Gender: Female
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 53
Sign: Aries
City: RIVERSIDE
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 12/8/2008
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Monday, December 15, 2008
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Current mood:  accomplished
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4652377n%3fsource=search_video The Foreclosure "Swat Team" ~ starring Jeff Hague ~ including footage of the All REO Preservation Services crew doing a trashout. Watch CBS Videos Online
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Wednesday, December 03, 2008
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December 2nd, 2008 by admin
The economic crisis that put a dent on the housing market and caused a surge of foreclosures has created a new startup business, firms that clean foreclosed properties.
Real estate agents are hired by banks to resell the property, and a firm is also contacted to clean up the foreclosed home after its owners have been evicted.
Web sites have also been created that offer advice on how to start a business in foreclosure cleanup. "Entrepreneur Magazine," even featured the foreclosure cleanup provider, Cyprex on its 2008 list of "Hot 100 Fastest Growing Business."
Meanwhile, some real estate companies have ventured into this type of business, performing eviction lockouts and providing property management services, including home repairs and cleaning.
ALL REO Preservation owner Linda Hall said that her business has become successful that she is developing a plan to provide employment to other contractors. She currently has subcontractors and crews in various states.
Hall's company also offers training programs for startup businesses. She explained that sometimes the work just involves changing the locks and cutting the grasses because some of the foreclosed houses are in better shape.
Data from the Mortgage Bankers Association showed that, as of June 2008, there were more than 4 million homeowners who were behind a month or more on their loan payments.
Moody's Economy.com predicted that about 2.8 million homeowners in the United States will lose their homes before the end of 2008. Some will sell their homes for less than the market value of the property, while others will turn over their properties to their lenders.
A homeowner is evicted from his home if he and his lender failed to come up with a deal that will allow him to remain in his property. It is the job of the county sheriff to deliver the notice for eviction lockout to the owner of the foreclosed home.
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Saturday, November 29, 2008
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Posted by g.singlaub on Nov 28th, 2008

The San Francisco Chronicle has a piece that describes a new business opportunity that has great growth potential;
"The nation's housing bust and economic downfalls have greatly increased the number of homes being foreclosed and taken by banks. The bank typically hires a real estate agent to resell it, but someone has to come in and clean up after the last residents. That's led to a boom in a new type of startup business — cleaning up foreclosures, also known as "real-estate owned" or REOs…Web sites aimed at wannabe entrepreneurs — like www.explorestartups.com — frequently suggest starting up a foreclosure cleanup business as moneymaker. Entrepreneur Magazine even picked a foreclosure cleanup business called Cyprexx for its 2008 "Hot 100 Fastest Growing Businesses" list."
In the US, where over 4 million homeowners are at least a month late on their mortgages, and more than 2 million homes will be foreclosed upon in the next 13 month (according to Moody's Economy.com), the trash out biz op makes sense, but there may be a few negatives associated with the job;
"It's not as common for the occupant to stay full-term after the foreclosure, but it does happen, Drake said. In one case, his crew found the resident still inside, armed and refusing to leave. Fortunately, he said, police were able to safely resolve that situation. Companies like Drake's usually try to the "cash-for-keys strategy" first, in which a homeowner facing foreclosure is offered a small sum, usually between $1,000 and $3,000, in exchange for a clean, quick departure and handing over the keys."
With jobs in real estate sales and mortgage brokeraging disappearing, the new business model may provide gainful employment for some. The Chronicle features Linda Hall who formerly worked as a bookkeeper before starting her own trash-out company All REO Preservation in California, who said of her company, "We've been butt-kicking busy."
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Thursday, November 27, 2008
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This story ran November 27, 2008, across the nation in several newspapers.
My phone interview with reporter, Jessica Pasko, actually took place a couple months before that.
I was in the process of interviewing with a reporter from Associated Press in Los Angeles the week prior to this publication and had no clue my interview with AP New York was even going to be used.
The first I heard about it is when a potential preservation vendor brought it to my attention in an e-mail. So much for being the first to know, right? {{smile}}
So, without further ado, here's the story:
 
Housing Bust Leads To Cleanup Boom
FORT EDWARD, N.Y., Nov. 27, 2008
(AP) Several men wordlessly carry out furniture, broken computers and boxes of garbage from a large blue house on a quiet upstate street on a brisk autumn morning. Rusting bikes and an old grill lay discarded in the overgrown backyard which is spotted with empty beer cans and crushed milk cartons. The mood is oddly serene as the men unload the remnants of what was one someone's home.
