June 2008
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    Archive for June, 2008

    06 27th, 2008

    A New Buying Season Begins

    By sjalot • Apr 1st, 2008 • Category: Features ShareThis

    “It’s the start of the buying season,” says Walter Molony, Senior Public Affairs Specialist with the National Association of Realtors. Molony specializes in tracking industry trends and statistics. He says spring is traditionally the best time of the year to buy property, and the forecast for this season looks no different. As a matter of fact, it’s been several years since opportunities for buyers have looked so good. There are more homes on the market at this time of the year, making it a premium time to close a deal. For buyers, the good news just keeps coming.

    “Lots of people wait until spring to put their house on the market because they know the buyers will be there,” says Molony. “Things warm up and it’s a nice time to go out and shop for a house.” According to Molony, this spring the market will favor buyers even more than it has during the last several years. “There’s a unique opportunity right now that hasn’t existed since 2000,” he says. “That is the willingness of sellers to negotiate.”

    Sellers and home builders are much more willing to make concessions in many areas, including sale price and terms. This spring, sellers are going to be especially motivated. Once inventories level off, home prices will begin to climb again and the bargaining power may return to the seller. If you wait too long, you could miss out on some great opportunities. You never know when the market will actually bottom out and you don’t want to get caught in the upswing, or even worse, a bidding war with other buyers.

    The National Association of Realtors (NAR) expects relatively flat activity throughout the first and second quarters of the year, with a notable increase in the second half of the year as higher loan limits are implemented. That means opportunities for buyers will be ripe in the spring. The NAR also predicts that the government’s move to stabilize
    the mortgage industry could result in more than 300,000 additional home sales. “Home sales will increase when loan limits increase,” explains Molony. Interest rates are lower and the move to stabilize the mortgage industry should bode well for the housing industry.

    In more good news, some areas are still appreciating at a steady pace, making it an ideal time to invest. Real estate professionals say the important thing to remember about real estate is that it’s local, and looking at national statistics can sometimes be misleading. In other words, just because the sky seems to be falling across the nation doesn’t mean there aren’t areas that are still stable.

    Cities in states throughout the Southeast are in particularly good shape. The Raleigh/Durham/Cary region in North Carolina has seen steady gains in home prices in the last six to nine months, according to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO). Other notable southeastern cities with appreciating home values include Savannah and Columbus, GA; Florence and Columbia, SC; Knoxville and Chattanooga, TN; as well as several cities throughout Alabama. OFHEO studies show housing prices in all of these cities have seen appreciation of five percent or more.

    Interest rates are low and inventory is high. There’s really no better time to get out there and find your dream home in your ideal community. If you’ve been thinking about a few different areas, pick one at the top of your list and make the trip. There are several discovery packages available through this magazine that will allow you to stay at communities in your selected city. Use this unique opportunity to meet with residents and learn just what they think of their community. Do this with at least five communities in the city you’ve chosen, so you can make comparisons and survey more than one option. Do it now, so that next spring, instead of looking for that perfect community, you’ll be living in it.

    Please call or email Tom & Kibbi Rieber at ERA Sand & Sea Realty Group in Ocean Isle Beach North Carolina, paradise waiting……….. 1-877-263-6732 or Tom.Rieber@gmail.com



    06 25th, 2008

    No tax hike included in county budget

    By CAROLINE CURRAN, Staff writer BOLIVIA—With soaring gas prices and increased food costs, Brunswick County residents won’t have to worry about one increase this year—property tax rates.
    County commissioners on Monday night voted to leave the ad valorem tax rate at its current rate of 30.5 cents per $100 of valuation for the upcoming fiscal year, which begins July 1.
    But the $224.6 million budget commissioners approved along with the tax rate doesn’t leave much wiggle room.
    Many ideas pitched to commissioners at their early spring budget retreat have been trimmed from the budget.
    “Many of the goals and objectives were great ideas; very much needed,” county manager Marty Lawing said, referring to county department heads’ budget requests.
    “Not many of those items still remain in the budget.”
    The county’s general fund budget totals $169.3 million, with $11.5 million slated for fund balance appropriations to fund major capital improvement projects, capital outlay and major expenditures.
    Lawing told commissioners last month when he first presented the proposed budget property tax revenues make up 56 percent of the general fund revenue.
    “One year removed from a general re-appraisal of real property in Brunswick County, the smallest percentage increase in a tax revenue in the last three years is projected due primarily to the slowdown in the constructions and additions to the tax base,” Lawing explained.
    The water fund was set at $23.8 million with the water capital reserve fund approved at $12.6 million. The wastewater fund was approved at $13.1 million and the wastewater capital reserve fund was set at $4.2 million.
    After first unveiling the proposed budget May 19, Lawing said several changes were made to balance the budget.
    “Following the workshop last week, we had to make some adjustments to balance the budget. Some of these included the reduction of seven positions that are currently vacant.”
    But two positions were added to the budget, bringing the net reduction of positions to five.
    Lawing first proposed no additional positions in this year’s budget, saying department heads will be asked to “be creative and change the way of doing business to achieve desired performance outcomes.”
    Other items sliced from the budget include: three vacant human resource aides for the department of social services; a vacant property development tech in the central permitting department; $12,000 for equipment for a government access channel; $120,000 for various park improvements and more than $100,000 for software.
    “We felt we could cut those costs,” Lawing told commissioners.
    “The budget as you see it is now balanced with those changes.”
    Budget highlights
    •Brunswick County Schools will receive $31.8 million, with $4.4 million included in the school capital reserve fund. Brunswick Community College will receive $3.4 million. Libraries will receive $1.5 million.
    •Department budgets include: $8.2 million for the sheriff’s office, $6.4 million for emergency management, $6.4 million for emergency medical services, $2.6 million for the central communications center, $12.8 million for the solid waste department and $16 million for debt service.
    •Total revenues include $100.6 million in ad valorem taxes, $21.8 million in local option sales tax, $6.5 million in permits and fees, $3.7 million in sales and services and $3.4 million in other taxes and licenses.



    06 23rd, 2008







    06 9th, 2008



    06 9th, 2008



    06 4th, 2008