Angela Kroemer Mortgage Professional

Angela Kroemer Mortgage Professional
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Monday, January 21, 2013

Mom, Dad I Need a Cosigner for My Mortgage



Cosigner

A third party to a loan who provides a guarantee that a loan will be repaid. The guarantee by the cosigner reduces the risk that the lender will lose the money he/she has distributed to the borrower. The cosigner signs an agreement with the lender stating that if the borrower fails to repay the loan, the cosigner will assume legal liability for it. A cosigner may be an institution, but is often a relative or friend of the borrower, especially for personal loans. Persons with little or poor credit history sometimes cannot receive a loan without a cosigner.  A cosigner must list the promissory note as a liability on financial statements.

Now that the Canadian government has tightened up the mortgage rules, some parents are being asked to co-sign  a mortgage for their children.

Why Use a Co-Signer

1. Credit score not where it should be
2. a blemish on the credit report
3. Too much debt
4. No credit score
5. Not at job long enough
6. Messy divorce or separation


The Cons of Being a Co-Signer

Often, an adult child will ask the parent to co-sign, as a speedy way of getting a mortgage for a house and some parents have been told they will just be the mortgage for 1 year.  The facts are the lender does not have to release the co-signer at any time.  You may be on that mortgage for the whole 5 year term or whichever term you picked.  The reasoning is that the lender wants a sure thing, no risk when the co-signer with a proven credit track record is on the mortgage, there is less of a risk.

When you co-sign, it is as if you have to make that payment every month.  This means if the parent wants to take out a new mortgage for themselves, they may not be able to because of debt servicing.  Even though they have never made a payment for their child.  The lender must make sure there is enough money for both payments in case things go bad.

To get your name off as co signer, you may have to terminate the mortgage and have the child get a new mortgage in their name.  There are penalties for terminating the mortgage , is your child prepared to pay the penalty? If not, the parent may have to pay the  penalty to get their name off of the mortgage.

Nothing breaks down a family relationship faster than money.  The old saying never lend money to family- may come into play if something goes wrong. 

The Pros of Being a Co-Signer

There may be  pros to being a co-signer it just depends on what happens in the life of your family.  The  happy feeling of being able to help your children can turn 360 degrees in to being the worst decision of your life.  As there are no guarantees in life and what will happen, you have to decide that you can make those payments for the term of the mortgage no matter what happens.

If you plan on co-signing just for 2 years, only take out a 2 year term. That gives your child 2 years to get their credit score high enough to take on the mortgage by themselves.

It is nice to think about helping your children and your children will appreciate it, but make sure you look after yourself first.

True Story About Co-Signing

Many years ago, my father co-signed for a car loan for me. I had been married and had no credit score to my name.
At the dealership my father told the loans person that the loan was to be put into my name, as I was the one needing the credit rating,  The loans person agreed.
We signed the papers. I drove away with my nice new to me car.
Fours years later when I had finished paying off the car, my father received a nice letter from the dealership, thanking him for the business and paying the loan off in a speedy manner.
I checked my credit report and the loan had never been in my name.

So, the moral to this story is, if you think co-signing will help raise your child's credit score, it probably won't.  Their name may be placed in 2nd line and may not show up on their credit report at all.