Todd Drake, manager of Empire Real Estate Management in Latham, is overseeing yet another eviction. The home's former owner has long gone, leaving just debris and an old phone number in his stead. After a county sheriff's deputy checks to make sure no one is inside, crews head in to change the locks and clean out the refuse - also known as a "trashout." Drake is stoic as he watches his crew.
"These evictions are the last resort," he explained. "I'm not here to judge that - the circumstances or the lifestyle."
The nation's housing bust and economic downfalls have greatly increased the number of homes being foreclosed and taken by banks. The bank typically hires a real estate agent to resell it, but someone has to come in and clean up after the last residents. That's led to a boom in a new type of startup business - cleaning up foreclosures, also known as "real-estate owned" or REOs.
Web sites aimed at wannabe entrepreneurs - like www.explorestartups.com - frequently suggest starting up a foreclosure cleanup business as moneymaker. Entrepreneur Magazine even picked a foreclosure cleanup business called Cyprexx for its 2008 "Hot 100 Fastest Growing Businesses" list.
Real estate firms have also taken on this side of the business, handling eviction lockout and property management services such as repairs and cleaning out the houses. Sometimes the firms contract another service to do the messy work, but others, like Drake's firm, do it all.
"It's just becoming a way of life. It's sad. we try not to have too many opinions out on the field to be honest," said Linda Hall of All REO Preservation in Riverside, Calif. "You kind of have to (stay detached from it), you can't think about the circumstances of it."
On the street where's Drake's crew was cleaning up, neighbors said they weren't too worried about whether the foreclosure would hurt their home values.
"I think they just got into trouble financially," said William Trackey, who lives across the street. He said there was a man, his girlfriend and a couple of children living there.
"It's a nice neighborhood and I've lived here for a long time," said Trackey, who says foreclosed homes are a rarity in this neighborhood of primarily owner-occupied homes. "You don't often even see many homes for sale on the street."
According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, over 4 million homeowners were at least one month behind on their loans at the end of June according to the latest statistics, and almost 500,000 had started the foreclosure process. An estimated 2.8 million U.S. households will face foreclosure, turn over their homes to their lender or sell the properties for less than their mortgage's value by the end of next year, predicts Moody's Economy.com.
When a deal can't be negotiated, an eviction may have to be obtained from the courts. In those cases, the county sheriff delivers the eviction lockout notice and peaceably reviews the situation.
It's not as common for the occupant to stay full-term after the foreclosure, but it does happen, Drake said. In one case, his crew found the resident still inside, armed and refusing to leave. Fortunately, he said, police were able to safely resolve that situation. Companies like Drake's usually try to the "cash-for-keys strategy" first, in which a homeowner facing foreclosure is offered a small sum, usually between $1,000 and $3,000, in exchange for a clean, quick departure and handing over the keys.
Hall was working in the bookkeeping business in 2007 when a client got her then-boyfriend involved with foreclosure cleanup. In February, she launched her own business, All REO Preservation.
"We've been butt-kicking busy," said Hall. "I work in the field as much as I work in the office."
So busy that Hall's even working on putting together a nationwide plan to give work to other contractors, and currently has crews and subcontractors in several other states. Her business also offers its own training program for startups.
"Some of the homes are in pretty good shape and it's just a matter of changing the locks, cutting the grass, etc.," said Hall. "If it's a big, heavy trashout, those homes have either never been maintained or people are angry when they move out and do a little damage."
As foreclosure rates have risen, so too have the number of trashouts. While people typically take their valuables when the move out, sometimes they'll leave things behind like photographs and kids' pictures, and even family pets. Hall said she recently found two dogs that had been left behind when their owners left, a boxer and a pit bull puppy.
Many occupants even take the copper piping out of the house when they leave, while other people actually scout out the vacated homes to steal the copper piping. The troubled economy has led to rise in copper and scrap metal theft - prices for which have increased in the past few years.
While there are no statistics tracking copper thefts from vacated homes, real estate agents, contractors and police departments around the country are reporting a significant rise in these thefts; police in some counties report a 100 percent increase in the number of copper thefts from 2007. That causes more headaches for those who have to clean, repair and sell the houses.
