Chapel Hill Real Estate Blog

Free wireless internet downtown Chapel Hill

02.25.08

The town of Chapel Hill has added six new spots downtown where you will be able to connect to the internet for free. Hopefully more spots will be coming soon so we won’t have to compete with so many students for a place to sit down and surf. FYI- there is no tech support if you can’t connect so look for a friendly face to help you out.The hotspots, which show up on wireless devices as “TOWNofCH-WiFi,” are located at the following: U.S. Post Office, 179 E. Franklin St.;  Old Town Hall (IFC Shelter), 100 W. Rosemary St.; Town Parking Lot 5, 108 Church St.;  Hargraves Center, 216 N. Roberson St.; Chapel Hill-Orange County Visitors Bureau, 501 W. Franklin St.; and  411 West Restaurant, 411 W. Franklin St. Users within 300 feet of a hotspot should be able to connect.

Wi-Fi free in parts of Chapel Hill

08.31.07

Chapel Hill Launches Wi-Fi Pilot Project

The Town of Chapel Hill this Friday will activate six Wi-Fi hotspots in the downtown area, giving the public free access to the internet along much of Franklin Street.

The provision of wireless internet service to citizens has ranked as a top priority goal for the Town Council. The launching of wireless hotspots in downtown is considered a pilot project and a step forward toward this goal. The hotspots, which show up on wireless devices as “TOWNofCH-WiFi,” are located at the following (see map at http://www.townofchapelhill.org/DocumentView.asp?DID=1904):

(1.) U.S. Post Office, 179 E. Franklin St.
(2.) Old Town Hall (IFC Shelter), 100 W. Rosemary St.
(3.) Town Parking Lot 5, 108 Church St.
(4.) Hargraves Center, 216 N. Roberson St.
(5.) Chapel Hill-Orange County Visitors Bureau, 501 W. Franklin St.
(6.) 411 West Restaurant, 411 W. Franklin St.

Bob Avery, information technology director, said users within 300 feet of a hotspot should be able to connect, although the ability to connect will depend on the capability of the user’s device and the amount of obstructions between the user and the antenna. For a street level user, trees, buses, trucks and buildings will all reduce the quality of the connection signal.

The Town will soon provide information to the public by website, media and signage to help promote the hotspots and explain how they may be used. More information will be provided at the homepage of www.townofchapelhill.org.

The hotspots have been installed using Clearwire modems. These are attached to standard Wi-Fi access points with high gain antenna to provide the signal for public use.

The Town will not provide direct user support but does hope to be able to respond to and resolve outages or other service problems as they occur. To report comments and problems, please contact the Town at wifi@townofchapelhill.org.
 

July 4th Celebration Chapel Hill

06.29.07

flagFourth of July CelebrationCelebrate Independence Day with an evening of fireworks and family entertainment. The Town of Chapel Hill’s annual July 4th Celebration will begin at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 4, at UNC’s Kenan Memorial Stadium.Johnny White and the Elite band (Carolina beach music, R & B, blues and country) will play at about 8 p.m. Fireworks begin at 9:30 p.m. They are only visible from inside the stadium, so plan to arrive early to get a good seat. In the event of inclement weather, the fireworks show may begin earlier than scheduled.Alcohol is prohibited - no coolers, outside containers, or food items will be allowed in the stadium. Concession stands will be open with soft drinks, water, food, and treats.Recommended parking for the event is on the University’s South Campus at Craig, Dogwood, and Cardinal Parking Decks off Manning Drive and Ramshead Parking Deck off Ridge Road. Disability parking will be available in the Bell Tower Lot. Security personnel at the gates will direct patrons to disability seating.** Schedule is subject to change-inclement weather may result in fireworks beginning early.

North Carolina Mandates Title Insurance Rates

06.28.07

 Unfortunately this means that the previously reduced rates offered by my company will be regulated along with everyone else’s rates. Will someone explain to me how raising rates is in the best interest of my clients?

Title changes in

North Carolina prompt changes for Preferred

Carolinas Title As you read about in an email from Senior Vice President Harris Laskey last week, all title insurance companies across

North Carolinawill offer the same rates beginning on July 1, 2007. This means all reduced and special rates, including those previously offered by our own Preferred Carolinas Title, will no longer be permitted. The North Carolina Department of Insurance just announced this comprehensive new title insurance rate structure. Due to this change, we will be unable to honor signed versions of the old forms presented on July 1 or after. Only forms dated and signed prior to the July 1 deadlinewill receive the current special rate (even if invoiced after the deadline). The same will apply to relocation clients offered the special rate prior to July 1.