Sunday, January 20, 2013

Gardening: Plants in glass are post-holidays rage

BM-aerium.c.jpg
 
As we look to add some warmth and colour in our homes after the bright and cheery Christmas season, there is a new trend sweeping the world with a different style of décor.
Glass containers – balls, baubles, vases and hangers – filled with easy-to-care-for indoor plants are all the rage.
They’re called aeriums, and they are filled with plants like tillandsias, succulents and other fun and carefree tropicals.
Aeriums need some indirect window light to ensure quality growth, but that’s about it.
All you truly have to do is mist tillandsias and air plants with warm water once a day, or for succulents, simply check to see if the media in which they are growing is somewhat moist.
In a glass environment, resilient tropicals just need a bit of misting or a moisture check once a week.
It’s really that simple.
I love the fact they are equally at home on a window sill, coffee table, desk or any convenient place in your home or office.
They can also hang in windows, from the ceiling or from decorative light fixtures.
The old terrarium look has been taken over by larger clear glass vases and bowls containing a single specimen plant displayed with artistic flair. All that’s needed is a bit of well-drained soil and some horticultural charcoal on the bottom and for a finishing touch a covering of moss, a creeping evergreen fern or colourful stones in the colours of your home décor.
For a very ‘in’ look, heart-shaped anthuriums with their beautiful foliage and vibrant blossoms can have the soil carefully washed off revealing colourful white and pink roots, and they can look beautiful for months sitting in a clear glass vase of water.
Peace Lilies (spathiphyllum) don’t perform quite as well, but they too look great displayed this way.
Hardy water plants, like water rushes (Jucus effusus) do very well in household situations. Both the straight and curly forms can expose their attractive white roots in a clear glass container of water.
This whole new trend of introducing beautiful plants in glass containers is catching on, not only because they are unique but also because the care they require is minimal.
Folks who previously had difficulty looking after plants can now relax and enjoy.
Almost all of these aeriums are self contained, fit into spots where traditional plants can’t and are tidy and clean. They are a lot of fun, and many garden stores now carry them for you to try.
Empty clear glass containers are also available if you’re feeling particularly creative to plant your own.
Aeriums are a nice and easy way to add warmth and life into your winter home.
Brian Minter owns Minter Gardens near Chlliwack.

 

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

How To Make A Baby = Awesome

How To Make A Baby = Awesome


Posted on Jan 15, 2013 in Other News

Canadian photographer Patrice Laroche surely will have no trouble explaining to his kids about the birds and the bees.
During his wife Sandra Denis’ pregnancy, the artist created hilarious explanatory photo series titled “How to Make a Baby”.
The creative couple planned and carried out their project throughout the whole period of 9 months, taking pictures in the exact same settings as Sandra’s belly expanded.
The pregnancy saga of Sandra and Patrice basically denounces all the traditional cabbage and thestork stories.

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How To Make A Baby

How To Make A Baby



How To Make A Baby


How To Make A Baby


How To Make A Baby



How To Make A Baby



Wednesday, January 9, 2013

30 Wasteful Ways The Government Spent Your Money





For taxpayers concerned with out-of-control government spending, 2012 started on a bright enough note. Last January, the Department of National Defence announced it wanted to buy 20,000 custom-printed stress balls for its staff. Once Defence Minister Peter MacKay caught wind of the plan, he quickly cancelled the contract, calling it an “unnecessary expense of taxpayer money.” Noble words, but it was a brief reprieve. As Maclean’s found once again when researching this project, whether it was Ottawa, the provinces, municipalities or the organizations they oversee, governments couldn’t help themselves when it came to doling out cash. What follows is but a fraction of the foolish, wasteful and blatantly stupid ways governments found to spend taxpayers’ money. To uncover this year’s 99 items we pored over press releases and auditor generals’ reports, sifted through proactive disclosure statements and delved into media databases across the country, ferreting out examples of spending that occurred in 2012 or came to light last year. There will be those who take issue with some items on this list, arguing, for instance, that funding rock concerts boosts the economy. But the reality is that at every level of government, we’re in far worse fiscal shape than we were even a year ago, despite all the talk of cutbacks and austerity. And as this list makes clear, those who control the public purse have yet to really change their ways.
Luxury hotels, hemp body cream and subsidized hip-hop concerts: our second annual list of waste shows spending by all levels of government is still out of control. Find 33 of those stupid things below. And check us out tomorrow to see 33 more stupid things your government did with your money.

Sports & Leisure — when blowing money is the name of the game

1 Bad slice: The City of Abbotsford, B.C. handed a $115,000 “one-time grant” to a struggling municipal golf course, claiming its problems stem, in part, from poor weather. In a report, city staff said “good weather” was among the things “being worked on” to turn it around.
2 Sore loser: Former Regina mayor Pat Fiacco expensed more than $4,000 worth of tickets to sporting events, including $1,055 for Montreal Alouettes season’s tickets, nearly 3,000 km away. The tickets were the result of a bet Fiacco made with former Montreal mayor Gérald Tremblay that the Saskatchewan Roughriders would beat the Alouettes in the 2010 Grey Cup. The Riders lost—and so did Regina taxpayers.
3 Cheap seats: Sam Katz, mayor of Winnipeg, is a big fan of the Blue Bombers, but apparently not enough to pay for tickets out of his own pocket. The mayor billed taxpayers $2,033 for a pair of season’s tickets, even though critics pointed out that other politicians, like Premier Greg Selinger, paid for their own sporting tickets.
4 Losing bet: Vancouver Canucks goalie Roberto Luongo clearly knows when to hold ’em and fold ’em. The B.C. Lottery Corp. paid him $160,000 last year for an endorsement deal that included a $10,000 entry fee into the World Series of Poker event in Las Vegas—pocket change for a man with a decade left on a $64-million hockey contract.

