T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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477.1 | Peonage | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Mon Feb 29 1988 08:53 | 8 |
| Or even better, have DEC provide housing (small towns) for the
employees. There's a song about this (16 tons) with a line:
"St. Peter don't call me, I can't go, I own my soul to the company
store."
Sounds like a _bad_ idea to me.
/s/ Jim Williams
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477.2 | to claify a bit | PANIC::PACK | Reality Isn't | Mon Feb 29 1988 13:47 | 7 |
|
I was not proposing for digital to loan the whole amount for the house
just enough for the deposit. If the loan is then paid back in a
year, the advantage to digital then becomes, not that I owe them
money, but that I would be settled here.
:J
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477.3 | more restrictions | VAXRT::WILLIAMS | | Mon Feb 29 1988 15:51 | 10 |
| Also banks generally aren't amused if you borrow the down payment,
as a matter of fact is is one of the questions I have to answer
at the closing.
The source of the downpayment is usually required as part of the
application process. They want you to have a stake in the house
and they want a pad on their loan versus what they could get if
they had to auction the house due to default.
/s/ Jim Williams
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477.4 | Can I have some funds too... | STING::FIELDS | Corporate Head of Nonsense | Mon Feb 29 1988 21:08 | 12 |
| .0
Thanks for asking because I myself was wondering
about the exact same thing. I NEED to either get
settled with a place here or leave a good work area
and move on to where it's more affordable and without
a bit of help from DEC it looks like the latter will
win out. It's very ridiculous pricing houses and/or
land in the kingdom of Dukakis and it's time the
peasants got some help!!
Tom
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477.5 | Not a fair expectation. | MEIS::PARODI | | Tue Mar 01 1988 13:47 | 27 |
| .0
I don't know if you were transfered to Mass. from another
state but I was. As part of the decision process before accepting
the position I had to consider the housing market. Digital makes
it possible for transfered employees to have part of the closing costs
paid by them. But Digital is not in the business of "helping" each
employee enter the houseing market.
To ask Digital to help with the down payment by "loaning"
the money is not a good idea. Each person has to make decisions based
on their financial situation and see if the area is affordable for them.
Placing the burden of housing on the company is not a fair expectation,
if after the transfer I found that I could not afford to buy a house my
wife and I were prepared to move to another state where housing was more
affordable.
If you were moving to New York city you would not ask the
company to pay or help with security devices or personal body guards.
Part of your decision has to be the ability of your family to cope
with financial, social, and moral issues of the area.
I do hope that you find the means to purchase your house
because I know it is difficult. Good luck,
Jose
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477.6 | Not fair you say?? You aren't in my shoes... | STING::FIELDS | Corporate Head of Nonsense | Tue Mar 01 1988 20:10 | 29 |
|
No transfer involved. I opted for an honorable discharge from
the army after 10 1/2 years of service because I was tired of the
military politics and foolishness and luckily got in to DEC while
someone wasn't paying attention. If I hadn't been so lucky we would
have moved to another area, preferably where you didn't need to be a
megabucks winner to own your own home. We did take into consideration
where it was that we would have to live while living up to a commitment
with Dec and now that I'm relatively happy with my work location I'm
still very dissatisfied with the housing arrangements in and around
our area.
From Boston to Athol rent and housing is too expensive and
I don't think asking DEC for a "help me out loan" to pay a down
payment on a house is too much to ask for. You can't save alot
of money in the military because you don't MAKE enough money to
begin with!! I'm not from Massachusetts, I'm from Florida where
housing is beginning to be just as expensive. What would you have
done after giving up 10 years of life to your country? Go back
to Florida and pay what we're paying to live in Mass? Why not stay
here where we're almost established and attempt to pull up our
pants and make a decent living? I love New England but I can't afford
to buy a house because I don't have enough geld to compete in the
real estate market. That's not a fair expectation? I beg to differ!!
Tom
what real estaters
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477.7 | other sources of help | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Mar 02 1988 12:58 | 32 |
| Hey, you may be better off than you think, if you are a veteran!
You can probably qualify for a low-interest, low-down-payment loan
on that basis; I've known people who got away with less than 5%
down! -- I was very jealous at the time since I am NOT a vet and
had to come up with more than 25%(!! - I live in Mass. too) in order
to qualify for a loan at a bank, which was real, real tough. Also,
there are low-rate mortgages for people buying their first home.
