Posts tagged Final

Dephased by a real estate market Rocky Stone Bridge Homes builds Final phase of 220 condominiums in the Community “Gables in Abington, Massachusetts

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Stonebridge Homes, Inc., local home builder and developer, announced the construction of the final and 50 of the working life, the resort condos in Abington? The Gablesâ ????. With 170 units already sold, despite a slower housing market, The Gables is one of the most successful developments in South Shore with the ability to meet many of todayâ? S discerning buyer.

Located on 41 hectares of woodland in North Quincy Street, on 200 Hampton Way in Abington include, The Gables features award-winning architecture, tennis and basketball courts, a fitness center, putting green, landscaping, upscale and a great clubhouse. The club from a large and well equipped offering an attractive and practical for receptions, parties and community events. Near S-Bahn stations in Abington, Brockton and Braintree, The Gables is a real destination to relax or enjoy activities with friends and neighbors.

The residents of these luxury condominiums also enjoy a unique opportunity to live in harmony with nature. The Gables meets Ames Nowell State Park, which contains 430 hectares of forest park. This green buffer offers a variety of activities for all age groups for fun, relaxation, stress relief, experiencing nature and exercise please. The Gables is close in proximity to all amenities such as public transportation is embedded, so the people has to offer the rest of the area.

The Gables offers gracious living at an affordable price? Each from 9900th Each unit offers generous design and floor plan options, quality brand products and materials. Jacuzzi, fireplace, tiled bathrooms and kitchen, air conditioning and much more: Each unit is packed with luxury features including. Several improvements are proposed, which satisfy even the opportunity to customize units to individual tastes.

Stonebridge Homes offers a variety of floor plans and unit of town homes to garden units and many properties include basements and garages. The Gables offers more than just condominium living, it is a quiet life, safety and comfort features for years to come.

Residents of the gables are an eclectic mix of empty nests, young families, singles and seniors.

About Stonebridge Homebuilders:

For over 20 years, Stonebridge Homes and his team now built in South Easton, Massachusetts, many residential communities in the northern United States. More recently, Stonebridge has to buildings in towns in southeastern Massachusetts, including Abington, Easton, Raynham, Taunton, Franklin, West Bridgewater, concentrated Pembroke, Whitman and Norwell. The styles of these communities have varied from imaginative condominiums to custom single-family homes through its award-winning in-house architect, whose specialty is the adaptation of dream homes for individuals, couples and families. Each development is built with the same quality and satisfaction.

Opening times Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday 14.00 bis 07.00 Clock and Saturday and Sunday from 11.00 bis 16.00 clock />
For more information visit or call 508.230.3595 www.TheGables.net.


Condo Floor Plans

Final Expense Leads | Final Expense Insurance Leads JOBS

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home insurance leads


Final Expense Leads Service CMO Eric Brennan offers six-figure jobs to agents who want to work just three days per week. Details at www.EFESOnline.com or call (254) 227-6166. Equita Final Expense Services (EFES) provides high-quality final expense insurance leads, sales training from proven producers, and complete back office support to empower insurance agents. Equita Final Expense Services is an Independent Marketing Organization specializing in the Final Expense Insurance marketplace. EFES is part of a larger insurance operation that has been offering insurance and annuity products and services since 1986. The home office is located in Dallas, Texas but serves markets throughout the United States. EFES offers its agents a broad spectrum of products, including life, term, annuity and long term care, designed to meet the diverse needs of its client base. EFES primary focus of operations, however, is the Final Expense arena. We contract with superior insurance carriers to provide a wide range of product choices and service options to benefit our clients and our agents. As a result we can tailor plans for individual customers to obtain affordable rates and specific benefit provisions for them EFES is an agent-focused organization. Our agents are entrepreneurial by nature and desire the freedom that comes from building their own businesses. To assist them to be successful we provide training and effective sales tools. We have also created an in-house service organization

Twilight at Monticello: The Final Years of Thomas Jefferson

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Much has been written about Thomas Jefferson, with good reason: His life was a great American drama–one of the greatest–played out in compelling acts. He was the architect of our democracy, a visionary chief executive who expanded this nation’s physical boundaries to unimagined lengths. But Twilight at Monticello is something entirely new: an unprecedented and engrossing personal look at the intimate Jefferson in his final years that will change the way readers think about this true American icon. It was during these years–from his return to Monticello in 1809 after two terms as president until his death in 1826–that Jefferson’s idealism would be most severely, and heartbreakingly, tested.