5
Le’go the money: Ontario’s Municipal Property Assessment Corp. spent $170,000 on a one-day team-building event that included an exercise playing with Lego.

6 Out of bounds: The City of Whitehorse coughed up $1.3 million for Mount Sima, a struggling nearby ski hill. The money was diverted from the city’s infrastructure fund, which had been topped up by the federal government. That was on top of $1.6 million the city gave the hill a year earlier for a ski lift.

7 Meanwhile: Ottawa shovelled $1.5 million into 10 Quebec snowmobile clubs for snow grooming

8 the feds pumped $13,000 into a Tsawwassen lawn bowling club in Delta, B.C., to create “jobs, growth and long-term economic prosperity”

9 the City of Ottawa spent $48,000 on a “deluxe” three-sided bike cage for city employees

10 Saanich, B.C., faces an $818,000 deficit on the city-owned Cedar Hill golf course

11 Kitchener, Ont., transferred $1 million into a “golf stabilization reserve fund” to prop up two money-losing golf courses

Other folks’ money — corporate handouts and subsidies for all


12
Korpporät welfår: Ikea is a Swedish retailing behemoth rolling in kronor, but when it came to opening its first store in Winnipeg, that didn’t stop the city and province from offering a combined $22 million in subsidies. Did we mention Ikea’s annual sales of $30 billion are roughly three times what Manitoba brings in each year from all forms of taxes, fees and transfers?

13 Paper chase: In December 2011, Nova Scotia’s provincial government handed $24 million to the owner of the Bowater Mersey paper mill in return for a swath of company land in the hopes of staving off its closure. By June the mill had gone out of business.

14
Something fishy: For more than a decade, Supreme Sturgeon and Caviar of New Brunswick raked in some $3 million in grants and loans from the federal government before falling into receivership in 2010. Resurrected by new owners as Breviro Caviar, it’s now back in the subsidy business, winning $200,000 from Ottawa in marketing funds and $50,000 to “hire expertise in caviar production.”

15 Flat battery: The B.C. government said it would spend $2.7 million to build hundreds of electric-car-charging stations across the province in an effort to encourage drivers to buy vehicles such as the Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf. That’s in addition to a $5,000 rebate to drivers. Yet just 210 electric vehicles have been sold in the province—effectively translating into an $18,000 per vehicle subsidy for the carmakers.
Meanwhile: Four months after getting $3.8 million from New Brunswick to create 300 new jobs, Radian6, a social media monitoring firm, said it would slash 100 jobs globally (16); a CBC News analysis found $20 million doled out by Newfoundland to attract out-of-province business generated just 58 full-time jobs (17).

Cultured club — the same old song and dance for taxpayers

18 TV time: British Columbians saw $48,000 go to bringing Entertainment Tonight Canada to Vancouver for three days. Included in the provincial payout was $16,000 in airfare from Toronto and $12,000 worth of hotel accommodations.
19 Tear down the haul: The federal government subsidized Quebec City’s summer festival to the tune of $1 million, in part to help pay for a show by former Pink Floyd band member Roger Waters. The Plains of Abraham was the last stop on the aging rocker’s Wall Tour, which earned a total of $158 million from worldwide ticket sales.
20 Party on: The B.C. government sponsored a $3-million rock music tour last summer called JobFest, where attendees (when there were any) were offered on-site career counselling. Roughly $100,000 went to promotional kits, including glow sticks, guitar picks and glossy posters, mailed out to local businesses and media.
21Moving pictures: Winnipeg city council voted to spend $10,000 to transfer a work of art from the old Winnipeg airport to the University of Manitoba, even though city staff recommended denying the request.
22 Stamped out: 2012 marked the 100th anniversary of the Calgary Stampede, and though it bills itself as the “Greatest Show on Earth,” the federal government still felt the need to kick in $5 million to promote it—including putting a chuckwagon food truck in New York City.

23
A black eye: In May, Halifax councillors voted to cut a cheque for $360,000 to cover bad debts stemming from a money-losing Black Eyed Peas concert two years earlier.

