Florida Real Estate Blog

Chinese Drywall
October 30th, 2009 1:52 PM

The problems caused by Chinese Drywall are perfectly clear in thousands of recently constructed homes across the nation.  Issues like corrosion of A/C coils, plumbing fixtures turning black, jewelery turning black and in some cases health problems. The cure to replace all the drywall in a home has typically been in the $25,000 price range for most homes. After spending 3 1/2 million dollars to study the problem the Feds now say their findings are inconclusive. Read more below:

Feds: Chinese drywall reports still inconclusive

WEST PALM BEACH, Florida (AP) – Oct. 30, 2009 – Federal studies released Thursday cannot yet definitively link imported Chinese drywall to health problems or corrosion of pipes and wires that thousands of U.S. homeowners have been reporting for nearly a year.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission, which is leading the multi-agency investigation, said it needs to further study the matter before it can consider a recall, ban or other solutions to help affected homeowners. Additional results from ongoing studies were due to be released next month.

“The expansive investigation and scientific work that has been done and continues to be carried out is all aimed at providing answers and solutions,” Lori Saltzman, a director in the CPSC’s Office of Hazard Identification and Reduction, said Thursday. “No connections have been made yet.”

Saltzman said the agency, which has so far spent $3.5 million on the studies, has received nearly 1,900 homeowner complaints during one of its largest consumer product investigations in U.S. history.

“We understand this problem has literally driven people from their homes,” she said.

Homeowners, however, were frustrated by a lack of answers.

“So many of us have been really waiting on these results released today to offer us encouragement, but in fact, we’re quite disappointed,” said Holly Krulik, of Parkland, Florida, about 45 miles north of Miami.

Krulik and her husband, Doug, along with their two young children, moved in with her parents about six months ago because she says the Chinese wallboard in their home was making them sick and ruining the house.

“We’re hanging on by a thread here. When is help going to arrive?” said Krulik, who will soon join hundreds of others who have filed lawsuits.

Thousands of homeowners like the Kruliks who bought new houses built with the potentially defective materials are finding their lives in limbo as the lawsuits against builders, contractors, suppliers and manufacturers wind through the courts.

During the height of the U.S. housing boom, with building materials in short supply, American construction companies imported millions of pounds (kilograms) of Chinese-made drywall because it was abundant and cheap. An Associated Press analysis of shipping records found that more than 500 million pounds (226 million kilograms) of Chinese gypsum board was imported between 2004 and 2008 – enough to have built tens of thousands of homes.

They are heavily concentrated in the Southeast, especially Florida and areas of Louisiana and Mississippi hit hard by Hurricane Katrina.

The defective materials have since been found by state and federal agencies to emit “volatile sulfur compounds.” Officials have also found traces of strontium sulfide, which can produce a rotten-egg odor, along with organic compounds not found in American-made drywall. Homeowners complain the fumes are corroding copper pipes, destroying TVs and air conditioners, blackening jewelry and silverware, and making them sick.

And some homeowners are reporting that their insurance companies are dropping or refusing to renew their policies based on the presence of the wallboard in their houses, putting them at risk of foreclosure.

The federal test results released Thursday largely confirmed what prior testing had found. The multiple agencies investigating, including the CPSC, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, acknowledged the reported health symptoms are consistent with some sort of contamination. But the culprit is unclear.

The Chinese government is assisting with the investigation.


Posted by Craig Hensley on October 30th, 2009 1:52 PMPost a Comment (0)

Subscribe to this blog
Rental Market has been challenging in 2008
October 22nd, 2009 10:33 AM

The rental market in SW Florida has seen a steady decline in rental rates over the past year.  This is a direct result of the effects of supply and demand, with the supply of available rentals being greater than the demand by tenants.  This was the first year that I can remember since I arrived in 1973 that the population of Florida actually declined.  As foreclosures and short sales are purchased by investors, many of these properties are placed in the rental pool which increases the supply even more.  Investors who are currently purchasing homes for $45,000 to $85,000 that were originally sold three years ago for $200,000 or more have a big advantage over owners who may have a large mortgage.  A home that was purchased for $45,000 can be rented for $750 a month and show a nice positive cash flow. A house with a $150,000 mortgage cannot.  This causes even more owners who cannot carry the negative cash flow to be forced into foreclosure of short sales, which again adds to the over supply of inventory and compounds the problem. 

