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Plumbing overhaul worth every penny

By Bill and Kevin Burnett, Thursday, April 9, 2009.

Q: I'm a regular reader of your column and was hoping you could help me. I live in a two-unit building built in San Francisco in 1941. It still has the original galvanized plumbing.  more...

Jobless renter still on the hook for lease

By Robert Griswold, Thursday, April 9, 2009.

Q: I recently signed a new lease on a beautiful rental home. However, I lost my job and am finding it very hard to pay my rent. I was wondering if there was a way to break my lease due to loss of job?

A: No, not unless you have a specific "lease break" clause for loss of your job or a job transfer or other similar reason. If not, then your only hope is that your landlord is voluntarily willing to allow you to break your lease. A lease is a legally binding contract and enforceable regardless of your employment or personal situation. What if the landlord lost his job? Would it be acceptable that he raise your rent during a fixed-term, fixed-rent lease just because something changed in his life? Of course not. Just as you would expect to rely on all terms of your lease, the landlord does too.  more...

Social media sites don't sell real estate

By Teresa Boardman, Thursday, April 9, 2009.
Flickr image by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/christajoy42/2048522252/sizes/o/">Photos o' Randomness</a>.

People need to know that social media sites don't sell real estate before they get overly excited and start setting up profiles on Facebook and LinkedIn, and open accounts on Flickr, join Twitter and start a blog.

None of those services sell real estate. It is really too bad because so many good agents are spending their time on the Internet these days. I can give examples of how all of these nifty Web 2.0 sites have failed me. Recently I had a prospective buyer -- we will call her "Mary" -- who had been lurking on my blog. She contacted me one day and told me that she really wants to buy a house.  more...

Home modifications save lives, money

By Tom Kelly, Thursday, April 9, 2009.

One of my friends just added a gorgeous, walk-in shower to a first-floor bathroom that sits nicely behind a kitchen pantry and easily is accessible to the kitchen, den and home office. The huge rectangular glass-door enclosure features a sliding shower head that can rise more than 8 feet above the stone floor.

"Are you expecting grandkids that will be 6-foot-7," I laughed.

"That … and if something ever happens to us, we'll need a shower downstairs. That office could quickly become a bedroom."  more...

 
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