Showing off — The price of looking good is on the rise

24 Maybe he’s born with it: Not one to be caught without his game face on, it was revealed the office of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty expensed $130 worth of cosmetics for an apparent beauty emergency ahead of a televised budget announcement. Flaherty’s staff scrambled to purchase concealer, blush, loose powder and shaving supplies to do the minister’s makeup after a cosmetician cancelled at the last minute. For anyone wanting to replicate the look, Flaherty wears a combination of Maybelline, CoverGirl and Smashbox.
25 Funny money: The Bank of Canada spent nearly $40,000 to promote its new $20 bill. The spending included $35,832 to a company to design and install seven-storey images of the new polymer note on the bank’s headquarters in downtown Ottawa in May. In total, spending to promote the new bill equalled 1,942 of the new $20 notes.
26 Fumble for fame: Four small cities, including Guelph, Ont., and Langley, B.C., forked over a total of roughly $100,000 to have former football great Terry Bradshaw appear in short promos about them that were meant to attract new American business to small-town Canada. The videos found airtime mostly off hours, while the famous QB, who narrates the promos, couldn’t sound more bored.
27 Over-planned: The recession may have ended a while ago, but that hasn’t stopped Stephen Harper’s government from spending millions on advertisements featuring its Economic Action Plan stimulus slogan. The government spent $16 million in three months on feel-good commercials about Canada’s economic prosperity.
28 Top gun: Despite getting a mock jet for free from manufacturer Lockheed Martin, Defence Minister Peter MacKay still managed to spend $47,000 on a 2010 press conference where he posed with the fake plane.

29
Centless spending: Eliminating the penny was supposed to save the government, but not without a final splurge. Finance Minister Jim Flaherty stamped the last Canadian penny in a photo op that cost $56,000.

30 Gold medal waste: The federal government spent at least $4.5 million on ads that ran during the two weeks of the London Olympics, but shelled out just $214,000 to Canadian athletes who won medals during the Games.

Thank you to McLeans Magazine
 Jason Kirby, Tamsin McMahon, Rosemary Westwood, Nick Taylor-Vaisey, and Mika Rekai on Monday, January 7, 2013


Sunday, January 6, 2013

5 Real Estate Must-do's for 2013


Are you in the market to buy or sell a house this year?
Some things are simply out of a would-be buyer or seller’s control. But, as a would-be buyer or seller, you can learn from and make decisions based on those who have gone before you.

There exists a former buyer who, if he could, would have done more legwork before buying. Conversely there’s a current seller who will take the next under-asking-price offer from a buyer more seriously.

Whether you plan to buy or sell, there are some real estate decisions that buyers and sellers can — and should — make. Here are five to get you started.

Buyers: Get your financial house in order


Planning a home purchase takes time and effort, so you should consider meeting with a mortgage professional early in the year. Know your credit score and understand what your financial situation looks like from a lender‘s perspective.

If you have credit issues, identify what they are and the necessary steps to correct them. Sometimes, it can take six months to see your FICO score move up the much-needed 20 points to get you a better mortgage rate.

Sellers: Think of your home as a product


When it comes time to sell, your home becomes another product on the market. Buyers will compare it and its price to competing properties.

The properties that are priced right and show well sell the quickest.

Pricing will get worked out once you’re ready to list, but showing well can start way in advance. A home that shows well is free of clutter, clean and as up-to-date as possible.

Start clearing out old stuff now. If there are things deep in your closets that you don’t think you’ll use between January and the time you move, consider a storage locker or making space in the garage.

Decide what you are willing to change. Is your kitchen or bathroom out of date? Are you willing to spend the money now to upadate them? Do you need to refresh your house with a coat of paint? Get some contractor bids now so you know how much the upgrades will cost. If you are not willing to update, then at least you can give the bids to the Realtor and they can let the prospective buyer know how much it will cost to professionally have the upgrades done..
You can spread out the costs of home repairs and changes over several months so it is easily manageable.

Here is a website with information about hiring a contractor http://www.hiringacontractor.com/



Buyers: Start feeling out the market early


You may think you only need to go to open houses once you’re ready to buy. But in reality, a buyer needs a couple of months learning the marketing, understanding home values, the prices per neighborhood and the market in general.

