Tag Archive: property


A long-awaited Senate version of legislation to speed up sales of excess federal real estate was introduced on Thursday by a bipartisan group led by Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., adding a new wrinkle to efforts by the Obama administration and House Republicans to streamline the federal role in property management and save money.

The Federal Real Property Asset Management Reform Act is aimed at reducing the budget deficit by helping agencies improve the disposal of unneeded government-owned buildings and facilities, and manage existing space better. It is co-sponsored by Sens. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, Tom Coburn, R-Okla., Mark Pryor, D-Ark., and Mark Begich, D-Alaska.

The bill differs from the measure (H.R. 1734) the House passed on Feb. 7 as well as from a proposal offered last year by the Office of Management Budget. Both those plans would create a civilian property board similar to the Defense Department’s Base Closure and Realignment Commission, which would package promising properties for sale and submit them to Congress for approval.

The Carper bill would give OMB and agencies authority to dispose of property, while preserving congressional oversight of the process. Twenty-four federal agencies in fiscal 2009 reported possessing more than 14,000 excess and 45,000 underutilized buildings that together cost more than $1.7 billion annually to maintain. The government owns upward of 1 million properties nationwide.

“When it comes to federal property management, it’s clear to me and others that we can get better results and save money,” Carper said. “Federal property management has been on the Government Accountability Office’s high-risk list every year since January 2003, in part due to the overwhelming number of unneeded and underutilized facilities held by federal agencies.” He added that he looks forward to working with the administration and House lawmakers on the legislation.

Specifically, Carper’s bill builds on a 2004 executive order from President George W. Bush to establish a property management “leadership structure” within agencies and at OMB. Each agency would appoint a senior real property management officer to monitor asset sales in accordance with the agency’s strategic plan. Agencies would set measurable goals for property disposal and be held accountable for meeting them by agency chiefs and Congress.

The bill also would require agencies currently enjoying independent powers to lease office space to seek congressional approval for certain high-priced rentals. It would devote the bulk of proceeds to deficit reduction, dividing the remainder with 80 percent going to miscellaneous Treasury receipts, 18 percent to agencies for property management and 2 percent for homeless assistance grants.

Unlike the House-passed bill, the Senate version would continue a process through which the Housing and Urban Development Department would work to “address the needs of the homeless and state and local governments.”

The cost to maintain government property increased more than $1.5 billion in 2010, the Federal Times reported.

According to a General Services Administration report released Friday, the government paid $30.7 billion in 2010 to maintain its roughly 3.3 billion square feet of property, an increase from $29.2 billion in 2009.The report excluded several Defense Department buildings.

Meanwhile, the cost to maintain excess and underutilized properties actually decreased from $1.8 billion in 2009 to $1.6 billion in 2010.

Maintenance costs covered utilities, cleaning, repairs, grounds-keeping and rent for leased properties. Overall, $5.30 per square foot was spent to operate government-owned space, while the cost to operate leased space increased from $12.80 to $15 between 2009 and 2010.

NEW YORK – Property owners across the country bear a burden from the recession: paying a fortune in moving and storage costs to evict tenants who fail to pay their rent.

But the owners’ losses are a boon for the companies that clear out homes. Their business has skyrocketed, “making money out of people’s misery,” said David Robinson, an attorney for Legal Services NYC, which helps low-income New Yorkers navigate the eviction process.

Hardest-hit are ethnic urban neighborhoods, where about twice as many renters are forced to leave as in the general population, according to housing experts.

Low-income black women, often single mothers, are the most likely to be evicted because they can’t afford their rent, recent research showed.

For the movers, “it’s a lucrative business, absolutely,” said Eli Navon, owner of Eagle Van Lines, a New Jersey-based company that executes eviction moves in the greater New York area.

Such jobs typically bring extra money because “you have to pack every single thing, from the dishes to the furniture, and sometimes even garbage; we’re not allowed to throw anything out,” said Navon.

His clients pay an average of about $2,500 to clear out a two-bedroom apartment, Navon said. And that’s not the end of eviction expenses for the property owner, who then must pay for a storage unit to hold the tenant’s goods for 30 days.

That’s how long tenants in New York and New Jersey have to pick up their belongings before they’re discarded or auctioned off as a lot.

And some owners take on additional cost when they hire an attorney who specializes in evictions.

Kick ‘em Out Quick is the name of a nationwide, online referral service warning owners that “nonpaying and nuisance tenants cost you time, money and serious risk to your property. … Take control and protect your investment.”