You should call up your veteran's administration, and a few banks
to get the info, since I don't know the details. I was jealous
at the time because with the low rate, my veteran friends bought
a much bigger house than mine, on more land, with a much smaller
down payment and monthly payments that were quite a bit less than
mine; having been shot at in Vietnam causes their living costs to
be much lower than mine for the next thirty years - hardly seems
fair to me, but you deserve something for working for your country
(well, I am a bit undecided about what we were really doing there
in Vietnam, too, but that doesn't change the danger my friends faced
when he was stationed over there).
If that doesn't pan out, the other thing you can do (I assume that
DEC is really unlikely to loan you the money) is swallow your pride
and ask your relatives to help with some of the down payment. It's
tough, but people will usually come through for you, if you ask
them. I borrowed a bunch of money to lend to my sister-in-law for
their down payment (my credit is better than hers anyhow), as did
several other relatives, and they were able to buy their first home.
I can manage the payments on the loan I took out, and some day when
they are able, they will pay me back - actually, I told her to put
the money she offered to pay back in a college account for my little
niece and nephew, so it may not be soon, but that's OK with me. It
would be OK even if they are never able to pay it back - they're
family, after all.
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477.8 | VA...Worked for me! | SALEM::RIEU | Who gets custody of Chuck Sullivan? | Wed Mar 02 1988 14:33 | 4 |
| VA mort. can be had for $0 down. I believe the current rate is 9.5%
Also seller pays the points. (You may have to make an 'arrangement'
on this').
Denny
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477.9 | AHA! A chance for a permanent igloo! | STING::FIELDS | Corporate head of Nonsense | Thu Mar 03 1988 00:15 | 7 |
|
RE.8.
Thank you kindly, I will look into it asap!!
Tom
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477.10 | TANSTAAFL | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Mar 03 1988 12:38 | 5 |
| Don't you believe that the SELLER pays the points - they will be
added on to the price of the house. It's just like taxes: the ultimate
consumer is the one who ultimately pays it - that's YOU.
Good luck! Hope you find a hou$e!
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477.11 | Check out the REAL_ESTATE notesfile | BAGELS::LEVY | Living life at the margin | Thu Mar 03 1988 12:52 | 5 |
| As has been pointed out in a previous reply, a house downpayment
cannot be funded from a loan, so this DECloan issue is moot.
Many insights on first home purchasing, especially in NE, can be found
in TALLIS::REAL_ESTATE.
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477.12 | | SALEM::RIEU | Who gets custody of Chuck Sullivan? | Thu Mar 03 1988 13:32 | 5 |
| When I said the seller pays the points, I ALSO said you might
have to make an 'arrangement' This will depend on how bad they want
to sell. In my case they paid half. The other half was added to
the cost.
Denny
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477.13 | It must depend on the lender | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:34 | 15 |
| You only can't borrow your down payment if your bank or mortgage
lender won't let you. One of my old managers bought here first
house by taking the maximum allowable cash advance from both hers
and her husband's MasterCards - a total of $8000 (that was a lot
of money in those days) - because they didn't have a down payment
otherwise. They bought the house, and lived VERY frugally for the
first year or so while they paid off the credit card bill along
with the mortgage. Of course, if one or the other of them had ended
up out of work, they would have been in big trouble, so it wouldn't
surprise me if most lenders would disallow this scheme these days
- they really do NOT want you to default on your mortgage.... I
don't think that borrowing from relatives who don't care when you
repay them counts as borrowing the down payment to most banks, though
- at least, it worked for my sister-in-law, as I said, and they
bought their first home last summer.
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477.14 | More info on VA loan | EVER11::LOWELL | | Fri Mar 04 1988 20:52 | 19 |
| My husband and I got a VA loan in November 1986. The formula used
at that time was --
0% down on the first $110,000
25% down on the amount over $110,000.
For example, the required down payment on a $150,000 home was $10,000.
The VA guaranteed $27,500 of the mortgage, the interest rate was
lower than the going rates and we qualified for a higher monthly
payment due to their methods of calculating what we could afford.
The main disadvantage is that the whole loan process tends to get
slowed down significantly which makes sellers hesitant to accept
your offer (we had to state that we were obtaining VA financing
and that the sellers were responsible for paying the discount points
in the purchase and sales agreement).
Please feel free to contact me by mail for more details.
Ruth Lowell
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