"There's a real correlation between the state of the economy, the foreclosure rate and copper being pulled from homes," said Boston-area real estate broker Marc Charney. "We're seeing somewhere in the neighborhood of 50-60 percent of the houses we have (getting stripped), some during the acquiring process."
"We put (the house) on the market, we might even find a buyer for it, and then somewhere between them buying it and us needing to close, people will break in and steal all the copper," said Charney. "If the lender for the new buyer finds out, that's a problem. It messes up the whole process."
As for the stuff that's left behind, most counties require all personal property to be put in storage for 30 days to give the previous owner a chance to reclaim it. Most of the time, they don't.
"Every house and situation is different," said Hall. "Every circumstance for people losing their house is different too. Sometimes you see medical equipment left behind and you sometimes can assume they lost someone and just couldn't keep up with the medical bills."
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Thursday, April 17, 2008
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This is a trashout we did especially for CBS 2 / KCAL 9 back in April, 2008.
Unfortunately, there is no static link to the original video so, if it looks a little fuzzy it's because I had to record it with my camera from the monitor.
But here we are in all our glory. [My first time on TV so I'm a little camera shy.]
http://s415.photobucket.com/albums/pp240/NoShyAngel/Videos/?action=view¤t=HPIM7399.flv
Enjoy!
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Friday, February 01, 2008
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Can't Pay Your Mortgage? Trash Your House and Leave
As housing markets tank, "trash-outs" are on the rise, leaving owners, lenders and banks fighting over who should pay the clean-up bill.
February 1, 2008.
by Scott Thill,
AlterNet.
On the lookout for disturbing trends? Here's one for your pile: According to a recent article in Fortune, there has been a noticeable increase in not just fraud but arson that has kept pace with the housing depression. Professionals in the insurance and lending industry are bracing themselves for all manner of similar situations, as homeowners either trash, or simply leave their trash lying around their houses, often taking off without even claiming their furniture. This is already a dirty problem in the housing business, with owners, lenders and banks having to figure out a way to stick each other with the check when tenants destroy their property on their way out the door. Woe is the person left behind to clean up the chaos.
"We just estimated a trashout yesterday where we're going to have to drain the pool," one Fontana , CA resident posted on AgentsOnline.Net, a resource and idea site for realtors, "and the stench from it when you enter the backyard is overwhelming. Then, of course there are mosquitoes all over the top and it's been sitting so long without chemicals that it's green on top and murky black on the bottom. We've already had to refuse one pool because of its really creepy condition and I'm not so sure about this one either. [I] just hope we don't find the previous homeowner at the bottom when we drain it."
"Vacant homes attract vandals and depress property values," explained Douglas Robinson, spokesman for NeighborWorks America , a nonprofit created by Congress to offer financial and technical support and training for community-based revitalization. "This negatively affects existing owners and reduces local property tax revenues. But very few homeowners walk away, although those who do believe that is their best option. Of course, trying to get a loan modification so that the payments are affordable is their best option."
As if it were that easy. Especially for those homeowners, including those with good and bad credit, who have seen the light at the end of our current economic crisis only to decide there isn't a house in it. In fact, one could almost see the Wall Street Journal frown with disapproval upon reading the title of their December 2007 piece, "Now Even Borrowers With Good Credit Pose Risks." But the title no doubt was influenced by the comments of Bank of America CEO Kenneth Lewis in the piece itself. It seems that Lewis, whose company recently bought the housing meltdown's poster boy for bad lending, Countrywide, for $4 billion in stock, nevertheless feels confounded that customers of questionable loans would simply choose to abandon ship, er, house. "There's been a change in social attitudes toward default," Mr. Lewis told the Journal. "We're seeing people who are current on their credit cards but are defaulting on their mortgages. I'm astonished that people would walk away from their homes." While Lewis may scratch his head in disbelief, employees of the bank Wachovia have an explanation that might work for him: Homeowners have crunched the numbers and decided their houses are worth less than their mortgages. According to a recent conference call, many of Wachovia's current losses in California are originating not from subprime buyers fallen on financial hardship, but from homeowners who can pay their cleverly structured loans but are just choosing a different fate. "They've been from people that have otherwise had the capacity to pay," a Wachovia spokesperson said on the call, "but have basically just decided not to because they feel like they've lost equity, value in their properties. It's hard to know right now, but we may have seen somewhat of an acceleration problem…as people have reached that conclusion."