In January, they posted their Nightmare Eviction of the Month, from Ogden, Utah. In that case, the landlord waited five months before filing to evict the tenant, who owned $5,600 in back rent, plus $8,700 in damages.

The total loss to the property owner was $14,300, before moving costs.

After New Year’s, “my phone is ringing nonstop,” said Gregory Gosset, managing director of Ogden-based Kick ‘em Out Quick, which fields queries from landlords seeking attorneys who handle eviction cases.

Judging by the volume of calls he’s getting, “It’s gotten worse,” said Gosset.

He said he’s now hearing more often from the West — especially southern California, Texas, Washington state and Arizona.

The annual cost of evictions to property owners is in the millions of dollars, according to Chester Hartman, an urban planner with the Poverty and Race Research Action Council in Washington.

A study conducted in Milwaukee showed that one of every 20 renter-occupied properties is evicted each year. In mostly black neighborhoods, the rate is one in 10 households. The research was based on an analysis of court records and fieldwork from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, led by sociologist Matthew Desmond, now at Harvard University.

“The odds of a woman being evicted in black neighborhoods is twice that of men,” Desmond said. “It’s quite stunning.”

Arthur Mirtal, sales manager at the White Glove Moving & Storage in Bayonne, N.J., said he’s seen a rise in evictions that reflects the failing economy.

In Brooklyn, AAA Moving makes more than $120,000 a year from evictions, accounting for about 20 percent of its revenue, according to manager Mike Edelman, who said his company charges $35 an hour for each employee, plus packing materials and storage.

In 2007, New York’s housing court reported about 700 evictions citywide; two years later, there were more than 1,100. The numbers have tapered off slightly in the past few years.

While failure to pay the rent is a major reason for eviction, a tenant can also be kicked out for violating a lease, damaging property or other causes that can be proved — from criminal activity to unbearable noise.

It’s all legal, hinging on a strict process that governs any eviction move.

First, an owner must warn the tenant of the possibility of eviction and offer them a chance to rectify the situation before going to housing court to request an eviction order from a judge. Then, once a date is set, a city marshal or sheriff with the proper documentation accompanies the mover to the property, along with a locksmith.

“It can be a sleazy business,” said Mirtal, of White Glove Moving & Storage.

“A mover has to show up at the door, and we don’t know what to expect,” Mirtal said. “We’re not allowed to throw anything out, so if there’s something that looks like garbage, it has to be packed and labeled.”

More often than not, tenants warned of pending eviction leave before the mover arrives.

And that allows crews “to be very generous with the amount of materials and time they take to do the job,” as Mirtal puts it.

Translation: Companies charging by the hour often take as much time as possible to pack every item, which must then be written up for an inventory, as required by law.

If tenants refuse to leave, it can get ugly, with authorities forcing their way in, sometimes facing resistance.

“Once, in Manhattan, we were met with bats and chains,” said Mirtal. “And we were told, `You’re evicting our friend.’”

His company averages four or five evictions a month.

In certain communities, like Suffolk County on New York’s Long Island, the law allows a property owner to leave a tenant’s belongings on the sidewalk.

Attorney Steven Snair specializes in landlord-tenant cases. They often involve middle-class, blue-collar Suffolk owners renting out part of their home to barely make ends meet, he said.

Then they’re slammed with the eviction costs.

Sheriff’s deputies in the New York county either move belongings to the curb themselves, or use companies under contract to them. Because it’s only a walk away, the cost of such a move is far less, but the total still runs to thousands of dollars.

Snair charges a minimum of about $1,000 per case, plus charges for paperwork and other fees like the $400 that goes to the sheriff when filing an eviction warrant.

“When owners try to do it on their own, they often screw up,” said Snair. “It’s very difficult to evict someone, very technical, and if you don’t dot all your i’s and cross all your t’s, a judge quickly dismisses the case.”

However it’s done, the patterns of tenant evictions across the country reflect a painful reality.

“Just as incarceration has become typical in the lives of poor black men, eviction has become typical in the lives of poor black women,” said Desmond, the sociologist.

ATHENS, Greece – A Greek high court on Friday considered appeals against a deeply resented new property tax that has sparked anger across the country because those who don’t pay it will get their power turned off.

As the case was being heard, hundreds of protesters outside the Council of State in Athens chanted “We won’t pay!”

Inside, court President Panayiotis Pikramenos voiced reservations over the stakes at hand.

“The Council of State has undertaken a burden that is not its own,” he said, opening proceedings. “(The court) will do its duty, but cannot undertake to handle a political problem that has built up over the past few years.”

