudoun 2009

Purcellville Baptist Church                  Purcellville, VA         June 22-26

St. Francis deSales Catholic Church  Purcellville, VA         July 13-17

Cornerstone Chapel                           Leesburg, VA           July 20-24

Hamilton Baptist Church                    Hamilton, VA            August 3-7  

Blue Ridge Bible Church                    Purcellville, VA         August 3-7  

Chick the Church to link to the individual theme. 

Courtesy, Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-mail.

LOUDOUN COUNTY VIRGINIA BRINGS US THE CIRCUS IN SUMMER 2009.

THE CIRCUS IS COMING!       THE CIRCUS IS COMING!

Conveniently located at Dulles Town Center in Sterling Virginia just off Route 7 and Route 28, we saw the rides going up, game tents and food outlets going up today and the Circus folks getting ready to show you a great time. 

THE MOST POPULAR RIDE, THE FERRIS WHEELE. 

Ferris Wheel in Dulles Town Center

COTTEN CANDY, POPCORN AND CANDY APPLES ALL AT THE SAME TIME?

Cotten Candy

Do I see a Space Needel??  Come one, come all!

Circus at Dulles Town Center

Loudoun County Map

Courtesy, Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-mail.

 

PURCELLVILLE REAL ESTATE - NEW HOME FOR SALE ON 3 ACRE LOT - LUXURY REAL ESTATE IN LOUDOUN COUNTY, VIRGINIA

ALMOST FINISHED, THIS LOVELY NEW HOME IN PURCELLVILLE can be ready with your selections in just 60 days.   Fabulous home on a beautiful wooded lot with privacy and room for all. 

HOME IS 60 DAYS FROM READY FOR YOU TO MOVE IN. 

$599,900

Broker Rebate - $7,000

Buyer Indentive From Builder - Negotiable

Flexible Financing

Purcellville VA New Home

This spectacular home is loaded with special features, including:

GRANITE COUNTERTOPS IN GOURMET KITCHEN * 3,535 FINISHED SQUARE FEET ON LEVEL 1 & 2. 

3 CAR SIDE LOAD GARAGE * 3 FULL BATHS ON BEDROOM LEVEL * POWDER ROOM ON MAIN LEVEL

3 ACRE WOODED LOT ON QUIET ROAD * GAS HEAT * FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM * BRICK FRONT

HOME IMAGE AFTER COMPLETION (minus dormer decorative windows)

Loudoun County New Homes

New Home Floor Plan Purcellville VA 

 New Home Purcellville Floor Plan

Courtesy, Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-mail.

LOUDOUN COUNTY HOMES IS A DIVISION OF HOMEFINDERS.COM. 

SERVING HOME BUYERS IN LOUDOUN COUNTY, VIRGINIA

Purcellville VA Map

LOUDOUN COUNTY VIRGINIA ANNOUNCES THE ARRIVAL OF SUMMER!

DRIVING AROUND NORTHERN VIRGINIA AND MARYLAND COUNTRY ROADS, as I often do, one of the nicest things to view is the wildflowers. 

THE TIGER LILYalways announces the arrival of SUMMER.  This year, I spotted the first Tiger Lilies in Lovettsville on the 21st of June. 

SUMMER TIME IS HERE!

               These Tiger Lilies blossomed in the moat in front of my home on the 21st of June.

Tiger Lily

Tiger Lily

Courtesy, Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-mail.

 

Loudoun County Map

 

"SNAPPING TURTLE" IN MY BACK YARD. A BIG SNAPPING TURTLE IN LOVETTSVILLE VA.

WHO PUT THAT BIG ROCK IN MY BACK YARD?  NO, IT'S SUPER TURTLE!!

Glancing out my back window on Friday made me look twice.  You know the feeling.  You see something and then look away.  However, the brain won't compute.  So, you have to look again, and again.  That's exactly what happened.  Time to grab the camera.

I couldn't believe my eyes.