Going to open houses in the neighborhoods where you want to buy will allow you to start feeling out the market. It may also be the best way to meet your future real estate agent. Many agent/buyer relationships are forged at open houses.

Once you engage an agent, you may make several offers before you get into your dream home. Having your agent along for the ride will allow you to compare and contrast homes you’ve visited to the home you eventually buy.

The homes you see and your experience feeling out the market will serve as the building blocks toward becoming an informed buyer and making your best offer.



Sellers: Understand your timing and exit strategy

One of the biggest stresses on a seller is trying to plan a purchase and a sale at the same time.

Can you afford to close on the new home before selling? If so, for how long? Do you need to sell the property first? If so, will the potential sale price support a home purchase in the neighborhood you want to be in?

If not, what other areas should you be looking in? Selling and buying at the same time brings up all kinds of financial, emotional and physical stress.

Uprooting yourself from your home is not easy. What if you have to go into short-term housing? How will you get that set up and how long would you need to commit for?

If you can afford to purchase and then sell, do they need to happen quickly? Are there things you can be doing in your current home so that once your new home closes, you’ll be ready to list?

It’s a lot to think about and plan for, and it helps to have a strategy in place well before you have to take action.


Buyers and sellers: Engage a real estate agent now


Planning a home purchase or sale takes time. Engaging a real estate agent early in the process will allow you to have an expert on hand as you start to put the pieces together.

A good real estate agent doesn’t just show and sell homes: They can be your strategic adviser, even well in advance of any actual transaction.

On the seller side, if you pulled a permit to install some new windows or replace some dry rot in 2005, likely the contractor issued a permit. But did he close it out?

A good agent will figure that out and clean it up before it becomes a transaction issue. You should use your agent to literally get your house and listing in order.

For buyers, having an agent with you from the start is like having an experienced, second set of eyes and ears.

Having so many transactions under the belt and years of market knowledge in their head, a real estate agent’s opinions, thoughts and ideas can save you a lot of time and money.

What’s more, they can keep you on the right path toward identifying the best home, and they’ll see you through the process all the way to the closing.

some information provided by Zillow.com




Friday, January 4, 2013

New Year! New Solutions!

New Year!
New Mortgage!
Mortgage up for renewal this year?
Upgrade your present house?
Build a 'Granny Suite'?

Let's look into it and find you the best solution for your situation.
Visit www.kroemermortgages.com
Email akroemer@mortgagegroup.com

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Homes With Secondary Suites- What To Look For

Sold Home For Sale Sign and House



Beware of homes with secondary suites and check with the City to see if it is a legal suite.

The following is an interesting read if you are considering buying a home with a secondary suite.  It outlines what can go wrong even when the information is thought to be truthful by the now homeowner because that is what was conveyed to him/her when he/she bought the home. How many houses were changed or altered without permits.  While reading this article it can relay just what can go wrong because someone did alterations to a home 20 or 30 years ago without a permit and necessary permissions.  The one big rule is that is is up to you to do your due diligence and find out for sure if the secondary suite is legal or not. It is better to find out before you buy it then after.


By Jean Sorensen
As municipalities across Canada move more towards increasing housing density on land once zoned for single-family homes, real estate agents are being challenged with a barrage of conditions related to secondary living quarters.

The danger comes, says Marty Douglas, managing broker for Coast Realty Group in Courtenay, B.C., when the sales rep advertises “mortgage helper suite with $700 or $800 revenue” and the buyers qualify because of the extra revenue. Douglas says: “If it is not a legal suite and they (buyers) faced evicting the tenant, the problems can really begin for the Realtor. He really has to be cautious on suites even when the municipality turns a blind eye.”
The blind eye is more of a shift of political outlook. There has been a general trend in the marketplace for homeowners to put in suites or convert suites illegally and municipalities largely did nothing unless a complaint was lodged. But now municipalities are passing bylaws allowing licensed suites. Even West Vancouver city council this year bowed to pressure on secondary suites and gave those with extra living units (estimated at l, 000 in the area) until Sept. 30 to register their suites or face a fine of $300 per day. (Only an estimated l0 per cent were registered when the bylaw was passed).

The difficulty for real estate agents lies in sorting out the grey areas around legal and illegal under a mixed bag of conditions. An average of one case a year is now landing before the higher courts as municipalities and homeowners fight over who has what rights. In most cases that have been decided, the homeowner has lost and the B.C. Supreme Court has ordered the units to be removed or demanded extensive renovations.