Greece’s debt-strapped government is seeking to raise some euro2 billion ($2.7 billion) with the new tax. It is among a raft of harsh cutbacks — including pension and pay cuts and tax hikes — imposed over the past 20 months to secure international rescue loans to keep the country afloat.

Fourteen appeals have been filed by bar associations, unions, lawyers and property owners. The court will reconvene Jan. 19, with parties submitting written positions and is expected to rule several weeks later.

The tax — which is paid through household electricity bills — has meet with strong resistance throughout the austerity-weary country. Several municipalities have urged their citizens not to pay, or threatened power suppliers with lawsuits if they disconnect clients who can’t afford the emergency levy.

Prime Minister Lucas Papademos insisted Friday the tax can’t be scrapped as it will provide the state coffers with vital revenues.

He told Parliament that his interim coalition government will ease payment terms for disadvantaged householders, including long-term jobless, in a country where unemployment has risen to record levels amid a deep recession.

“I too do not consider it right for citizens who objectively cannot pay the property levy to have their power cut off,” Papademos said. “I believe these arrangements will address many of the issues that have arisen. But the measure itself cannot be abolished, as it is necessary for our process of fiscal adjustment.”

Later Friday, lawmakers will start debating the 2012 austerity budget, which seeks to reduce government overspending to 5.4 percent of annual output — from an estimated 9 percent this year.

Next year’s figure factors in 50 percent writedowns on the value of Greek bonds held by private creditors as part of a second international bailout for Greece, after a first euro110 billion ($148 billion) deal in May 2010 proved insufficient.

Former central banker Papademos was appointed last month to head a coalition government to push through financial reforms. The interim government is expected to call early elections in late February.

___

Fanis Karabatsakis contributed.

ATHENS, Greece – A Greek high court on Friday considered appeals against a deeply resented new property tax that has sparked anger across the country because those who don’t pay it will get their power turned off.

As the case was being heard, hundreds of protesters outside the Council of State in Athens chanted “We won’t pay!”

Inside, court President Panayiotis Pikramenos voiced reservations over the stakes at hand.

“The Council of State has undertaken a burden that is not its own,” he said, opening proceedings. “(The court) will do its duty, but cannot undertake to handle a political problem that has built up over the past few years.”

Greece’s debt-strapped government is seeking to raise some euro2 billion ($2.7 billion) with the new tax. It is among a raft of harsh cutbacks — including pension and pay cuts and tax hikes — imposed over the past 20 months to secure international rescue loans to keep the country afloat.

Fourteen appeals have been filed by bar associations, unions, lawyers and property owners. The court will reconvene Jan. 19, with parties submitting written positions and is expected to rule several weeks later.

The tax — which is paid through household electricity bills — has meet with strong resistance throughout the austerity-weary country. Several municipalities have urged their citizens not to pay, or threatened power suppliers with lawsuits if they disconnect clients who can’t afford the emergency levy.

Prime Minister Lucas Papademos insisted Friday the tax can’t be scrapped as it will provide the state coffers with vital revenues.

He told Parliament that his interim coalition government will ease payment terms for disadvantaged householders, including long-term jobless, in a country where unemployment has risen to record levels amid a deep recession.

“I too do not consider it right for citizens who objectively cannot pay the property levy to have their power cut off,” Papademos said. “I believe these arrangements will address many of the issues that have arisen. But the measure itself cannot be abolished, as it is necessary for our process of fiscal adjustment.”

Later Friday, lawmakers will start debating the 2012 austerity budget, which seeks to reduce government overspending to 5.4 percent of annual output — from an estimated 9 percent this year.

Next year’s figure factors in 50 percent writedowns on the value of Greek bonds held by private creditors as part of a second international bailout for Greece, after a first euro110 billion ($148 billion) deal in May 2010 proved insufficient.

Former central banker Papademos was appointed last month to head a coalition government to push through financial reforms. The interim government is expected to call early elections in late February.

___

Fanis Karabatsakis contributed.

CHICAGO, Nov. 3, 2011 /CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM/ — ICAP Patent Brokerage, the global leader in intellectual property brokerage and patent auction firm and a division of ICAP plc, the world’s leading interdealer broker, is offering for sale technology related to prioritized inter-node communication of data packets for reduced collisions and improved efficiency developed by Darryl C. White.  

(Logo: http://photos.CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM.com/prnh/20100614/CG20517LOGO)

Key Characteristics & Benefits

This patent portfolio discloses a method for optimizing packet data traffic between network nodes in a hierarchical or peer-to-peer network.