             Turtle

To get perspective on the size of this turtle, look at it next to the septic access in my back yard which is about 32 inches wide.

             Turtle

What kind of turtle is it?  It's a Snapping Turtle, of course.  How do I know that?  As far as I'm concerned, there are only two kinds of turtles, Snapping Turtles and those that went into the soup.  Snapping Turtles are often found in areas around water and there is a creek that goes through the moat in front of my home as well as a creek that runs down the hill on the left side of the lot, which is where it probably came from.  It was a BIG turtle.  Since I've spent a lot of time on lakes in the area, I see them often, but never one this big.  

Courtesy, Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-Mail.

 

FOR HOME BUYERS - TIPS FOR MAKING WISE HOME BUYING DECISIONS.

REAL ESTATE SECRETS THE AGENT MAY NOT TELL YOU (Originally published September 6, 2007.  The market has changed dramatically and so have some of the tips below.)

WHAT A REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL MAY NOT TELL YOU CAN BE
DANGEROUS TO YOUR HOME BUYING HEALTH.

Sound serious??  We hope so. The important thing is for us to get your attention before you hit the road with a real estate agent that may not be working in your best interest. Consider the following:

Secret: Dark roofs often do not last as long as light colored roofs. Further, light roofs reduce air conditioning costs by  Homes in MD and VAreflecting sunlight.  Your home inspector will estimate the remaining expected life of the roof as a part of the home inspection. 

Secret:  Attics were meant for ventilation.  If you store belongings in the attic of a home, you may reduce the life of the roof.  Ventilation prevents moisture and mold growth in attics. 

Secret:  If you put flooring over the insulation in your attic floor, you may reduce the insulation properties of the material.  Insulation works best when loose and deep.

Secret: Interest on your mortgage loan and real estate taxes are deducted from your gross income before computing your income tax. Wow.

Secret:  Your home inspector cannot order repairs.  Unless agreed in writing, the seller can agree, refuse or negotiate repairs. 

Secret: The agent's whose name is on the FOR SALEsign in the yard has promised the seller that he/she will get the best price for the seller.  The only information required of a seller's representative would be "material defects".  General condition of a property should be obtained the a home inspection with a contingency to void the contract if the house has serious maintenance, structural problems.

Secret: You can avoid Private Mortgage Insurance with down payments of less than 80% by using the 80/20 loan or 80/15/5 loan.  Many loan instruments popular in the past that helped home buyers avoid Private Mortgage Insurance are no longer available.  FHA and VA financing has gained in popularity with higher loan limits. 

Secret:  Radon inspections are inexpensive and Radon remediation averages about $1,500 or less.

Radon Map Zone 1 = High

Fix your home if your radon level is 4 picoCuries per liter (pCi/L) or higher. Radon levels less than 4 pCi/L still pose a risk, and in many cases may be reduced.

Secret: Earnest money deposits may be forfeited if a buyer falsely represents his/her financial ability to obtain financing.  Buyers who do not cooperate with the financing paragraphs and cause the seller to keep the home off market have caused the seller serious damages and may not get their earnest mondy deposit refunded.

Secret: Real estate agents who work for companies that own lenders, title companies, termite companies, etc. often receive benefits for referrals to those affiliates. 

Secret:  Termite Warranties do not protect your home from termite damage.  Termites cannot read.  Get a termite inspection

Secret: The advertisement for homes for sale in the newspaper, home magazines are placed there by the agent that works for the seller.

Secret: Sellers cannot hide material defects by not providing a Property Condition Disclosure Statement. A material defect is a condition that would or may affect the value of the real estate or present a safety hazard.

Secret: Oral statements are not binding. 

Secret: There is no cooling off period or rescission period unless it is written into the contract. Once the contract is signed and accepted by both parties, it is a legally binding document.

Secret: Personal property does not convey with the real estate. Washer/dryer, etc.must be written in the contract to convey.

