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Money and Privacy

AT&T Trouble Borrowing, Are You Kidding Me ?

 

Big business really wants to shove the $700 billion bailout down America's throat. AT&T and others want to scare us into supporting the bailout.

 

Related articles

Businesses Pressure Congress on Bailout Plan from the Wall Street Journal

AT&T feeling credit crunch strain from cnn.com

Filed Under
Communications: Wireless - Landline -

HUD's Half Billion to Cal. Funds Local Gov't Purchase, Rehab of Foreclosed Homes

California to get $500 million in federal foreclosure relief

Los Angeles is to receive about $33 million. Plans call for using the money to buy blighted homes and either resell or turn them into affordable housing.
By Jessica Garrison, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

September 27, 2008
California and many of its communities hardest hit by the foreclosure crisis stand to receive more than $500 million in federal aid over the next 18 months to buy and fix up distressed homes, the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced Friday.

Within hours of the announcement, California's two Democratic U.S. senators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, protested that the state was not getting its fair share of the nearly $4 billion Congress allocated to help local governments deal with blight from foreclosures.

"Frankly, it is beyond us how California -- which has nearly twice the amount of foreclosure filings than Florida (561,223 compared with 287,210) -- could receive less assistance. This makes no sense, and is totally unacceptable," the senators wrote in a letter to HUD Secretary Steve Preston. (Florida received $541 million; California $521 million.)

HUD officials said they believe their formula fairly distributes money to the places that need it most. They also said the senators were using different, less complete data than HUD relied on; HUD data show that Florida has a higher foreclosure rate and a higher risk for abandoned homes than California.

The city of Los Angeles is to receive about $33 million directly from the federal government. In the next few months, the city could also get money from the state, which has a pool of $145 million to allocate to communities. With more than 13,000 foreclosed homes in the city, Los Angeles Councilman Ed Reyes warned that the federal funds would go quickly. Los Angeles County is to receive $17 million, and other cities in the county, such as Long Beach and Lancaster, also would get awards.

The largest single award, about $50 million, would go to Riverside County, where the foreclosure crisis is so dire that bobcats recently took up residence in an empty home.

HUD's neighborhood stabilization program, which was championed by U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles), is part of a housing bill approved in July. It gives money directly to local governments to buy and fix up foreclosed homes.

Critics of the program say it could hurt recovery, explaining that governments will now be competing with lenders and private homeowners who have been struggling to sell in a depressed market.

Last month, The Times contacted housing officials in the 12 California counties with the highest concentrations of foreclosed properties. Most said they had not lobbied for the bill, and several wondered whether they had the staff to make use of the funding.

Under the program, governments can demolish or rehabilitate blighted homes, then either resell them or use them for affordable housing.

jessica.garrison@latimes.com

Filed Under
Money & Privacy Affordable Housing -

Asinine - WaMu CEO Gets $18 Million In 18 Days - Bank Fails

Alan Fishman might want to leave his brief tenure as the new WaMu CEO off his resume. Hired September 7, Fishman oversaw the biggest bank failure ever when federal regulators seized WaMu on September 25.

Not to worry, Fishman stands to get $18 million for less than three weeks at the helm.

Hopefully the failure of WaMu will nix the implementation of a $5 fee for cashing personal checks drawn on WaMu.

Related links

Nightly Business Report. WAMU Is Going, Going, Gone...Sold to J.P. Morgan | PBS

WaMu CEO: 3 weeks work, $18M

Alan H. Fishman Joins Washington Mutual as Chief Executive Officer

Washington Mutual's free checking -- give or take $5

 

 

Filed Under

Don’t let Uncle Sam pocket your stimulus check

Recent news reports indicate that some retirees, disabled veterans and others, who do not normally file a tax return, may miss out on receiving their economic stimulus check if they do not file a tax return by October 15th.

Persons who normally ARE NOT required to file a return -- because their income is too low or nontaxable -- MUST file a tax return this year to obtain their stimulus payment approved by Congress. The legislation provides a minimum payment of $300 for individuals ($600 for married couples). It also provides a payment of $300 for each qualifying child younger than 17. The married couple or individual must have qualifying income of at least $3000 to be eligible for the payment.

Various types of Social Security and veterans benefits may qualify you -- but not all.

 The IRS has Taxpayer Assistance Centers to help with filing for individuals whose income is $40,000 or less. More information about how to file and eligibility is available by going to this link http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=177937,00.html at IRS.gov or call 1-800-906-9887 for a taxpayer assistance site near you.  