Hensley Real Estate's rental department is much smaller than many of the other Realtors in the area as we manage less than 50 properties.  This allows us to be very hands on with our customers and maintain a 95% occupancy rate for our customers.  We are currently advertising for additional units as we have none available at this time. Landlords however need to realistic as to what current rental rates are and be competitive.  Otherwise, their house will sit empty as renters find a better deal down the street.

Below is an interesting article from the NewsPress on this topic:

Lee County rental market in shambles

DICK HOGAN • dhogan@news-press.com • October 21, 2009

1:10 A.M. — Between falling rent rates, the rising cost of insurance and unscrupulous tenants, Bob Wilson is having trouble breaking even on the modest houses he rents out for a living.

“I’ve been in this business for 35 years and I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said. “I’m paying more for taxes and insurance alone than for what I used to pay for principal, interest, taxes and insurance.”


Wilson is not alone. Statistics released today by Novato, Calif.-based RealFacts shows that the average rent for big apartment complexes in the third quarter dropped 7 percent from a year earlier in Cape Coral-Fort Myers — second only to 8.8 percent in Naples-Marco Island.

Meanwhile, occupancy in Cape Coral-Fort Myers also rose sharply: up 8.5 percent to 90.2 percent, the second biggest jump in the state after Ocala.

While it’s good news for those who are looking for an inexpensive place to live, the falling rents are wreaking havoc on the rental industry itself.

“This is pretty much the trend all over the country although it does seem that particular market, Lee County in general, has had a more dramatic hit in terms of rent erosion,” RealFacts CEO Sarah Bridge said. “It was $950 in 2007 and now, two years later, $826. It has definitely sustained a steady decline of rent in this market and it’s pretty much happened every quarter.”

The company tracks rents for apartment complexes of 100 units or more.

Dave Roberts, owner of Dave Roberts Realty in Fort Myers and of the FREE Apartment Finder Service, said the reason for the low rent prices is plain to see:
“You’ve got more people buying investment properties: short sales and foreclosures.”

Those investors typically rent the houses out but they’re often in for a rude surprise, he said. “The problem is you’ve got these landlords who are new to the business. They say, ‘We’re going to rent this for $925 a month, and first and last’” month’s rent required up front, he said.

“Well, God bless you, we’ll try, but it’s not likely,” he said.

The market may eventually make rental rates pick up, but this area is particularly prone to a sustained renter’s market, Bridge said, noting that besides the flood of foreclosures there’s little chance for the economy to rebound because the home-building industry dominated the area so strongly before the market crashed in early 2006.

That rebound will be awhile in coming, Roberts said, in part because this area actually lost population last year and is likely to do so again this year.

He expects rents to get a short-term lift from the tourist/part-time resident season just starting, but that the downward trend will still be in place by the second quarter of 2010.

Wilson said the prognosis is gloomy for small landlords like him.

Renters sometimes agree to rent only to “renegotiate” after a month, knowing that a landlord will have to spend up to $1,000 in court costs and attorney’s fees, he said.

Even after spending the money, Wilson said, “It takes forever to get rid of them.”

Now, he said, it looks like the rental industry will be in bad shape for the foreseeable future and he’s looking for steadier work.

“I’m looking to get a job dealing poker” at the Naples-Fort Myers Greyhound Track, he said.


Posted by Craig Hensley on October 22nd, 2009 10:33 AMPost a Comment (0)

Subscribe to this blog
Recent Posts:

Archive:

My Favorite Blogs:

Sites That Link to This Blog:

Hensley Real Estate 1423 SE 16th Place Suite #202 Cape Coral, FL 33990-6834
Phone: Cell: Fax:

Contact Us | Free Home Valuation | Our Listings | Home | Search Area Homes | Florida Real Estate Blog

Copyright © 2010 Hensley Real Estate
Portions Copyright © 2010 a la mode, inc.
Another XSite by a la mode, inc. | Terms of UseSite Map
All rate, payment, and area information are estimates and approximations only.