Welcome to SoundBiteBlog.com. This website focuses mainly on providing Real Estate, Mortgage, and Local Area information for consumers and residents in Western Puget Sound, we also share our passions, expertise, and practical insights on Internet marketing and technology, including social media/networking, SEO, website design, and custom web applications. SoundBiteBlog is an award-winning joint venture between Mark Flanders of Pastik Design and Rich Jacobson of Keller William West Sound.

Within the pages of SoundBite is an eclectic collection of articles covering a wide variety of topics we hope you'll find interesting, engaging, and helpful. Rich is committed to relentlessly representing his client's best interests and empowering them to make informed decisions. Mark finally decided what he wanted to do when he grew up and gets excited when the code he's written solves a customer's problem with blinding efficiency!

Central Market – Business Bites on the Kitsap Peninsula

March 17th, 2007 by Rich Jacobson

 One of the challenges of relocating to a new area is finding the best places for shopping. Locating good grocery stores is usually not too difficult. Most of the major food chains have stores within the limits of most towns and cities. It’s finding those really exemplary and unique markets, the ones that cater to the more discerning, high-end shopper, and have every conceivable foodstuff possible, that tend to be rather daunting.

Fortunately, for us here on the Kitsap Peninsula in scenic Washington, we have Central Market in Poulsbo.

Owned & operated by a local independent retail grocery company, and founded in 1957, Town & Country Markets, Inc., along with President Larry Nakata at the helm, currently operate six stores in the Puget Sound area.

Central Market opened in Poulsbo in 1995, and is one of three “destination” concept food stores. These offer a broad scope of quality, selection, and value products to entice, not only people from within the immediate neighboring areas to shop, but also people from farther, surrounding areas as well. In each of their stores, they strive to offer the freshest, highest quality foods available.

Central Market offers “Markets within a Market” by providing a large selection of fresh produce; an amazing variety of fish, including one of my favorites, Sushi Ko, where you can custom order your choice of sushi while you shop; a complete flower & garden shop, a full-service bakery; a vast choice of fine wines and beer; a huge international foods section, and much, much more.

 In addition, the staff members are extremely friendly, possessing a knowledge and passion about quality foods.

Central Market is located in Poulsbo, on Hwy. 305, just east of Hwy. 3. Once you’ve shopped there, you’ll keep finding excuses to go back often!

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Do you have trouble steering? Home Builders don’t !

March 17th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

There is a very questionable practice on the increase in WA Real Estate communities. Potential buyers of Condominiums, Manufactured Homes, Modular Homes and Stick-Built Homes are finding themselves in an uncomfortable position created by the seller. The discomfort occurs when the buyer finds that they will be penalized if they try to use a Realtor® or Lender of their own choice. This practice is called steering.

Unfortunately, at the moment, gray areas in the law and RESPA (Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act) are being abused by builders and developers intent on improving their profit at any cost.

Coercion Steering is the practice of guiding a potential buyer towards an affiliated or related Lender, Title Company or Insurance Company. Steering reduces a buyers access to fair representation. Many home buyers have an existing relationship with a Realtor® they trust, or a Loan Officer they trust. Yet, when the buyers attempts to pruchase the property of their dreams, they are confronted with the information that, if the do not use the builder’s chosen Real Estate Company or Lender, they may be penalized in the form of Higher Earnest Money requirements and additional pre-qualification demands.

An example of the deceptive way this begins.

If you are a buyer interested in one of the new Condominium projects in Downtown Bremerton WA, you will be forced to fill out a “Registration Form” before you can view any of the units. While there is nothing wrong with this in itself, what happens later is, at the very least, questionable. Should you decide that you would like to buy one of these condos, you will find that, in the Condominum’s view, you already agreed to use the Listing Agent as your representative! Not only that, if you insist on using your own Agent, your agent will be given a reduced commission. The last person I want representing me when I purchase property, is the Listing Agent. The Listing Agent is legally required to protect the seller’s interest. In my mind, there is no way an Agent can represent my best interests at the same time that Agent is protecting the seller.

An example of the pressure you can expect.

If you are a buyer looking at property in Port Orchard WA, and you decide to pursue the purchase of a home in one of the new develpments, you will have to agree to disclose all of your personal financial information to a Lender that the developer chooses. In other words, even if you walk into the office with a Pre-Approval Letter and Proof of Sufficient Funds to Close, this developer will insist that you cannot make an offer on the home unless you get pre-qualified by his Lender!

An example of the financial penalties to watch for.

