A Brampton tenant has racked up $30K in unpaid rent and still won’t leave, landlord says lolita, 27/08/2025 A Brampton landlord says he’s out at least $30,000 — so far — because the tenant at one of his properties has refused to pay rent or move out. Rajan Kanwar says he’s been trying to get the tenant out since May and recover some of his losses, but delays at Ontario’s Landlord and Tenant Board (LTB) have left him with mounting debts and emotionally drained. “It’s upsetting, it’s saddening, it’s a lot of different emotions,” Kanwar told CBC Toronto. “I would like my property back.” Since May, the tenant has paid little or no rent, Kanwar says, leaving him to pay the $9,500 monthly mortgage costs on the property. That’s on top of a $7,500-per-month mortgage on his own family home. The tenant on Scotchmere Crescent hasn’t paid full rent since last spring, according to landlord Rajan Kanwar. The tenant would not speak with CBC Toronto. His legal representative has not responded to calls. (Tina MacKenzie/CBC) He says the amount he’s owed includes both unpaid rent and utilities. The tenant refused to speak with CBC Toronto. His legal representative has not yet responded to requests for comment. Ordered out Kanwar, an IT manager, says he’s filed two applications with … Continue Reading
Ex-Steelers quarterback Kenny Pickett sells his Cranberry Township home lolita, 26/08/2025 Kenny Pickett is selling his Pittsburgh-area home. The Steelers’ former quarterback has listed his Cranberry Township home for $2.7 million. Listed by Sayward Lehman with Sotheby’s International Realty, the 8,756 square-foot house has six bedrooms and six full bathrooms and is located in the Seneca Valley School District. It was built in 2022 and is being sold fully furnished. Another former Steelers QB is also selling his home. Mitch Trubisky is selling his Pittsburgh-area home after leaving the team last month. PHOTOS: Former Steelers quarterback Mitch Trubisky’s home on the market Click here for more information Pickett’s listing. Download the FREE WPXI News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Channel 11 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch WPXI NOW TRENDING NOW: Roberto Clemente jersey worn during 1960 World Series-winning season sells at auction for over $250K Deadly Jeannette fire: How you can help surviving mom, 2 kids 4 children, father killed in Westmoreland County house fire VIDEO: Pittsburgh sports bars, hotels hoping to cash in on March Madness DOWNLOAD the Channel 11 News app for breaking news alerts View comments … Continue Reading
St. Petersburg Snell Isle mansion lists for $11.25 million lolita, 25/08/2025 A 5,378-square foot home in St. Louis Petersburg’s exclusive Snell Isle neighborhood is on the market for $11.25 million. 321 Brightwaters Blvd NE is a Mediterranean style home with four bedrooms and five bathrooms on a 0.41-acre double lot. The waterfront property overlooks Coffee Pot Bayou and faces west, offering sunset views. It was built in 1928 and designed by the influential developer SV Schooley. “He was like a Spanish-Mediterranean style Frank Lloyd Wright,” said Bonnie Strickland of Coldwell Banker Realty. She is listing the property along with Miles Crowe. 321 Brightwaters Blvd NE was designed and built by the influential developer SV Schooley. [ VHT STUDIOS – WWW.VHT.COM | Bonnie Strickland ] The current owners paid $705,000 for the property in 1999, according to Pinellas County property records. They renovated it in the early 2000s to preserve its historical significance. They’ve also added modern structural elements like new windows and a new roof. “You can’t build a house like this anymore, it’s too expensive.” Strickland said. “It’s built like a fortress, solid plaster.” Special features include three fireplaces, hand-painted Italian-inspired interiors, an attached one-car garage, a separate two-car garage/workspace, a heated pool with a waterslide and a dock with … Continue Reading
Will Brisbane property prices keep surging? Here’s what the experts say lolita, 24/08/2025 The rise in Brisbane property prices last month caught many people by surprise, but experts are divided on whether the surge will continue through the rest of the year. CoreLogic says values rose more than 13 per cent in 2023 and lifted a further one per cent in the first month of this year. Regional values rose a tad below nine per cent last year and half a per cent in January. There was a recurring theme as hopeful buyers inspected a recently listed inner-Brisbane apartment on a muggy afternoon this week. Buyers still feel FOMO Phoebe told the ABC the fear of missing out is real. “It’s the competition really that we’re struggling with. There’s not a lot on offer and places are just getting snapped up super quickly,” she said. “Prices are skyrocketing and it’s a race against the clock really to get into the market.” Phoebe says many places sell quickly.(ABC News: Alex Brewster) Another potential buyer added: “It’s frustrating as we see things coming up, and by the time we get to the first inspection, an offer has already been made.” Angus Kizil said he was lucky enough to buy his first home … Continue Reading
Longtime Virginia Dragstrip Hits The Real Estate Market lolita, 23/08/2025 The Custom T’s Motorsports Park, formerly known as Colonial Beach Dragway in Northern Virginia, was listed this week with agent Exit Realty Expertise, for an asking price of $4 million. The 1/8-mile dragstrip, which has been in operation since 1960, is owned by veteran grudge racing promoter Larry Thompson, who took over the facility in 2018. The track carries the name of Thompson’s successful custom screen printing business, Custom T’s, which he founded in 1987 in Washington, DC The 50-acre facility in Colonial Beach, population 3,900, is located less than two miles from the Maryland state line and the Potomac River, and is a short drive from DC Richmond, and Virginia Beach. Your traditional small-town track, it features all of the essentials without the frills: new scoreboards, freshly paved return road, some limited paved parking, an office and concession building plus other storage outbuildings, covered dining tables, and of course the timing tower , timing system, concrete barrier walls, and simple grandstand seating. At about 26-grand a month over 30 years before taxes and insurance, whether this Virginia dragstrip is worth the $4 million asking price is up to the discretion of an interested buyer. But we certainly join the … Continue Reading