  • A robust protocol provides flexible, prioritized access control and a retransmission process.
  • Protocol accommodates a wide array of applications and diverse channel media.
  • Packet prioritization features can be implemented within many of these network protocols to reduce collisions and improve the efficiency of high value and time-sensitive data.
  • The protocol also provides error detection features such as packet acknowledgment and CRC’s, while minimizing the communications overhead required for simple devices.
  • Transmission priority can be a function of device type, data type, status condition, and/or the number of failed transmission attempts.
  • Advantages are: efficient data traffic management, scalability, reliability, low-implementation cost and flexibility.
  • The addition of priority-based access and retransmission intervals provide significant advantages over present CSMA communication protocols (e.g., Ethernet and its derivatives, Fieldbus protocols, LonWorks, LnCP, Controller Area Network (CAN) implementations, DeviceNet/ControlNet, IEEE 802.11, et al.).

Market Potential

This patent portfolio should be of interest to those involved in cost- and reliability- critical multiple networking environments including: telecommunications, industrial networks, home automation and appliance networks, smart-grid and utility data networks.

Forward Citing Companies: AT&T, Cisco Systems, Fujitsu Limited, GE, Hitachi, Honeywell, Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V., LG Electronics, Lutron Electronics, NEC America, Qualcomm, Smartmatic International, Yitran Communications

Please contact Dean Becker, CEO of ICAP Patent Brokerage, at Dean.Becker@us.icap.com or 561-309-0011 for more information.

About ICAP Patent Brokerage

ICAP Patent Brokerage is a division of ICAP plc and the world’s largest intellectual property brokerage and patent auction firm.

About ICAP

ICAP plc the world’s leading interdealer broker and provider of post trade services. The Group matches buyers and sellers in the wholesale markets in interest rates, credit, commodities, foreign exchange, emerging markets, equities and equity derivatives through voice and electronic networks. ICAP plc was added to the FTSE 100 Index on 30 June 2006. For more information, go to www.icap.com.

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http://www.icap.com

ICAP Patent Brokerage Offers for Sale Technology Related to Prioritized Communication of Data Packets for Reduced Collisions and Improved Efficiency | Chicago Press Release Services – Chicago’s leading press release newswire service; professional press release services, press release distribution and newswire services.



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WASHINGTON – Government-controlled mortgage giant Freddie Mac has requested $6 billion in additional aid after posting a wider loss in the third quarter.

Freddie Mac said Thursday that it lost $6 billion, or $1.86 per share, in the July-September quarter. That compares with a loss of $4.1 billion, or $1.25 a share, in the same quarter of 2010.

The government rescued McLean, Va.-based Freddie Mac and sibling company Fannie Mae in September 2008 after massive losses on risky mortgages threatened to topple them. Since then, a federal regulator has controlled their financial decisions.

Taxpayers have spent about $169 billion to rescue Fannie and Freddie, the most expensive bailout of the 2008 financial crisis. The government estimates it will cost at least $51 billion more to support the companies through 2014, and as much as $142 billion in the most extreme case.

Freddie and Washington-based Fannie own or guarantee about half of all U.S. mortgages, or nearly 31 million home loans worth more than $5 trillion. Along with other federal agencies, they backed nearly 90 percent of new mortgages over the past year.

The two mortgage giants buy home loans from banks and other lenders, package them into bonds with a guarantee against default, and then sell them to investors around the world. When property values drop, homeowners default — either because they are unable to afford the payments or because they owe more than the property is worth. Because of the guarantees, Fannie and Freddie must pay for the losses.

Fewer foreclosures and delays in foreclosure processing because of a yearlong government investigation into mortgage lending practices have reduced the companies’ projected losses.

Fannie and Freddie are required to pay 10 percent dividends on the government money they receive. Freddie paid $1.6 billion in dividends to the Treasury Department in the July-September quarter.

Pressure continues on the government to eliminate Fannie and Freddie and reduce taxpayers’ exposure to risk. The Treasury Department put forward a plan in February to slowly dissolve Fannie and Freddie, although that process could take years. Abolishing Fannie and Freddie would transform how homes are bought and redefine who can afford them.

DES MOINES, Iowa – Allstate Corp. said its third-quarter net income fell 55 percent after natural disasters cost the insurer $1.08 billion.

Allstate posted net income of $165 million, or 32 cents per share, compared with $367 million, or 68 cents per share a year ago.

The Northbrook, Ill.-based property and casualty insurer said revenue rose 4.2 percent to $8.24 billion from $7.91 billion a year ago.

The company’s adjusted operating income was $84 million, or 16 cents per share, compared with $452 million, or 83 cents per share a year ago.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected 8 cents per share on revenue of $7.99 billion.