If you are a buyer interested in one of King County’s new condo projects, you can expect to be informed that if you insist on using your own Lender, your Earnest Money Deposit will be increased by $5000! No, you didn’t mis-read that. This is currently happening to a member of my own family. This buyer is prepared to put up a normal Earnest Money deposit. She has $2500 set aside for just that purpose. That’s just not good enough for this condo development, unless the buyer uses the seller’s Lender. If the buyer is determined to use her own choice of Lenders, she must come up with $7500! Does that sound like a financial penalty to you? It did to this buyer. She was incensed and furious. The sellers response? “Other buyers haven’t had a problem with it”. This form of coersion is happening with increasing frequency at the moment. I think a more accurate response from the seller would be “We have forced others to do it this way, and we’ll force you too!”

These are not fictitious examples. Each of these situations has happened this year. They happened right here in Washington State. Your Realtor® did not gain your trust by accident. Your Realtor® gained your trust by proving to you he or she is worthy of it. The seller has not proven that you can trust them. On the contrary, didn’t the seller, by practicing these business techniques prove beyond a doubt, that you had better be very careful around them?

As a buyer, you have a right to representation of your choosing! You may have to fight for this right. Your Trusted Realtor® and Loan Officer are the people you can count on. Don’t let yourself be manipulated this way. Eventually, the government will put a stop to these practices. For now, you must protect yourself. And if a seller tries to tell you that these are acceptable practices, you may want to ask them why there is a current lawsuit in progress.

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Scenic Beach State Park – Bites of Kitsap

March 16th, 2007 by Rich Jacobson

 It never ceases to amaze me that people drive from hundreds of miles around just to stay at a state park that’s only a short distance from where I live and work. As a licensed, professional real estate agent here in Kitsap County, WA, I’m surrounded by some of the most spectacular scenery and vacation playgrounds in all the Pacific Northwest.

One such spot is Scenic Beach State Park located just west of Seabeck Harbor along a 1,500 foot stretch of Hood Canal shoreline. This lush 88-acre camping park is filled with wild, native rhododendrons that blossom in early-to-late spring. The park is a popular location for weddings, boasting breathtaking views of Hood Canal and the majestic Olympic Mountains. Take a relaxing stroll along ADA-compliant paths that wind through country gardens, crossing over rustic bridges, or stop to meditate quietly at a nearby gazebo.

The Emel House, a rentable day-use heritage place, provides a romantic setting for special events with its gazebo and country garden. Indoor capacity is 40 people. Outdoor use increases the capacity to 150. The facility includes a small kitchen, and a spacious living room with fireplace.
 The park also offers one kitchen shelter with electricity, plus six sheltered and 60 unsheltered picnic tables. The kitchen shelter holds 100 guests and provides three BBQ braziers, a cold-water sink and two electrical outlets.

The park has 52 tent spaces, one dump station, two restrooms (both ADA) and four showers. Eighteen pull-through sites accommodate 60-foot camping units. Bicycles may be ridden only on pavement, and riders must use caution in this hilly campground with blind curves.
Volleyball nets are up from May until September. Balls and horseshoes can be checked out through park staff. A large grass field makes an excellent place for that family reunion softball game!

A boat ramp is half a mile east of the park and is administered by the Department of Fish and Game. A sticker is required for parking your vehicle and trailer near the launch. Motor out only a short distance to drop down your crab pots, or pull up to a nearby beach to dig for clams and oysters.

For your next vacation, consider a trip to the beautiful Kitsap Peninsula!

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Consumer Credit Counseling – The world’s best sales pitch

March 16th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

Did you know that many mortgage lenders view Consumer Credit Counseling as worse than bankruptcy? It’s true. Getting a mortgage loan approval for a client who has a bankruptcy is easier than getting an approval for a client who has been in a Consumer Credit Counseling program.

Bad news in the mailboxThe revolving debt nightmare is faced by many Americans everyday. An entire industry has developed because of it. As with any industry, there are some good companies, many mediocre companies and too many very poor companies. In this industry, the mediocre and poor companies can make a bad situation significantly worse. The impact of this mediocrity shows up on your credit report. While you believe all your credit problems are under control, the reality is often quite different.

THE PITCH – When you see commercials for consumer credit counseling, the sales pitch is amazing.  “Consolidate your bills into one low monthly payment!”  “Never worry that this credit card bill can’t be paid or that other payment will be late.”  They promise that you will make one affordable payment to the credit counseling service, and they will divert the funds to all of your creditors as necessary to keep everyone satisfied.  You will have no more bill collectors calling you daily, hounding you for payment.  Is it to good to be true? Should you consider other alternatives? What are the alternatives?