“There is a rule in real estate – if you are unsure, disclose, disclose and disclose,” says Scott Carpenter of Vancouver’s The Carpenter Group, a Re/Max group of real estate consultants and associated professionals ranging from a conveyance lawyer to mortgage brokers and home staging specialists. The group works on the City of Vancouver’s west side, dealing in high-end properties.
Issues can be complex. Owners may often think their units are legal when they are not. Or, like the film Lost in Translation, the legality of what they own has become garbled. In the recent court case of the Corporation of the Township of Esquimalt v. Crosson (2010 BCSC 1490), an Esquimalt couple were found in breach of bylaws when their duplex actually had three suites (three kitchens and three mail addresses – although only two were legal). Court records show the previous owner converted the house to a duplex with the city approval in the early 1990s. The previous owner testified in court he was given the right to do the conversion and he submitted an amended plan indicating a third kitchen was being installed on an amended plan. The couple relied upon the amended plan in the city files, which “appeared to be the approved plan with some additional handwritten notes.” The previous owner couldn’t remember the name of the individual who made the red notes on the plan. But, he felt he had approval and went forward. Staff subsequently wrote the owner a note in 1993, saying while the third kitchen in the downstairs basement would be allowed, it could not however be used for a suite.

The judge found that the question to be determined was “not whether three kitchens were installed with permission, but whether three dwelling units were installed with permission” and while bylaws allowed for a duplex conversion, whether they also allowed for three dwelling units. He ruled that two bylaws in effect allowed only for a duplex conversion and the suite didn’t qualify as one of non-conforming but permitted. He gave the owners six months to remove the third suite.
The case clarifies some of the situations that can arise between owners and the municipality and zoning laws. The judge in the case points to Port Coquitlam (City) v. Hoffer (l988) BCSC Vancouver A871964, which stated “a municipal officer cannot give valid permission” to use land for something outside the bylaws and the city can’t be stopped from taking action even if the officer has made a commitment.

In Langley (City) v. Wood (1999), the city stopped the use of a two-family dwelling in a single-family area even though the owner had met with the building inspector and plan checker and obtained permission for its use for more than one family. When the home was moved on to the site, it was deemed that it did not fall into the category that would have made it legal non-conforming. The home could therefore only be used for one family.

Sales reps taking any listing for a suite within an existing building need to check with municipal authorities to determine the validity of any such property, says Douglas. “The owner might say it is legal, but I tell them that I am going to have to check anyway,” he says. If the owner is not telling the truth, then “he usually says something like – oh, no, don’t do that.” That then brings the issue of whether the suite is legal into question again. (Carpenter said he also does due diligence checking out what owners say – and, he does a walk-through looking for “red flags” or tell-tale signs such as low ceilings or other construction features that may signal it is not built to any standard or has not been inspected.)

Once a suite is determined to be unlicensed or illegal, there are other questions that emerge. Was it properly built and were the proper inspections carried out for the work completed? Douglas said there was a case in Comox on Vancouver Island where the city gave approval for an in-law suite over the garage. However, what the owner constructed exceeded the bylaws and the suite could not be used. Douglas has also written in REM about the problems of a Nanaimo homeowner who had to remove an in-law suite when a neighbour in a single-family development (with covenants restricting it to single family) complained. As Douglas points out, the removal occurred even though the city permitted such suites.

The lesson to Realtors is that “if you have checked the city hall zoning and the city says ‘no problem’ you still have to check the building scheme and see if it does conform,” Douglas says.
The Nanaimo case is backed up by another judgement in 2009 Robins v. Cranbrook (City) 2009 BCSC 355, 58 M.P.LR. (4th) 87. The court there stated that the issuance of a permit, which is in any event governed by bylaw, cannot amount to a promise that a restrictive covenant in favour of the city would not be enforced.

Today, Douglas says, agents are posting the documents relating to suites online with listings. He says the selling agent has a responsibility to check with the city (and document who he or she speaks with) “and the buyer’s agent also has a responsibility to make sure the documents are correct,” he says.
The ensuing problems that can result when a house is listed with illegal suites can cause more headaches than a sales reps wants to deal with. In Burnaby (City) v. Chiodo 2008 BCSC 491, the 1950s house provided the original owner/builder with a temporary occupancy permit to have a kitchen and live downstairs while the upstairs was finished – a common practice of the era. Those living quarters were to be only temporary but later owners made them permanent. There was a later permit in the late ’60s to put in a bathroom, but the existing old bathroom was to have been torn out and that was never done.