Based on new research and documents culled from the Library of Congress, the Virginia Historical Society, and other special collections, including hitherto unexamined letters from family, friends, and Monticello neighbors, Alan Pell Crawford paints an authoritative and deeply moving portrait of Thomas Jefferson as private citizen–the first original depiction of the man in more than a generation.

Here, told with grace and masterly detail, is Jefferson with his family at Monticello, dealing with illness and the indignities wrought by early-nineteenth-century medicine; coping with massive debt and the immense costs associated with running a grand residence; navigating public disputes and mediating family squabbles; receiving dignitaries and corresponding
with close friends, including John Adams, the Marquis de Lafayette, and other heroes from the Revolution. Enmeshed as he was in these affairs during his final years, Jefferson was still a viable political force, advising his son-in-law Thomas Randolph during his terms as Virginia governor, helping the administration of his good friend President James Madison during the “internal improvements” controversy, and establishing the first wholly secular American institution of higher learning, the University of Virginia at Charlottesville. We also see Jefferson’s views on slavery evolve, along with his awareness of the costs to civil harmony exacted by the Founding Fathers’ failure to effectively reconcile slaveholding within a republic dedicated to liberty.

Right up until his death on the fiftieth anniversary of America’s founding, Thomas Jefferson remained an indispensable man, albeit a supremely human one. And it is precisely that figure Alan Pell Crawford introduces to us in the revelatory Twilight at Monticello.

‘Crawford (Thunder on the Right) offers his own equally compelling look, in this case at Jefferson’s life, post-presidency, from 1809 until his death in 1826. Then a private citizen, Jefferson was burdened by financial and personal and political struggles within his extended family. His beloved estate, Monticello, was costly to maintain and Jefferson was in debt. Newly studying primary sources, Crawford thoroughly conveys the pathos of Jefferson’s last years, even as he successfully established the University of Virginia (America’s first wholly secular university) and maintained contact with James Madison, John Adams, and other luminaries. He personally struggled with political, moral, and religious issues; Crawford shows us a complex, self-contradictory, idealistic, yet tragic figure, helpless to stabilize his family and finances. Historians and informed readers alike will find much to relish in both of these distinctive works of original scholarship. Both are recommended for academic and large public libraries.
–Library Journal

“In “Twilight at Monticello,” Alan Pell Crawford treats his subject with grace and sympathetic understanding, and with keen penetration as well, showing the great man’s contradictions (and hypocrisies) for what they were.”
–Wall Street Journal

“Like all people,…

Rating: (out of 39 reviews)

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Plumbing Residential Final Inspection by Kim Appleberry (Part 1)

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residential inspection


Plumbing Residential Final Inspection by Kim Appleberry

I have the opportunity to do a final inspection on a property I brought?

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Question : I have the opportunity to do a final inspection on a property I brought?
If they have a lot of rubbish hanging around can I make it a condition that they have to remove it before settlement as it’s not a fitting or fixture?
property inspection

Best answer:

Answer by az_fybtex
yes, you can, but its debatable

WIll mortgage underwriter give final approval?

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Question : WIll mortgage underwriter give final approval?
I was pre-approved for FHA home loan. Found house, accepted offer, had professional home inspection done, and national city loan officer stated that I was approved for the loan. She stated that the appraisal and title work was ordered, and she was waiting on final ok from underwriter. What things can keep me from getting final approval.
professional home inspection

Best answer:

Answer by alexrmyers
A lot of different factors come into play when getting an approval. Credit rating and history, income verification, assets/retirement, debt to income rations, loan amount and payment, etc. You should always have an approval, not a pre-approval before looking into a home purchase. That way you know that you’re loan is going to fund and not going to fall out or get declined. Hold tight, underwriters can take up to 72 hours in some cases.