Secret: In most states, agents must disclose in writing which party, if any, they represent.

Secret:  When sellers with dog and cat pets move out, they often leave a growing infestation of fleas behind.

Secret: In most states, real estate conveys "as is", meaning - What you see is what you get. However, at the final pre-settlement walk through, appliances, heating/cooling electrical and plumbing must operate as the manufacturer intended.  The "as is" condition may be conditioned on an acceptable home inspection.

Secret: If the furnace filter is very dirty, that is a good indication of poor maintenance.

family homeSecret: Carpet replacement does not always eliminate pet odor.  Carpet "allowances" may not always be permitted with certain types of financing.  Serious home inspections should be made of homes for sale with pets in residence. 

Secret: Home owner additions may not have been code/safety inspected by the county. Who inspected the homeowner installed electrical wiring behind that finished basement wall.  Subsequent owners may have to remove additions, upgrades, etc. if code violations are discovered.  Or, the county may perform "after the fact" code inspections.

Secret: Foreclosures do not always (or even often) sell for less than market. They often sell for more than similar homes in the area.  Foreclosures are usually priced based on an appraisal or comparable sales in the area and then "discounted" for condition. 

Watch out for pet odors when selecting a home to buy.

Secret: Most new home contracts do not have financing contingencies for buyers.

Secret: Conventional loans with less than a 20% down payment usually will require that buyers pay for Private Mortgage Insurance; FHA loans are insured by HUD; VA loans (or a percentage of the loan) are guaranteed by the Veterans Administration.

Secret: Only a buyer's agent can help you negotiate the best possible price, terms and conditions for a home you want to buy. Seller's agent (listing agent) is obligated to obtain the best price, terms and conditions for the seller.

Secret: Homes constructed prior to 1978 may contain lead based paint. You can have a home inspected for lead based paint before or after settlement.  Sellers do not have to agree to mitigate lead based paint.

Secret: Termites gain access to many homes through mulch used in landscaping beds.

Secret: Most co-workers fib about their commute time.

Secret: Offers to purchase real estate that are not in writing may not be enforceable. 

Secret:  Offers to negotiate the price of a home listed for sale have a much higher likelihood of being accepted than an oral offer. 

Secret:  Short Sale contracts between a buyer and a seller/owner are contingent on acceptance by a "third party" which is the owner/seller's lender.  A buyer may cancel a short sale contract up until the time a seller's lender has approved the contract and the buyer's deposit money should not be deposited until the owner/seller's lender has removed the "third party" contingency. 

Secret:  Foreclosures sold by banks favor investment buyers using with cash or with high down payments, no home inspections and/or quick settlement times.

Courtesy:  Lenn Harley, Broker, Homefinders.com, 800-711-7988, E-mail.

Copyright 2007 Lenn Harley

WHO PAYS THE LENDER FEES WITH A VA LOAN? Chapter 2.

On April 29, 2009, I posted an article about VA lender fees and who pays. 

WHO PAYS THE LENDER FEES WITH A VA LOAN?? LINES 808, 809 AND 810 OF THE HUD-1 IN DISPUTE.

                                                  * * * *   HARD CORE REAL ESTATE TALK  * * * *

Since the article wasn't featured, it didn't receive much attention.  However, this morning I received a comment from Brian Brady that inspired me to post an update in this continuing saga of "Lender Fees and VA Loans, Who Pays?" 

Snippet from Brian Brady's comment:  "This is stupidity on the lender's part." Brian's full comment can be read in comments the original post.

Thanks Brian. 

You're right about it being stupidity on the lenders part.  He's lost me a about 15 other brokers/agents as a loan resource.  Once I found out that this, charge the lender fees to the VA buyer, was "company policy", they were history. 

When I asked him to kindly check with his superiors to make sure that it was policy or just habit, once he said that it was policy, I simply told him that I would pay them.  My goal was to get my buyers through settlement.   