Baltimore is selling hundreds of vacant homes to city residents for just $1 each lolita, 22/08/2025 Baltimore is selling city-owned abandoned homes to residents for $1 each. The initiative aims to revive neighborhoods with high crime rates and surplus vacant homes. The city of Baltimore will sell more than 200 city-owned abandoned homes to residents starting at just $1 each in an effort to revive some of its roughest neighborhoods. A city board approved the measure on Wednesday in a 4-1 vote, according to The Baltimore Sun. The Maryland city’s crime rates have led to a surplus of vacant homes in certain neighborhoods. According to the city, there are about 15,000 abandoned properties in Baltimore. The $1 home project approved this week targets about 200 of those city-owned residences. The properties will be marketed to Baltimore residents who are committed to restoring and living in the homes. The program is meant to incentivize Baltimore locals to buy up the cheap properties, although developers and nonprofits can also purchase the vacant homes — for $3,000, according to local news reports. The city is offering home repair grants of $50,000 to individuals who are pre-approved for a construction loan, Bloomberg reported. Baltimore implemented a similar housing project in the 1970s when it offered homesteaders the chance to snatch … Continue Reading
$2.3 million for a four-bedroom home lolita, 21/08/2025 958 Larkspur Road – Google Street View A 2,782-square-foot house built in 1925 has changed hands. The spacious historic property located in the 900 block of Larkspur Road in Oakland was sold on Feb. 6, 2024. The $2,300,000 purchase price works out to $827 per square foot. This single-story home offers a roomy layout with four bedrooms and three baths. Additionally, the house comes with a garage. The property sits on a 4,002-square-foot lot. Additional houses that have recently been purchased close by include: On Longridge Road, Oakland, in July 2023, a 2,285-square-foot home was sold for $1,875,000, a price per square foot of $821. The home has 5 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms. In November 2022, a 3,177-square-foot home on Longridge Road in Oakland sold for $2,300,000, a price per square foot of $724. The home has 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms. A 4,134-square-foot home on the 600 block of Carlston Avenue in Oakland sold in June 2023, for $3,750,000, a price per square foot of $907. The home has 5 bedrooms and 5 bathrooms. … Continue Reading
Changes to eviction notices put Dubai tenants on alert lolita, 20/08/2025 Eviction notices in Dubai may still apply to tenants when a change of property ownership takes place, rental dispute cases suggest. A recent court decision noted by the Dubai Rental Dispute Center (RDC) concluded an eviction notice was transferable from a property seller to the new buyer. Previously, new owners purchasing properties with a sitting tenant were required to apply for a new 12-month eviction notice, even if a notice had already been served to a tenant via a public notary. This opened the door to a tenant being able to serve, for example, 11 months of an eviction notice, only to have an extra 12-month eviction notice added on if the property was sold to a new buyer. When the buyer is an end user and needs to move in, this is a step in the right direction for those buyers and re-addresses the marketplace balance Mario Volpi, sales director, AX Capital real estate in Dubai But, even though article 25 of law 33 of 2008 on eviction notices remains the same, the way it is interpreted in court has changed so the notice is attached to the property and both parties are protected. Ludmila Yamalova, managing partner at … Continue Reading
Some BC property owners ‘panicking’ following short-term rental legislation: realtors lolita, 19/08/2025 Deanna Steele says she has never seen as many condos and vacation homes for sale in Kelowna, BC as she has this month. The founder of Keys to Kelowna Properties Inc., a luxury vacation rental management agency, said the lake-front city’s real estate market is “saturated” by properties zoned for short-term rental use. Some of the sellers are people who bought not that long ago and are already trying to get out. “They thought they were going to make a mint because they saw what was happening in the gold rush. And now they’re realizing, ‘Oh, big mistake,'” said Steele. That gold rush — investing in short-term rentals in Kelowna and many other Canadian cities — could potentially slow to a trickle in the wake of new legislation to regulate short-term rentals introduced by the BC government in mid-October. While the BC Real Estate Association’s chief economist Brendon Ogmundson says it is likely too early for the regulations to have a major impact on listings, he is hearing anecdotal reports from realtors that investors are looking to offload properties as the new rules come into effect. “My guess is that this change in policy will certainly motivate some investors to … Continue Reading
How Realtors are compensating may change lolita, 18/08/2025 The way Realtors are paid may change if courts uphold an agreement the National Association of Realtors made March 15 to pay $418 million in damages to settle lawsuits. Homeowners said in a class action lawsuit against the real estate trade group that its rules forced them to pay large fees, according to The New York Times. Rory Dubin, president of the Northeast Florida Association of Realtors, said the industry is waiting on a federal court ruling. Dubin “It’s not guaranteed that it will be accepted, but it probably will the way it looks,” he said. If accepted, rules are expected to change in July. At the heart of the matter are Realtor commissions. Dubin said that if passed, brokers representing buyers will no longer be allowed to post their commission on the Multiple Listing Service, or MLS, which lists available homes for sale in a region. Brokers representing buyers have used the information to help determine which homes to show prospective buyers. Most often, the selling broker splits the commission with the buyer’s broker. Those commission fees are usually paid by the seller. The commissions are added to the sale price of the home when it is listed. With … Continue Reading