If you’re already approved, ask to see the approval. That way you know everything’s good.

i should have mentioned that there is no final title policy and there was a fradulent person on the title and?

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Question : i should have mentioned that there is no final title policy and there was a fradulent person on the title and?
there was a fraudulent person on the title before the reverse was done and the broker or the closer didn’t remove the person off the title and i didn’t know until two years later when i went back to refinance the reverse mortgage the states attorney as well as hud investigator has told me to sue the title company as well as the mortgage company but i can not afford an attorney legal aid doesn’t do these type of cases where damages are involved ,will the courts appoint me a attorney or public defender
hud reverse mortgage

Best answer:

Answer by wizjp
How about the state insurance comission who is responsible for issuance of the policy?

UK Election, Final debate is on the economy. Will Gordon Brown answer these points?

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Question : UK Election, Final debate is on the economy. Will Gordon Brown answer these points?
The United Kingdom is facing the worst financial crisis in its history.

This is all about debt. Not just Government debt but Corporate debt and Consumer debt. By any accounting standard, they are all at nightmare proportions.

The last 12 years have seen an economy built, not on genuine growth in productivity, but on a Consumer spending boom that was financed by massive asset inflation and equity borrowing. All of this was made possible by cheap money from worldwide markets.

When this dried up, the asset bubble was exposed and the banks stood to make ruinous losses that would have decimated our economy along with many others. So we bailed out the banks with taxpayer-funded guarantees and all but nationalised them.

To use the analogy of a household that has massively over-borrowed; rather than go bankrupt, we took out a gigantic consolidation loan. This hasn’t cured the problem, it has merely deferred it to a later time.

So we have a situation of a fantasy economy. Asset values have been artificially protected from the reality of the market place. A reasonable mark-down of all affected asset values would be in the region of at least 40% from their current levels. So we’re talking losses running into trillions of pounds.

In the meantime, the BOE is printing money to buy Government Bonds so that we’re able to keep up interest payments on our massive borrowing which is increasing day by day. Desperate to stimulate consumer demand, interest rates have been slashed to 0.5% to enable homeowners to keep paying their mortgages and keep defaults as low as possible.

The banks, desperate to rebuild their balance sheets, are charging a premium on their mortgage products which is depressing the very stimulus effect that the BOE’s interest rate cuts were designed to promote.

One thing is for certain, there is no way we are going to borrow our way out of this mess.

Then there is taxation and Government spending. Taxation at its present level is far too high. It is siphoning so much money out of the real economy that the vast majority of households have little or no funds for discretionary spending. This is further depressing the economy resulting in job losses, hours cut back and downward pressure on wage inflation. This, in turn, reduces the tax take and puts additional burdens on the Exchequer with higher welfare payments and entitlements which increases the amount of money that the Government has to borrow.

Outside economic forces are not helping. The UKs balance of trade figures are truly appalling. Invisible earnings, normally the salvation of our B.o.T figures, has been dramatically hit by this crisis. For a long time now, we have been a net importer of manufactured goods from overseas. That’s even more pronounced now. But with North Sea Oil and Gas running out, we are becoming net importers of energy as well and this is reflected in higher petrol and diesel costs and higher prices on electricity and gas.

Once again, the UK consumer is bearing the brunt of all this which is further depressing the economy while inflationary pressure on prices is increasing.

Now let’s look at jobs:

The Public Sector, for the most part, has been spared the job cuts it has coming but, rest-assured, they are coming. By my reckoning, at least 30% over the next 3 years.
The shake-out in the private sector hasn’t even started yet. Most employers have been willing to take the hit of keeping their employees on because they’re hoping for a re-bound in consumer confidence and spending. We’ve already seen how unrealistic that scenario is.