I asked for a new HUD-1 with a credit of $550 from the Buyers Broker and showing the full $11,000 credit from the seller to the buyer.  I'm comfortable paying these fees for any VA buyer. 

When I got the new HUD-1, the lender fees were gone.  The loan officer or the company ate them.

Sadly, it will cost him in the future because I'll never send him another buyer.  My buyers are well qualified, prepared and cooperative and he knows it.  For a stinking $550 he lost a pipeline of business. 

One agent asked me why I wouldn't use him in the future since they finally did the right thing.  There are many reasons. 

1.  I don't believe that their mortgage company's policy on lender fees on VA loans follows the VA guidelines.

2.  He caused me 2 full days of back and forth between the title attorney, the lender, the seller's agent and the buyer to explain why the buyer couldn't pay those fees.  It should never have come up.

3.  Since the mortgage company's policy has not changed, they are probably still charging other VA buyers these fees through the smoke and mirrors of the HUD-1 every day that they process a VA loan.  Since many buyer's agents can't or don't read a HUD-1, their VA buyers are not protected and will just pay.

4.  This mortgage company is still costing me money.  I'm paying my attorney to investigate this matter.  We write a letter to the General Counsel of the VA Administration for a clarification of the guideline.  We received a response from the VA Admin. with the name of the investigator who is processing our request.  Then I'll have to go to the local boards to ask for a clarification of the paragraph that describes lender fees closing costs in the VA Addendum. 

My VA buyer spent 10 years of his life in the Navy on submarines serving our country.  This mortgage company is willing to throw him under the bus for a stinking $550.  That's not a company with which I want to do business.  Even if they have no interest in the special place that VA buyers have in our housing industry, they should at least have an understanding of the VA financing guidelines. 

I'll publish the results of the VA investigation when it's received. 

No.  They will not get buyer referrals from me. 

                                                       Military Buyers

ALL REAL ESTATE PEOPLE--Government is trying to kill owner financing! HELP!

CALL TO ACTION!!

HELP STOP THIS OUTRAGE!

I published this ReBlog to the public to gain the widest possible coverage.  This is a blatent attempt to strip the American home owner of their property rights and the right to buy and sell real estate. 

This is nothing more or less than an attempt to limit the freedoms of American citizens. 

Soon, the property rights of Americans will be totally subverted to the whims of Congress and the Executive Branch of government.

I seriously doubt that this would pass constitutional muster, but how many home owner/sellers have the capital to mount these types of legal actions??

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Via Security Trust Mortgage, Inc.:

This just sent to my mortgage office. It will harm consumers, mortgage brokers and many real estate broker. We need to STOP THIS GOVERNMENT NONSENSE! Pass this on to every person / organization .

 

Marvin, H.R. 1728 has recently passed the U.S. House of Representatives and has been sent to the Senate for a vote. It says you won't be able to sell residential real estate using owner financing more than once every three years unless you have a government license.

Please take a few moments to read this e-mail and then contact your two U.S. Senators. Sample letters are at the end. If you need your senators' contact information, go here:
http://snipurl.com/senatorscontactinfo

Thank you for helping to stop this horrible bill.

 

Senate Bill Restricts Seller Financing --
Take Action Now To Stop It

Clint Hinman, editor of NoteWorthy Newsletter, has done a great
job of explaining H.R. 1728:

HR 1728 - WHAT IT SAYS AND WHY IT WILL HURT CONSUMERS AND SMALL BUSINESS
The U.S. Senate will soon be considering a bill that will severely
restrict the property rights of millions of Americans and the way
you do business going forward.

WHAT ARE WE TALKING ABOUT?

HR 1728 was recently passed by the House of Representatives with
little fanfare and even less press coverage. Not until it was
referred to the Senate did it grow legs and start getting the
attention of everyone it will affect. The full text and status of the bill can
be read here: http://snipurl.com/hr1728

WHAT DOES IT SAY?