WHAT HAPPENS – The way a credit counseling service consolidates your bills can actually be more damaging than helpful.  Initially, the service will have you collect information on all of the bills you wish to consolidate. You turn this information over to them.  They will request information on your income and help come up with a monthly payment that you can afford.  They will then contact your creditors, inform them of the consolidation, and set up slow payments.  This will get the bill collectors off your back and usually stop compounding of interest on accounts, but it can also affect your credit.  Also, rolled into this payment is a fee for the service that the consumer credit counseling service keeps for itself.

REALITY CHECK ON YOUR CREDIT – Understand that, if you allow the counseling service to “slow pay” your creditors, your credit score will be reduced, and your credit report will be severely tarnished.  While you will live more comfortably, knowing that all creditors are receiving payments, no one is hounding you for money, and you can afford your monthly payment, your creditors are reporting you as either a “charge off” or a “slow pay” to the credit bureaus. A charge off is the worst rating you can have on a credit line. Slow pays show up as current activity while you are in credit counseling. This information is rarely disclosed by Consumer Credit Counselors.

This article may be disturbing if you have been considering Consumer Credit Counseling. The point of the article is not to cause you concern, it is simply to make sure you are informed. There are other solutions to the debt trap. Consumer Credit Counseling is just one of the possible solutions. It is by far, in my opinion, the most heavily adveritsed solution.

You can find alternative solutions on this site as the site develops. These alternatives will all be in the Credit category that you can jump to from the sidebar.

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An A.R.M. or a Leg?

March 15th, 2007 by Mark Flanders

Money and pocketwatchAn adjustable rate mortgage (A.R.M.) is one of the most popular options available to both home buyers and homeowners considering a refinance. Many borrowers do not fully understand the concept of an A.R.M. and as a result may be somewhat hesitant to pursue this type of a mortgage. There are some situations in which an A.R.M. or a hybrid mortgage can be the best mortgage solution for a homeowner who is in the process of refinancing. This article will focus on explaining the concept of an A.R.M., explaining situations where it is the best solution, debunking the most popular misconception regarding A.R.M.s and explaining how those with bad credit can benefit from an A.R.M. At the conclusion of this article you should have a better understanding of A.R.M.s and may want to investigate this option further.

What is an A.R.M.?

A.R.M. is an acronym for an adjustable rate mortgage. This means the interest rate associated with the mortgage is not fixed. Instead it is tied to an index such as the prime index and may rise and drop as the associated index rises and drops. The fact that the interest rate is variable scares many borrowers away from considering this option further. However, there are certain safety measures in place which protect the homeowner from rapid increases.

The Biggest A.R.M. Myth

 

The variability of the interest rate in an A.R.M. makes many homeowners feel apprehensive. Many borrowers envision interest rates going through the roof during their loan term, and resulting in their monthly payments skyrocketing. Fortunately for these borrowers, rapidly increasing interest rates may not have a significant effect on A.R.M. s.

This is because  A.R.M. s have a built in clause which prevents the interest rate from rising more than a certain amount during a specific time period. Although the national interest rate may rise significantly, the A.R.M. is strictly limited to a predetermined maximum. This maximum limit is determined before the borrower signs a single document.

 

When is an A.R.M. Desirable?

Money in a mousetrapOne of the most popular types of  adjustable rate mortgage is the hybrid mortgage. Hybrid mortgages typically have one component which is fixed and one component which is adjustable. These types of mortgages may have a fixed rate for a set number of years. The don’t truly begin to vary until after this initial period. Alternately, a hybrid loan may be variable for a number of years and then become fixed after this initial period.

The adjustable rate mortgage loan which begins with a fixed rate is often desirable because the introductory rate is typically lower than the rate offered on traditional fixed rate mortgage loans for homeowners with comparable credit ratings. Homeowners may particularly like this option if they are not planning to be in the home for an extended period of time.

A.R.M. s for Those with Bad Credit

A.R.M. s can also be very helpful for assisting those with bad credit in purchasing a home for the first time. There are a variety of loan options available today which makes it possible for even homeowners with poor credit to obtain a home loan. However, those with bad credit are usually offered these loans with unfavorably higher interest rates. Additionally, lenders may only be able to offer those with poor credit an A.R.M. Lenders take significantly greater risk when they lend money to a homeowner with bad credit. As a result the lenders often compensate for this increased risk by only offering the homeowner an adjustable rate as opposed to a fixed rate mortgage loan.

Knowledge is the key to deciding what type of mortgage loan is best for your situation. The best advice? Ask questions until you thoroughly understand the terms of any mortgage. Make sure you have no questions at all before you sign any paperwork.

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