But that is what things usually do when you drive them off a cliff: Accelerate, ever faster. The open secret about the current housing crisis is that it is almost wholly built upon debt, which is to say the opposite of money. Everyone owes everyone: American banks borrow money from overseas, structure bizarre loans at home for Americans, which are then sliced and diced into securities and sold back to the international debt markets. The whole thing is a feedback loop made of bills needing to be paid. The best-kept secret of the crisis, however, is that homeowners at the mercy of those greedy banks and lenders -- including Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozilo, who sold off his stock before the crisis to net a cool $290 million while the company's value shrank to practically nothing -- are bailing out and leaving the banks and lenders to sort out the mess of past-due notices themselves.
And that's a problem the banks or lenders can't handle, according to Tricia Canites, managing attorney for Human Rights/Fair Housing Commission in Sacramento , one of the housing meltdown's most impacted cities. "The banks are not in the business of renting or selling properties," she explained by phone. "If the homeowners are willing to work with them, banks will work to get something rather than nothing. But it's a lose-lose situation, because you have homeowners who are willing to leave."
Not that they should, if you ask the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Many of those fed-up homeowners, according to HUD, might not understand the intricacies of their financial agreements and relationships with their lenders, and may miss an opportunity for renegotiation if they decide to simply mail in their keys and never look back.
"We strongly encourage homeowners facing a financial crisis to stay in close touch with the lender holding the mortgage on their home," advised Larry Bush, Public Affairs Officer for HUD's California network. "Because of the number of foreclosures, many lenders would prefer not to add to the inventory of foreclosed homes but instead work out an agreement with the homeowner. Lenders likely have higher costs for a vacant home than a homeowner has for living in the home. They have to make certain the property is kept in good condition, in most jurisdictions this means keeping the electricity and water hookups active, security monitoring to ensure there are no squatters or break-ins, and new appraisal and inspection. Homeowners absorb many of those costs."
Of course it's expensive, one might say, but it's arguably more expensive for a homeowner to hang onto a money pit. Billions of equity lost, companies teetering on the brink of bankruptcy, the dollar sinking like a stone, the recession at the door: Some homeowners read those tea leaves and decide to leave well enough alone.
While that kind of payback might not sit well with banks and lenders who kick-started the so-called subprime crisis by taking advantage of ridiculously low lending rates, courtesy of free-marketeer and now-disgraced Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, they cannot argue with its purely financial logic. These are people who refer to the market as a living thing, and place their bets across its expansive craps table in hopes of hitting the mad jackpot. And for the years following Greenspan's loony monetary policy, that jackpot was in housing.
"Most of the homeowners now facing problems bought their homes when the market was at its recent height in 2005-2006, and paid prices that have not held up in the current market," added Bush. "That leaves the homeowner owing more than the current value of the home."
That, at least for conventional gamblers, is usually a sign to walk away from the table, which is what compromised homeowners are doing in greater numbers than before. But it has yet to reach the stage where it is has become an epidemic concern, according to Bush.
"There isn't a one-size rule for all communities," he explained. "We see some homeowners losing their homes, but HUD certainly does not see an exodus underway. In many cases, the trend is now toward resolving the financial challenges."
Perhaps for now, in an economic crisis that looks like it might have a bottom, or could be solved by the recent bipartisan band-aid designed to give taxpayers rebate checks ranging from $600 to $1200. But that's not the kind of money that is going to save a homeowner from default or bankruptcy; it's merely spending money the government hopes will be liquidated at the mall, so that its resultant consumption can jump-start our debt-based economy back to life again. And, for many homeowners, even ones with good credit, loan modifications are just different arrangements of the same basic pain, one with root in the American Dream of housing for sure, but also one with root in dense financial contracts no one has time to read because they're too busy working to pay them off. As an alternative, rentals offer less migraines and less responsibility, because responsibility at the bottom and accountability at the top are rare things these days.
Too bad one is frowned upon by the powers-that-be, while the other is ignored outright.
Scott Thill runs the online mag Morphizm.com. His writing has appeared on Salon, XLR8R, All Music Guide, Wired and others.
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