Chapel Hill Luxury Home

05.06.07

I have a new Listing at 217 Nottingham Drive in The Oaks. Just 3 minutes from the country club and close to all the conveniences in southwest Durham and Chapel Hill. It has about 6300+ heated square feet and another 1400 SF of fabulous outdoor areas including a grill house, raised patio, elevated fireplace. It also has two master suites with heated tile floors, a steam room, custom dressing rooms, not walk-in closets! There are too many features to even begin to give it justice, you just have to see it. $1,790,000.

Beazer Homes are Courting Trouble

03.28.07

 MSN Tracking Image

  MSNBC.com


Feds probe homebuilder Beazer

Residential builder probed in connection with potential mortgage fraud

By Dawn Kopecki

BusinessWeek Online

Updated: 8:49 a.m. ET March 28, 2007

Amid the meltdown of the subprime housing sector, mortgage lenders and brokers have come under fire from state and federal officials for predatory lending practices with those risky borrowers. Now one national homebuilder is feeling the heat. BusinessWeek has learned that federal investigators have opened a broad criminal probe into lending practices, some financial transactions, and other dealings at Beazer Homes USA.

Atlanta-based Beazer, the nation’s sixth-largest residential homebuilder, rode high during the heyday of the housing boom — profiting from both selling the homes it constructed and often financing the buyers as well through a wholly owned mortgage arm. It’s common in the industry, but Beazer may have pushed the bounds: The North Carolina field offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Justice Dept. have recently opened a joint investigation into the company over such matters.

The Inspector General of Housing and Urban Development is also part of the group since a large percentage of Beazer’s loans were made to low-income borrowers and insured by the federal government through the Government National Mortgage Assn., according to people familiar with the investigation.

‘Actively pursuing fraud’
Investigators, however, are not limiting their probe to possible mortgage fraud. “There’s all sorts of potential fraud issues here,” FBI spokesman Ken Lucas told BusinessWeek. “We’re looking at all types of [potential] fraud associated with Beazer — corporate, mortgage, investments.” Beazer did not comment by press time.

 

The U.S. Attorney’s office in North Carolina, which is leading the charge, would neither confirm nor deny an investigation into Beazer. But Gretchen Shappert, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, said her office has been actively pursuing mortgage fraud among lenders, builders, appraisers, and others since 2002.

“Our experience has shown that mortgage fraud cuts a wide swath,” says Shappert. “As the housing market and lending regulations tighten, we expect more, not less, fraud in the housing market.”

High foreclosure rate
The joint investigation stems from a series of articles that ran in The Charlotte Observer in mid-March, detailing allegations of abusive lending practices and unusually high foreclosure rates in a handful of Beazer housing developments in North Carolina. The paper’s investigation alleges that foreclosure rates in several Beazer developments ran at around 20 percent, compared with the national average of 3 percent. At the time, Beazer said in a written statement that the high foreclosure rates were an anomaly. Still, such allegations have also sparked a class action against Beazer.

 

Could Beazer’s troubles spread to other homebuilders? Like Beazer, homebuilders across the country have increasingly relied on in-house mortgage arms as part of their sales strategy over the last few years, financing a growing volume of loans used to buy their own properties. There’s nothing inherently wrong with the tactic. But with default and foreclosure rates creeping higher, the entire housing industry, including builders, is being scrutinized.

Tighter standards ahead
Homebuilders have already been feeling the pain. Beazer’s stock has fallen from around $70 to roughly $32 over the past year. And the outlook isn’t good. The rate of new homes sales fell by 18.3 percent in February over the previous year, the second consecutive monthly drop and lowest level since August, 2000. The National Association of Home Builders blamed, in part, bad weather in the Northeast and Midwest.

There’s also a growing worry over the mess in subprime. The group’s most recent survey shows industry executives have “serious concerns about how the subprime-related shakeout in the mortgage market will affect the housing sector,” NAHB President Brian Catalde said in a statement. “Lending standards apparently are tightening not only in the subprime market but in other components of mortgage lending as well, and this is creating tremendous uncertainties regarding the near-term outlook for homes sales and housing production.”

 

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17819456/


© 2007 MSNBC.com





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