Black Women's News

Home | Advertise | Help
Fitness | Religion | Disease | Pregnancy | Mental Illness | Weight Loss | Natural Alternatives
Politics | Regional News | Caribbean News | African News | Latin News
Computers | Medicine | Agriculture | Cars | Environment
Music | Theatre | Movies | Television | Books | Sports
Investing | Entrepreneurship | Retirement Planning | Home Ownership
subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link | subglobal6 link
subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link | subglobal7 link
subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link | subglobal8 link

News for Us


Advertise Here


Interrupted Education... Made Whole full story...

2005 Black Movie Awards...full story...

Breast Cancer Awareness Month full story...

Terry McMillan Explores Challenges... full story...

Survey: Minority Students Key to US Edge in Science full story...

...Love Stories from the Slavery Era full story...

Condos


Citizens Fight Eminent Domain Ruling
Voice of America News October 27, 2005
In dozens of communities across the United States, citizens are fighting to save their homes. The battle is over a legal provision known as 'eminent domain,' which allows government officials to take a person's private property, provided they offer adequate compensation, and they use the property for a "public purpose." Often, eminent domain is used to take land for things like roads and schools. But recently, local officials have been using it to build shopping malls, condominiums, and other privately owned enterprises. Many believe this is not a proper use of the provision - even though the U.S. Supreme Court says otherwise. More...

 

U.S. Housing Boom
VOA News July 21, 2005

HouseThe number of existing single-family homes sold in May jumped to a record-high level, up nearly 6% (5.7%) in a year's time. And, according to the National Association of Realtors, an industry trade group, the median price of a home jumped 15%, the strongest year-to-year price appreciation in 25 years. According to the National Association of Realtors, the median price nationwide of single-family home is now $206,000, but in some areas prices are much higher. For example, in California the median price is over $500,000. So far, the Federal Reserve Board, whose decisions on monetary policy affect interest rates on everything from credit cards to car loans to home mortgages seems reluctant to deflate the housing bubble. But most economists believe that unlike the rapid decline in stock prices five years ago, the national housing market is likely to cool gradually from its red hot pace of the last several years, sparing the U.S. economy and American homeowners, any major economic shocks.

 

White homeHomes the Size of Castles Muscle Into America's Neighborhoods
VOA News June 22, 2005
Owning one's own home is central to the "American dream." But the dream can be a nightmare for the new homeowners' neighbors. You see, some people want every amenity in their new houses -- and can afford it: lots of bedrooms, a big sunroom or deck, a spacious lawn, maybe even a swimming pool. Throw in a library, huge walk-in closets, and a mega-kitchen fit for a king's chef, and the result is a home of gargantuan proportions. A "McMansion," as it's called. That's fine and dandy if you have a rolling country estate on which to erect this monster. But squeeze one onto a modest lot in an older community, and you've created, in the eyes of your neighbors, an eyesore pretentiously out of scale with its surroundings. Citizens who are freaked by the super-sized houses going up on their street have 3 choices: Move. Get the city council to pass regulations to limit the size of new houses in your area. Or win the lottery and build your own McMansion!

 

American Women Flock to Home Improvement Stores for Do-It-Yourself Classes
VOA News March 16, 2005
HammerSurveys indicate that growing numbers of American women no longer rely on a husband or a boyfriend or a professional fix-it man to take care of home repair and construction projects. As a result, retailers are now targeting the female market by offering home improvement classes for women. The stores hope to make further increases in the $50 billion a year that women across America are now spending on hand tools, power tools and other equipment. At the nation's home repair stores, female customers have consistently outnumbered males in the last five years, according to studies by Home Depot and other retailers. The research reflects a broader social trend: more single women owning their own homes and doing their own repairs. Home Depot spokeswoman Carol Luten says the number of women who've enrolled in her company's home repair classes has reached 250,000 nationwide in just two years enough perhaps, to call it the start of a women's home repair movement.

 

 


 


Advertise Here

 

 


So You'd Like to Know More About...
Burgandy Dress
Magazine Sony Laptop
Cell Phone
Bath Gift Set
Browse Gift Sets

 

About Us | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | ©2004 Webprevision.com