The proposed legislation focuses upon the predatory lending practices
of yesteryear and the resulting subprime debacle, imposing stringent
requirements on mortgage brokers, servicers, appraisers, etc.
Unfortunately, owner financing gets caught up in the dragnet, and the
impact could be devastating. The offending text of the bill is in
section 101(3)(e), which defines who is exempt from being a
'licensed mortgage originator':

'(E) does not include, with respect to a residential mortgage loan,
a person, estate, or trust that provides mortgage financing for the
sale of 1 property in any 36-month period, provided that such loan--
(i) is fully amortizing;
(ii) is with respect to a sale for which the seller determines in
good faith and documents that the buyer has a reasonable ability to
repay the loan;
(iii) has a fixed rate or an adjustable rate that is adjustable after
5 or more years, subject to reasonable annual and lifetime
limitations on interest rate increases; and
(iv) meets any other criteria the Federal banking agencies may
prescribe.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?

As long as you provide owner financing on the sale of your property
no more than one time every three years, you will not be in violation
of the statute. Any individual who does sell more than one property
every three years via owner financing will be in violation unless
they are a 'licensed mortgage originator'. State laws vary, but
typically a 'licensed mortgage originator' must have a $25,000 to
$50,000 surety bond, three years mortgage origination experience, a
physical business office in the state in which the property is
located, and continuing education requirements. In other words, very
few, if any, Mom & Pop sellers will ever jump through the hoops to
become a 'licensed mortgage originator'.

WHAT KINDS OF TRANSACTIONS WILL BE COVERED?

Selling your own home using a land contract or owner-held mortgage
with the intent of getting a faster sale, a higher sales price, or
higher rate of interest than is available in other investments will
no longer be an option (unless that sale is limited to once every
three years). Carrying back second mortgages on investment
properties you sell will also be a violation of the law. In fact,
any kind of installment sale on residential properties (including
houses, condos, mobile homes, and residential land lots more than
once every three years will be subject to this legislation.

The original bill presented to the House didn't make any exceptions
to owner financing. The National Association of Realtors argued to
include the exception of one owner financed property every three
years. Without addressing owner financing, many in the House
contended owner financing would become the 'loophole' for
predatory lenders to continue their exploitative ways.

WHAT'S THE PROBLEM?

Owner financed notes are not loans. There is no transfer of money,
no points or closing costs, and no mortgage brokers involved. They
are not created with the intent of selling them off to
government-sponsored entities like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or FHA.
They are INSTALLMENT SALES. The borrower receives no money that must
be repaid, only a property on which periodic (read: installment)
payments must be made.

Just as egregious is the loss of private property rights. The
government should have no power to legislate how property owners
dispense of their properties. If a property owner is willing to
finance the sale of a property to a buyer, whom is the government
trying to protect by making the transaction illegal? States already
have usury laws and servicing requirements that protect the
purchasers.

If passed by the Senate, this legislation will:

1. Severely limit the number of property owners who can legally
owner finance the sale of their properties.

2. Make violators out of everyday Americans who, unaware they
are breaking the law, are merely trying to sell their properties
and/or offering financing to prospective homeowners who cannot obtain
conventional financing.

3. Require obscene amounts of due diligence on the part of note
investors to make sure all facets of this legislation have been
complied with.

4. Give prospective homeowners even fewer options to realize the
American Dream of homeownership.

5. Cost the U.S. taxpayers over $400 million dollars to enforce.

WHAT CAN I DO?

Contact your senator via phone, fax, e-mail or snail mail. Implore
them to vote NO on the bill as it's currently written. You can get
your senator's contact information here. We have included some
sample letters assembled by Vena Cox-Jones that will assist you in
knowing what to say and how to say it. Additionally, we at
NoteWorthy have written a fourth letter for owner financed note
brokers.