Last Monday (February 14th), we learned that the number of economically inactive people of working age has hit an all-time high of 8.08 million.

The number of under-employed and part-time workers has hit 7.69 million.

All these people qualify for State-funded support of one type or another. To say nothing of the social cost that is taking its toll on families and communities right across this Country.

This leaves 21.2 million people in full-time employment, but if you break that down you will find a significant percentage are working on one year contracts and around 4 million are working for the public sector. Make no mistake, our Country is sitting on a knife-edge.

Now let’s look at Treaties, regulation, laws and administrative burdens. In our global economy, every negotiation to implement a Treaty requires compromise and dilution of Sovereignty. Each Country seeks to uphold certain self interests and cedes other interests to arrive at a negotiated settlement.

The UK has done that with Europe, Nato, the UN, G7, G20 and many other agreements. This, in turn, has led to the imposition of regulations that govern many aspects of our economy, our criminal and civil laws, environment and trade. The consequent administrative burdens that we, as a nation, now face is so complex that even a minor policy change will require massive scr
uk homeowner loans

Best answer:

Answer by Elmbeard
I was just getting into my stride with this lengthy and largely accurate essay into our predicament when the character count cut us off!

I am sure Gordon Brown, along with leaders and treasury spokesmen from all the other parties, is well aware of all this. None of them really have the answer, and certainly nothing that could be got across in a 20-second soundbite and still remain electable.

When folk run out of money to pay the ever-rising Council Tax bill, then in come the bailiffs. I worked for a Council legal section where the duty solicitor took a malicious pleasure in the tone of fear in the voice of some Gladys, Edith or Doris who were facing the removal of their possessions to meet outstanding care payments. How far we will go down this road toward Mugabe style of redistribution remains to be seen. It all depends just what democracy will be forced to tolerate. It all depends how long the “I’m all right, Jack” element of our electorate holds the majority.

The answer? I am planting ash trees as fast as I can. At least in 15 years I will have a supply of heating materials. Sooner or later, when the money runs out or becomes meaningless, I will need a shotgun and a large dog to see off the Council bailiffs, and a network of tunnels so that when they come looking for me, it will be the devil’s own job to find me, and they can pick on someone easier.

Producer prices reverse course in 2008: after surging in 2007 and the first 7 months of 2008, prices for energy goods plummeted during the final 5 months … 2008): An article from: Monthly Labor Review

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This digital document is an article from Monthly Labor Review, published by Superintendent of Documents on July 1, 2009. The length of the article is 18520 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Producer prices reverse course in 2008: after surging in 2007 and the first 7 months of 2008, prices for energy goods plummeted during the final 5 months of the year; similarly, inflation in food prices slowed significantly in 2008, following a steep runup in 2007 and early-to-mid 2008.(PPI Highlights, 2008)
Author: Joseph Kowal
Publication: Monthly Labor Review (Magazine/Journal)
Date: July 1, 2009
Publisher: Superintendent of Documents
Volume: 132 Issue: 7 Page: 22(24)

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning

List Price: $ 9.95

Price: $ 9.95

The Very Final Desk Rage Video

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office desk plans


Meetings. Bureaucracy. Egos. Working in an office from 9am to 5pm is a challenge to patience and a test in the survival of the human spirit. For many us, employment means cubicle fields surrounded by nit-picking, complainy, lazy, know-it-all, incompetent back-stabbers that steal your food from the refrigerator. Psychotherapists suggest you detach and accept that you will not change that person. Remember that its not you, its just their behavior. Then make a plan of how you will deal with them beating them at their own game. Little Peach has made a few well-thought-out plans of her own. *DESK RAGE IS NOT INTENDED TO BE AN INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE. ANY DEPICTIONS HEREIN ARE PRESENTED FROM THE PLAYFUL AND IMAGINATIVE PERSPECTIVE NECESSARY FOR SURVIVAL UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF DAILY OFFICE POLITICS.

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