Letter to News & Observer

Discussion in 'Discussion Group' started by MamaApe, May 28, 2008.

  1. MamaApe

    MamaApe Well-Known Member

    I copied this from the NAHB Newsletter. The author has as good point.



    Letter to the Editor: A Local Paper Sells Housing Short


    Editor’s note: Following is a shortened version of a letter to the editor of The News & Observer in North Carolina that was forwarded to Nation’s Building News by its author.

    Dear Editor:

    Since my youth, I have been an avid newspaper reader and follower of current events. I look forward to the morning, when I can enjoy my first cup of coffee and the local newspaper and catch up on what’s happening in my backyard as well as around the U.S. and the world. Even with the instant communication and seemingly endless feeds of news and information available online, I still find myself “addicted” to my morning ritual.

    Having lived in a number of cities and traveled to countless others, I have experienced the good and the bad “fish wrap” — and I consider The News & Observer to be a fine publication, generally worthy of its lofty perch as North Carolina’s capital city newspaper. However, over the past few years, I have found myself increasingly gritting my teeth and wondering why I continue to subscribe to a publication that so unfairly chastises my profession.

    You see, I’m a home builder and real estate broker, working as hard as I can to survive the current downswing in my industry. Every day, I am deluged with the unenviable task of juggling numerous factors and potential outcomes related to our industry and where we are headed. Don’t get me wrong — I love what I do. There are few things more rewarding than watching a beautiful home rise from a vacant lot or an excited new home owner collect their keys at closing to move into their new residence or hearing a stranger tell me that my firm has been recommended to them because of how we do business.

    That’s why I’m e-mailing you today. I needed to vent my frustration, and that of thousands upon thousands of North Carolinians whose livelihood is directly or indirectly tied to the housing market who undoubtedly feel the same as I do. I have read countless stories in the N&O about the demise of the housing market, tales of doom and gloom with a local negative spin on a transitional market. Why, I have asked myself and others, can’t our local newspaper occasionally downplay the national trends and report what is happening in our state? Why so many headlines like “Housing Bubble Threatens U.S. Economy” or “Triangle Home Sales Down for Fourth Straight Month,” instead of “Triangle Housing Market Defies National Trends” or “North Carolina Home Values Increase for 14th Straight Month”?

    I know — doom and gloom sells papers. That’s the conventional wisdom, it seems, within your industry. Not ours. Not for the hundreds of small and large firms that have closed shop and handed the office keys to the landlord or even worse, their bank. Not for the builder, local or national, who cannot carry the burden of interest on unsold spec homes and lots any longer. Not for the nearly 100,000 licensed real estate professionals in North Carolina who are hoping to see their industry rebound before they are forced to seek other employment. Not for the myriad businesses (bankers, lenders, attorneys, surveyors, subcontractors of all types, vendors and suppliers, and dozens more) who depend upon this market for their livelihood.

    I, for one, feel nothing less than a “punch in the gut” every time I read this negative press. I’ll bet there are thousands more like me — people who feel that with a little support from the media, we could speed this turnaround in our market. Our biggest hurdle these days is the “fence-sitter” — that couple in Raleigh who really wants to downsize into a new home, but is cautious because of what the paper says; the young lady who has saved for her first home, but feels she needs to wait because she has read that prices are falling; or the growing family in Wake Forest that needs a larger home, but can’t bring themselves to pull the trigger yet because of fears brought to their doorstep every morning by the local newspaper.

    Local and state real estate associations are spending tons of money to get the word out about what a wonderful time today is to buy a home, with interest rates at historic lows and money available to qualified buyers, the way it is supposed to be. Our market is poised for a rebound, but we need your help! All the good press about what a great place the Triangle is in which to live, the recent piece in Forbes magazine describing us as “a recession-proof” area, our many great attractions and work opportunities — all this fades to black without your support.

    Steve Cunningham
    Raleigh, N.C.
     
  2. kdc1970

    kdc1970 Guest

    :hurray: :hurray: :hurray: :hurray: Amen to that!!
     
  3. KDsGrandma

    KDsGrandma Well-Known Member

    Has that been published in the N&O? They have a length limit on letters to the editor. The writer makes some very good points, but would have a better shot at getting a letter published if made those points more succinctly. This is not meant as criticism of the letter, the letter writer, or any of the points made in the letter, but just as a helpful hint to anyone considering writing a letter to the editor.
     
  4. MamaApe

    MamaApe Well-Known Member

    I am not sure, if it has I have not seen it. It has become a popular email circulation, I got it in an email a few weeks ago, and now it was posted in the NAHB newsletter which is a National publication. Hopefully it will make some kind of impact, but who knows.
     
  5. MamaApe

    MamaApe Well-Known Member

    More good news

    Better Terms Coming for Jumbo Loans

    Executives from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac told Congress on Thursday that they are reducing interest rates on some jumbo mortgages.

    They said their more aggressive purchases in recent weeks of loans between $417,000 and $729,750 have brought rates down.

    Daily Real Estate News | May 23, 2008
     
  6. ddrdan

    ddrdan Well-Known Member

    I heard all the builders are going to raise home prices 10% in June??
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    We need to start scaring those people sitting on their hands waiting for a better deal while we loose our jobs. Keep waiting till that great deal you'll get won't be worth a ****e. DO YOURSELF & AMERICA A FAVOR, BUY THE DARN HOME NOW YOU IDIOTS.
     
  7. Hught

    Hught Well-Known Member

    Working Miami today and Coldwel Something or other is having a giant Bluelight special down here on the first, something like 400 properties for 10% off for 10 days. Suposedly they did it in Tampa it was sucesful!
     

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