In summer 2006, the owner decided to sell and the house was listed with two suites downstairs. A complaint was made to the city and a city inspector called the listing agent to tell her there was a problem with non-compliance. The owner then attempted to sue the city (the case was dismissed) claiming for damages as he blamed the advice given to the real estate agent prevented him from selling the house. The judge sided with the city and ordered a list of upgrades, tear-outs and inspections to the property.

Vancouver lawyer Richard Bell, whose firm Bell Alliance deals mainly with real estate law and property purchase law, says there is a growing trend for homeowners who have illegal suites to get them licensed before selling the house. “They are asking the city to come in and inspect them so they qualify for a legal suite,” he says. Still it is the buyer’s duty to disclose and the real estate agent’s duty “to fully advise on the property” with the clients about the perils of buying a house with an unlicensed suite, he says. “When we do see an unauthorized suite, we make sure that it is a buyer-beware situation,” he says, adding that the owner runs the risk of having to evict tenants or carry out costly renovations.

“The cost of renovation can far exceed any income revenue,” says Bell.

The New Year With New Predictions on The Housing Market



Happy New Year
Happy 2013



As I look to this new year, I am bombarded with mortgage news and predictions, just as you are; as we all know; the more bolder the headlines the more readers read, which sell more newspapers, subscriptions etc. So, today I will dig for all the 2013 predictions and post them here and as we move throughout 2013 we will see which predictions came true and which were just hot air.

Background on the housing market

We still have historically low interest rates. People still want to build and live in the big houses, 1200 sq. feet just does not cut it anymore. With expenses going through the roof, like hydro, gas, water and property taxes, having those big houses deplete our free spending money, even with the low interest rates for our mortgages. More and more people are living paycheck to paycheck to be able to afford those big homes, even though they are making great incomes. The term is house poor. While trying to afford their big homes their credit cards are being maxed out, raising concerns that Canadians are getting more and more in debt as the year progresses.

2013 is the year to realistically look at your house expenses and decide weather it would be advantageous for you to move on down a few square feet , rent out a room or reconfigured your home with a Granny Suite. Where else can you cut down on expenses? Hydro only promises to raise the cost of electricity, property taxes are always going up to pay for ithe infrastructure of where we live.

Students and senor citizens are always looking for more economical places to live. Renting a room to them may be an avenue or if you not comfortable having a non family member in your home would it be feasible to build a Granny Suite.

Sometimes city bylaws or zoning will not allow for this, but as we are progressing to not being able to afford the big houses anymore and many lower income people need affordable. warm and safe places to live, the cities are coming onboard to allowing the secondary suites or more affectionally known as Granny Suites.

As mortgage professionals we have a product called Refinance Plus Improvements. Which would allow you to refinance your home, plus get extra money to put in a Granny Suite for the same low mortgage interest rate. Banks do not offer this product.

Now on to predictions for 2013

1. Moderation is the buzz word when discussing the other positives. The economy is still creating jobs and the US economy has recently shown improved job creation. If this persists, it will contribute to faster job creation in Canada.

2. Sales will be sluggish. Housing prices will decline by about 10%

3. Demand for resale homes from both first-time and repeat buyers will decline slightly in 2013 as the slow pace of economic growth, global financial uncertainty and less accommodating mortgage market conditions temper sales.

4. Improving economic conditions and stable home prices will support housing demand in the second half of 2013

5. Mortgage interest rates will stay low for 2013

6. Buyers will take a little bit more time to buy and the sellers will have to be more patient.

7. In 2013, condo sales will also stabilize, thanks to first-time buyers who will purchase more affordable condos and “empty nesters” who will likely purchase more extravagant condos


As with any predictions it is only an educated guess. Changes in the economy can dramatically affect the outcomes. It is a good time to buy if you are in the market for a home. Interest rates are low, housing prices are stable with only a projected decline of 10%, that may have already happened in the area that you live in.

For more information on mortgages, how to Refinance your home to make improvements or to build a Granny Suite, send me an email. My advice is always free.
Knowledge is power.


akroemer@mortgagegroup.com