If you have friends or relatives who might qualify, remind them that this payment may be available to them by filing a return by the October 15th deadline. This will put the money in their pockets instead of Uncle Sam’s.

Filed Under

Property tax reassessment scam Update May 2009

2009: UCAN has copies of letters being issued throughout CA that look almost identical except the company name and sometimes, the PO Box & phone #. Please see Tax Reassessment Letter Scam Info sent by the Los Angeles Dept of Consumer Affairs. UCAN was advised to tell you that if you are a victim within the County of L.A. call (800) 973-3370, and if you're a victim outside the County, call (213) 974-1452 and select #3 at the prompt. The complaint form can be found at this link - http://www.dca.lacounty.gov/Forms/CAComplaint.pdf.

If you received and paid the San Diego based company (with the San Diego phone # on the letter), contact the San Diego City Attorney. No matter where you live, if you received a letter from an L.A. based company, follow instructions from the Los Angeles Dept. of Consumer Affairs. If you received and paid another company, contact the Attorney General. The California Attorney General's Office is taking all other complaints relating to other California companies that purport to assist consumers with filing the necessary paperwork to obtain a reassessment on their property value for tax purposes. Complainants can contact the California Attorney General's Office Public Inquiry Unit at (800) 952-5225.

2008 Blog: "Tax Reassessment Scam Hits San Diego" and UCAN wanted you to be aware: Have you been contacted by a company that is offering to reassess the value of your property for a fee? Consumers should be aware the county will reassess property value for free. The company has a P.O. Box and goes by the name of "Property Tax Reassessment." The notice looks like it's an official government notification but it's not. If you have received a notice from this organization or another like company, did you ignore it, try to contact someone with the company or pay the fee? UCAN has received several calls from people who have received this notice.

Filed Under
Money & Privacy Consumer Scam -

Property tax reassessment scam Update May 2009

2009: UCAN has copies of letters being issued throughout CA that look almost identical except the company name and sometimes, the PO Box & phone #. Please see Tax Reassessment Letter Scam Info sent by the Los Angeles Dept of Consumer Affairs. UCAN was adivsed to tell you that if you are a victim within the County of L.A. call (800) 973-3370, and if you're a victim outside the County, call (213) 974-1452 and select #3 at the prompt. The complaint form can be found at this link - http://www.dca.lacounty.gov/Forms/CAComplaint.pdf.

If you received and paid the San Diego based company (with the San Diego phone # on the letter), contact the San Diego City Attorney. No matter where you live, if you received a letter from an L.A. based company, follow instructions from the Los Angeles Dept. of Consumer Affairs.  If you received and paid another company, contact the Attorney General. The California Attorney General's Office is taking all other complaints relating to other California companies that purport to assist consumers with filing the necessary paperwork to obtain a reassessment on their property value for tax purposes. Complainants can contact the California Attorney General's Office Public Inquiry Unit at (800) 952-5225.

2008 Blog: "Tax Reassessment Scam Hits San Diego" and UCAN wanted you to be aware: Have you been contacted by a company that is offering to reassess the value of your property for a fee? Consumers should be aware the county will reassess property value for free. The company has a P.O. Box and goes by the name of "Property Tax Reassessment." The notice looks like it's an official government notification but it's not. If you have received a notice from this organization or another like company, did you ignore it, try to contact someone with the company or pay the fee? UCAN has received several calls from people who have received this notice.

Filed Under
Money & Privacy Consumer Scam -

I'd like my NEXT paycheck in Pesos, please!

Being prescient after making against-the-grain predictions is a UCAN tradition. Now that the price of oil has reached $105 a barrel, the mainstream media is finally admitting what we've been saying for years: that OPEC's price "increases" aren't really increases at all - what's really happening is that the dollar's value is dropping so quickly that it takes $105 in U.S. dollars to buy what used to cost $75 U.S.  Not only that, these cuts in the value of the dollar actually help the U.S. Treasury pay its debts. Good for Uncle Sam, but very bad for you ... especially if you happen to live in America.

Economists have a word for this: They call it "Inflation."

Unfortunately our government has not been monitoring inflation. About ten years ago, the United States began reporting what was called the "Core Rate" of inflation. This "Core Rate" is deceptive ... it does not include the cost of energy, food or housing - those items are considered mere "statistical noise"

That's why Mr. Bernanke has been able to claim that our inflation woes are manageable. The official numbers do not reflect the true price of anything that people actually buy. Apparently, Mr. Bernanke has not purchased a gallon of gas lately ... gone grocery shopping ... or tried to buy a home or pay rent.