Please keep in mind that our best plan of action is to address how
this legislation will hurt 'the little guy', i.e. buyers and
sellers of properties. Even though we all consider ourselves 'the
little guy', the government has made it clear that anyone
associated with mortgages is 'the bad guy', and has little
interest in how this bill may affect your business, your family, or
your livelihood. Be civil, cordial, and intelligent in your
communications with your senators' offices. Remember you can catch
more flies with honey than with vinegar.

Take action today or suffer the consequences of this legislation
tomorrow. ASK YOUR SENATORS TO VOTE NO ON HR 1728!!!

SAMPLE LETTERS

IF YOU ARE A NOTE BROKER
Dear Senator [name];

My name is Clint Hinman and I have been a resident of Washington
since 1993.

I am writing to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the "Mortgage
Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act".

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward
mortgage reform, the inclusion of private property owners in the Act
(see section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choices of
Washingtonians and the ability of homeowners to sell properties in a
market already languishing from an abundance of unsold properties.

As someone who buys and brokers owner financed notes, I encounter
hundreds of instances every year where home sellers and buyers came
to an agreement for an installment sale on a property that the owner
desperately needed to sell (often to avoid foreclosure) and the buyer
desperately wanted to buy, but could not raise the down payment
needed for conventional financing.

In every situation, these sales were win-win deals for the buyer and
seller: The seller was able to get rid of an unwanted property to a
buyer who loved it, and the buyer was able to get a new home at an
affordable payment and interest rate with none of the usual costs
(points, application fees etc) inherent in conventional mortgage
transactions.

In Washington, these transactions are already regulated by state law.
A low maximum interest rate is already in place, and both the buyer
and seller are protected by other regulations at the state level.

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from
the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them.
In its current form, it would all but shut off the "owner financing"
market, which is often the only option for many sellers to sell and
buyers to buy right now.

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from
transacting business that is beneficial to both of them -- they do
not cause the problems this bill seeks to solve. They do not originate
these notes to sell to government-sponsored entities (Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac, FHA, etc.), but instead hold them as investments, often
as a source of long-term income. HR 1728 would be extremely harmful
to thousands of your constituents if passed as currently worded.

This legislation will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer
sellers will be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY
foreclosure, as fewer buyers who have recently experienced
foreclosure will be able to re-start the process of home ownership
inexpensively and easily by negotiating owner financing.

Thank you for your consideration.

Respectfully,

Clint Hinman
Proficient Note Buyers LLC
Phone #
email

IF YOU HAVE A REAL ESTATE LICENSE
Dear Senator [name];

My name is Vena Jones-Cox and I am a life-long resident of
Cincinnati.

I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the
"Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act".

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward
mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see
section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of
Ohioans and the ability of home owners to sell properties in this
already-slow market.

As a real estate broker, I have seen several dozen cases in the past
year of home sellers and buyers coming to an agreement for an
installment sale on a property that the owner desperately needed to
sell (often to avoid foreclosure) and the buyer desperately wanted
to buy, but could not raise the downpayment needed for conventional
financing.

In all cases, these sales turned out to be win-win deals for the
buyer and seller; the seller was able to get rid of an unwanted
property to a buyer who loved it, and the buyer was able to get his
new home at an affordable payment and interest rates with none of the
usual costs (points, application fees etc) inherent in more
conventional mortgage transactions.

In Ohio, these transactions are already regulated by state law: a low
maximum interest rate is already in place, and both the buyer and
seller are protected by other regulations at the state level.

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from
the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them.
In its current form, it would all but shut off the "owner financing"
market that is the only way that many sellers can sell and many
buyers can buy right now.

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from
transacting business that is beneficial to both of them--they are not
the problem that the bill seeks to solve. HR 1728 would be extremely
harmful to thousands of your constituents.

It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will
be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure,
as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be
able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and
easily by negotiating owner financing.

Thank you for your consideration;

Vena Jones-Cox
Licensed Real Estate Broker license #
Phone #
email

IF YOU SELL HOUSES WITH OWNER FINANCING
Dear Senator [name];

My name is Vena Jones-Cox and I am a life-long resident of
Cincinnati.