Before Monday’s earnings, Allstate disclosed third-quarter pre-tax catastrophe losses of $1.08 billion, up significantly from the $386 million reported in the 2010 third quarter.

CHICAGO, Oct. 19, 2011 /CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM/ — ICAP Patent Brokerage, a division of ICAP plc, the world’s largest intellectual property brokerage and patent auction firm, is offering for sale seven patent portfolios from a major medical device company. The available portfolios disclose patented technology related to biomaterials, bio-prosthetics, device failure control, high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) energy, improved blood management, medical devices and suction ablation.

(Logo:  http://photos.CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM.com/prnh/20100614/CG20517LOGO)

Portfolios Available for Sale:

Biomaterials for Stable Medical Implantable Devices

This portfolio discloses medical devices constructed using biomaterial compounds or biostable polymers such as polyurethanes. Free of ester, ether, and carbonate linkages, the hard or soft segments of the polymers include moieties which reduce susceptibility to both oxidation and hydrolysis.

Bio-Prosthetic Devices & Methods

This portfolio discloses methods for manufacturing materials such as cross-linked collagen-based materials for bio-prosthetic devices, including implants. The technology affords control over the flexibility and stiffness of resulting materials.

Failure Control with Selective Protection of Electronic Components

This portfolio discloses techniques for protecting various electronic components of a device. In the event of device failure, the non-critical components stop the operation of critical components, mitigating damage to the system and/or user.

High Intensity Focused Ultrasound Energy for Ablation

This portfolio discloses devices and techniques for utilizing HIFU energy for localized, controlled tissue ablation. In particular, the disclosed devices can be used to form a customized lesion, or a lesion comprising disconnected lesion segments, applicable to the treatment of multiple diseases.  

Improved Blood Management Techniques

This portfolio discloses devices and techniques for the management of hemostasis. The technology rapidly determines heparin levels in blood or other fluids such as plasma, as well as quantitatively assessing the coagulation process.

Medical Devices & Techniques for Joining Hollow Bodies

This portfolio discloses medical devices and techniques for treating a patient with an anastomosis procedure or other techniques resulting in the joining of two bodies without a suture. In particular, the technology describes securing two hollow bodies using either magnetic or mechanical components.

Suction Ablation Devices & Techniques

This portfolio discloses a medical ablation device that uses a vacuum or suction force in conjunction with ablation element(s) to create lesions in tissue. The suction affords a robust relationship between the ablating element and tissue. This technology is particularly suitable for use with difficult to ablate tissue including tissue that can be expected to move during the ablation process.

“These portfolios feature superlative medical technology developed and refined over the course of decades. They warrant close attention,” said Cameron Gray, SVP at ICAP Patent Brokerage.

To learn more about the assets available for license in this portfolio:

Contact Cameron Gray of ICAP Patent Brokerage at (650) 421-3089 or Cameron.Gray@us.icap.com

About ICAP Patent Brokerage

ICAP Patent Brokerage is a division of ICAP plc and the world’s largest intellectual property brokerage and patent auction firm.

About ICAP

ICAP is the world’s premier interdealer broker and provider of post trade services. The Group matches buyers and sellers in the wholesale markets in interest rates, credit, commodities, foreign exchange, emerging markets, equities and equity derivatives through voice and electronic networks. ICAP plc was added to the FTSE 100 Index on 30 June 2006. For more information go to www.icap.com.

SOURCE ICAP Patent Brokerage


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Global Leader in Medical Technology Offers for Sale Seven Patent Portfolios Through ICAP Patent Brokerage | Chicago Press Release Services – Chicago’s leading press release newswire service; professional press release services, press release distribution and newswire services.



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Two cash-strapped federal entities, the Census Bureau and the U.S. Postal Service, have achieved solid efficiencies by working together and are pursuing additional opportunities in preparing for the 2020 census, the Government Accountability Office reported on Friday.

The Postal Service can help Census reduce the number of census forms that end up undeliverable (19 million in 2010) because of error or because a residential property is unoccupied, the auditors noted. Census can help USPS update its local-address databases and plan and update delivery routes, the report said.

Another possibility is for Census to hire retired local mail carriers as temporary field-staff census takers, though GAO raised questions about that idea’s cost-effectiveness.

Census and the Postal Service have been collaborating at least since the early 1990s, and they signed a joint memorandum of understanding in 1995. But auditors were told by Census managers that in the past, the bureau has benefited more than the mail service. The memo is under revision and is expected to be ready in 2011.

Because the Postal Service is downsizing, its managers had hoped to free up office facilities for use by census workers, but the properties may instead be sold, the auditors learned.

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