Mr. Bernanke's claims that we have "minimal inflation" are wearing thin. Even mainstream economists are waking up and smelling their overpriced coffee (as evidenced by Starbuck's recent financial woes). 

Here's how bad it is - the Mexican Peso is actually gaining on the U.S. dollar. That's right, the currency of a third-world country - a country where flush toilets are considered a luxury -- actually has a stronger monetary system than the U.S.A.

So why would our government inflate your money? They have three very good reasons:

1) in the short term, it stimulates the economy by creating the illusion of wealth. When there is more money in the system, it is easier to get into debt, because the money available to banks is cheaper.

2) In the long term, it is a great way to cut the benefits of wounded veterans and social security recipients.

It's ugly but true: Government benefits are tied to the Core rate of inflation" which doesn't measure the true rate of inflation. That means that COLAs (Cost of Living Adjustments) do not keep up with inflation. This process cheats Americans, but helps keep the government in the black. 

3) It is a fantastic way to pay off war debts and other foreign debts, such as money we've borrowed from the Chinese ... the debt is payed in dollars that are worth far less than the value of the money that was originally loaned. This is how Germany paid its debts to allied nations after World War I. At one point, it took a wheelbarrow of money to buy a loaf of bread in post-war Germany. Hopefully it won't get that bad here.

UCAN is known for making some pretty good predictions. We didn't predict that the Peso would outstrip the dollar, but we did tell you that the government was lying about the inflation rate more than two years ago. And we observed (correctly) that every major economic upheaval of the last 50 years has been accompanied by high oil and energy costs.

Of course UCAN members knew all about this trend TWO years ago, because we explained it in our Spring 2006 newsletter, which is available in print form to our members long before we ever put it on the Internet.

So the next time somebody offers you a penny for your thoughts, say "No Thanks, I prefer a stable currency, like the Peso."  And don't forget what President Gerald Ford said, "Inflation is the cruelest tax of all."

Filed Under
Money & Privacy Money Saving Tips -

Consumers can get their money back on fake "miracle" cold remedy Airborne in false advertising lawsuit settlement


Consumers who bought the cold remedy Airborne, and related products, between May 1, 2001, and November 29, 2007, can get their money back. Simply visit airbornesettlement.com to make your claim, I just did, and I'll give an update on the results. You can file a complaint online or print and send a claim form, but you'll want to rack your brain and try to remember...

  1. The store from which you bought the product(s),
  2. The amount you spent on the product(s).
  3. The city in which you bought the product.
  4. The type of product you bought

According to Cory Doctorow at Boing Boing, the company that made Airborne "settled a lawsuit brought by customers who were upset to learn that the 'clinical trials' that proved that it worked were faked. If you bought any of this snake-oil, you can get some money back.

Boing Boing points to the Lede blog from the NY Times, which reports that

"Under the agreement, a special Web site was created here to accept claims from customers, who have spent far more than $23.3 million on the range of Airborne products, from Airborne On-the-Go and Airborne Nighttime to Airborne Gummi and Airborne Power Pixies, which is sweetened for children..."

 

Filed Under
Money & Privacy Consumer Scam -

Real Estate Loan Tips

Most consumers who purchased homes or condos from sub-prime lenders knew the time would come when interest-only payments would end and that the actual montly mortgage payment to which they agreed, would be due.  The truth is that 95%+ of the people that took out the loans and now have problems knew the risks. And they took those risks in order to live the American dream. 

For future reference, the following tips could serve as a checklist: 

1.       Only bank with reputable conservative companies;
2.       If it seems too good to be true, it is;
3.       Always ask about the worst case scenario.  If you cannot afford it now, don’t do it; and
4.       Never assume that things won’t go bad.
 

Filed Under

Real Estate Loan Tips

Most consumers who purchased homes or condos from sub-prime lenders knew the time would come when interest-only payments would end and that the actual montly mortgage payment to which they agreed, would be due.  The truth is that 95%+ of the people that took out the loans and now have problems knew the risks. And they took those risks in order to live the American dream. 

For future reference, the following tips could serve as a checklist: 

1.       Only bank with reputable conservative companies;
2.       If it seems too good to be true, it is;
3.       Always ask about the worst case scenario.  If you cannot afford it now, don’t do it; and
4.       Never assume that things won’t go bad.
 

Filed Under


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