I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the
"Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act".

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward
mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see
section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of
Ohioans and the ability of homeowners to sell properties in this
already-slow market.

As a professional housing provider, I sell several houses each year
to home buyers on installment sale [or, if you have not purchased a
property, add here: "I had planned to sell several houses this year
on installment sale]--a practice that would become impossible under
this law in its current form. I find that in today's slow market, the best way for me to help buyers who desperately want to become homeowners, but who cannot raise the down payment or meet the other terms needed for
conventional financing, is to allow them to make payments directly to
me.

These sales are win-win deals for both the buyer and myself; I am
able to turn over homes that I've bought and rehabbed (often from
foreclosures) to buyers who love and can afford them, and the buyer
can get his new home at an affordable payment and interest rates with
none of the usual costs (points, application fees etc) inherent in
more conventional mortgage transactions.

In Ohio, these transactions are already regulated by state law: a low
maximum interest rate is already in place, and both the buyer and
seller are protected by other regulations at the state level.

Without the ability to sell homes in this way, I will no longer be
able to invest in and renovate any of the tens of thousands of
vacant, ugly houses placed on the market by the foreclosure crisis,
and my small-but-beneficial business will literally be in ruins.
Perhaps more importantly, the homeowner-buyers that I serve will be
forced to rent rather than moving toward the American dream of home
ownership.

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from
the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them.
In its current form, it would all but shut off the "owner financing"
market that is the only way that many sellers can sell and many
buyers can buy right now.

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from
transacting business that is beneficial to both of them--they are not
the problem that the bill seeks to solve. HR 1728 would be extremely
harmful to thousands of your constituents.

It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will
be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure,
as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be
able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and
easily by negotiating owner financing.

Thank you for your consideration;

Vena Jones-Cox
Perfect Properties, inc.
Phone number
email

IF YOU BUY HOUSES WITH OWNER FINANCING
Dear Senator [name];

My name is Vena Jones-Cox and I am a life-long resident of
Cincinnati.

I am writing you to encourage you to vote NO on HR 1728, the
"Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act".

While many of the provisions of the act are positive steps toward
mortgage reform, the inclusion of private owners in the act (see
section 101(3)(e)) will enormously reduce the housing choice of
Ohioans and the ability of homeowners to sell properties in this
already-slow market.

In the past year, I have purchased and renovated several homes--made
possible only because the sellers of these homes were able to sell to
me using owner financing in an unrestricted way.

For many of these property owners, seller financing was the only way
to unburden themselves of an unwanted property that, in some cases,
was headed toward foreclosure before I purchased it.

Without this ability, I cannot continue to buy and renovate
properties in the neighborhoods that so need my colleagues and me to
invest our time, energy, and money in rehabbing properties. Bank
financing is not an option for these properties because of the
condition; only financing carried by the sellers will suffice.

Section 101(3)(e) would keep my sellers from utilizing this method of
getting rid of unwanted properties in today's market, should they
have more than 1 to sell.

In defense of private property rights, owners should be exempted from
the burdensome and unnecessary rules that this law foists upon them.
In its current form, it would all but shut off the "owner financing"
market that is the only way that many sellers can sell and many
buyers can buy right now.

PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS RESTRICTION ON PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS PASS THE SENATE. It is unnecessary to stop private buyers and sellers from
transacting business that is beneficial to both of them--they are not
the problem that the bill seeks to solve. HR 1728 would be extremely
harmful to thousands of your constituents.

It will exacerbate the problem OF foreclosure, as fewer sellers will
be able to sell their homes to avoid it, and CAUSED BY foreclosure,
as fewer buyers who have recently experienced foreclosure will be
able to re-start the process of home ownership inexpensively and
easily by negotiating owner financing.

Thank you for your consideration;

Vena Jones-Cox
Perfect Properties, inc.
Phone number
email