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Florida Real Estate Marketing Services Our team focuses on marketing for buyer and seller needs whether condos, homes or vacant land. Let us help you realize your goal in owning property.

We are proud of our reputation of professionalism, integrity and work ethic or work hard and smart. Dreaming of laying out in the sunshine, immersing your feet in crystal clear water and enjoying all that Florida has to offer? Appealing to those who want to invest,sit back and watch their money grow. FLORIDA REAL ESTATE MARKETING SERVICES is dedicated to offering its clients a wide selection of fi

ne and affordable homes, condominiums, vacant land and investment/commercial opportunities throughout South Florida.

06/03/2022

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06/04/2021

JUNE 3, 2021
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Federal Court Won’t Stop CDC’s National Eviction Ban
A circuit judge ruled against the CDC’s eviction ban but issued a stay on the order. Landlords then asked an appeals court to reverse the stay and allow evictions, but that court ruled against them, saying it could “exacerbate the significant public health risks … even with increased vaccinations.”

WASHINGTON – A federal appellate court has ruled that a national COVID-19-related eviction ban ordered by government regulators can remain in effect, for now – which comes as a victory for renters following a series of prior legal defeats.

The Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., in its ruling denied a request by a group of landlords to allow evictions to resume.

The ban was ordered last year by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a measure to avert mass evictions of renters devastated economically by the coronavirus crisis.

The decision comes after a defeat for renters last month when a federal judge ruled that the CDC exceeded its authority by ordering the ban. In that decision, District Court Judge Dabney Friedrich ruled against the CDC – but agreed to delay its enforcement to give the federal government time to appeal. The landlord group then appealed to give the ruling immediate legal force.

On Wednesday, the three-judge court panel in D.C. denied the landlords’ appeal.

“[The government] has demonstrated ‘that lifting the national moratorium will ‘exacerbate the significant public health risks … because, even with increased vaccinations, COVID-19 continues to spread and infect persons, and new variants are emerging,’” the court wrote in its seven-page decision.

Several judges have previously ruled that the eviction ban is illegal, but they have limited their rulings to apply to only the parties involved in the lawsuit. Friedrich said last month that hers should apply nationwide, but Justice Department attorneys asked that she keep the scope of her judgment narrow.

Under the CDC ban, landlords are prohibited from evicting renters who demonstrate via a sworn declaration that they’d face overcrowded conditions if they were thrown out of their home. They also must certify that they have made partial rent payments.

A study in seven states by the Private Equity Stakeholder Project found that landlords filed more than 56,000 eviction actions since the CDC ban took effect last September.

06/03/2021

JUNE 2, 2021
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Biden Taking Aim at Appraisal Bias, Housing Disparities
By Kerry Smith
The president is launching a first-ever interagency effort to address “home appraisal inequities” and recommend rules to “aggressively combat housing discrimination.”

TULSA, Okla. – President Joe Biden traveled to Tulsa, Oklahoma, this week to honor the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, an infamous event where a Black business district, nicknamed Black Wall Street, was razed and hundreds of people killed.

Biden spoke of planned efforts to combat racial inequities, and he focused on the housing market and boosts for Black-owned businesses. A media release put out by the White House provided an overview of each initiative:

Housing market: Biden will “take action to address racial discrimination in the housing market, including by launching a first-of-its-kind interagency effort to address inequity in home appraisals, and conducting rulemaking to aggressively combat housing discrimination.”
Black-owned businesses: Biden plans to “use the federal government’s purchasing power to grow federal contracting with small disadvantaged businesses by 50%, translating to an additional $100 billion over five years, and helping more Americans realize their entrepreneurial dreams.”
“The horrific acts of violence and property destruction that occurred in Tulsa 100 years ago and the subsequent public and private policies that frustrated the recovery of ‘Black Wall Street’ help illustrate why racial wealth gaps persist in America today,” said National Association of Realtors® (NAR) President Charlie Oppler in response to Biden’s announcement. “We commend the Biden Administration for its commitment to closing the gap, specifically by focusing on the intergenerational wealth building opportunities offered by property and homeownership.”

Housing market proposals
Biden issued a memorandum during his first week in office directing the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to address discrimination in the housing market, and this week’s announcement is the result of that effort. HUD has now sent a proposed rule and proposed interim final rule to HUD’s authorizing committee in the Senate and the House of Representatives for review. They will be published in the Federal Register next week.

According to the White House, those rules will “provide the legal framework for HUD to require private and public entities alike to rethink established practices that contribute to or perpetuate inequities.”

Appraisals: Biden says a Brookings study in 2018 found that “homes in majority-Black neighborhoods are often valued at tens of thousands of dollars less than comparable homes in similar – but majority-white – neighborhoods,” and that the “crisis is worsening.”

In this week’s announcement, Biden said he asked HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge to create a first-of-its-kind interagency to address home appraisal inequities. He said the goal is to use “the many levers at the federal government’s disposal,” including:

Potential enforcement under fair housing laws
Regulatory action
New standards and guidance created in partnership with industry and state and local governments
“NAR is particularly encouraged by the administration’s most recent efforts to address inequities in the home appraisal process, and we support a thorough review of the current appraisal system alongside both public and private stakeholders,” says NAR’s Oppler. “We look forward to working with White House and HUD on other upcoming rulemakings that seek to more effectively combat housing discrimination and redress the legacy of residential racial segregation.”

Biden also outlined proposals that would impact the overall housing market, including:

New Neighborhood Homes Tax Credit: The American Jobs Plan calls for this tax credit to attract private investment for affordable housing for low- and moderate-income homebuyers. These tax credits will increase homeownership opportunities and asset-building for underserved communities, reduce blight and vacant properties, and create thousands of good-paying jobs. The Neighborhood Homes Tax Credit would, if passed:

Encourage investment in homes that cost more to redevelop than they can sell for on the open market. The White House says that about 40% of the U.S. housing stock is at least 50 years old, and more than 15 million properties are vacant as families struggle to find affordable housing. Under the tax credit program, each state’s housing finance agency would award tax credits to project sponsors – developers, lenders or local governments – through a competitive application process. Sponsors would use the credits to raise investment capital for their projects, and the investors could claim the credits against their federal income tax when the homes are sold and occupied by eligible homebuyers.
Bolster homeownership rates for low- and moderate-income homebuyers in underserved communities and protect against gentrification. Homes located in census tracts with poverty rates of at least 130% of the area poverty rate, median family income below 80% of area median income, and median home values lower than the area median value are eligible for the credit – about 1 in 4 census tracts nationwide. Homes redeveloped using the credit may only sell for four times the area median family income, and homebuyers cannot have incomes exceeding 140 percent of the area median family income.
Incentivize an end to exclusionary zoning to expand housing choices: In Biden’s American Jobs Plan, he asks Congress to enact the Unlocking Possibilities Program, a $5 billion competitive grant that awards flexible and attractive funding to jurisdictions that take steps to eliminate barriers to affordable housing and expand housing choices for people with low or moderate incomes.

© 2021 Florida Realtors®

02/09/2021
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07/21/2020

Fla. Homeowners, Renters Get $75M in Housing Aid
By Kerry Smith
The Fla. Housing Finance Corp. will send the first round of federal funds for coronavirus-related housing relief to individual counties and cities for distribution. Altogether, $120M will go to renters and homeowners hurt by the pandemic “through no fault of their own.”

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