Sue's Views

Archive for January, 2012

The Journey Home

Sunday, January 8th, 2012

I found this book to be a most original story. I liked the idea and it drew me on to a very unexpected end. My only complaint is that I read my books on an e-reader and the book itself was full of editing errors and had obviously not been proofread very well. I have received two notices from Amazon lately sending me updated version of books I have purchased which have been re-edited. They do this for free but it is hard to read books the first time with misspellings and grammatical errors. It reminds me of stories I once read about the “dime novels” which were popular in the early 1900′s which were cheap reading for those who couldn’t afford anything else but similarly trashed the English language.

The Journey home begins with a middle-aged man waking in a strangers home and being unable to remember anything about himself. Gradually, he begins to remember only one thing. He once knew a beautiful woman who he feels sure is his wife and she is worried about him and where he is. That’s all he can remember.

A young teenager he meets offers to drive around in hopes of finding some familiar sights which may trigger his memory about where he lives and where his home and family are.

The next chapter introduces us to an elderly lady named Antoinette who is in a nursing home living out her final days and succumbing to dementia and melancholy over the death of her much loved husband some years before.

Antoinette’s son Warren has lost his job and his marriage and is now dismayed that he will lose his Mother soon. He decides to devote his time to trying to get her back by coming and making her favourite meals for her each day. Warren hopes that he may entice her to return to the world around her and become the Mother that he would dearly love to have back.

The story alternate’s back and forth between the two different sets of characters until we finally reach the point were they all come together in a climactic event.

Other than the editing this was a great story. I enjoyed it very much.

How to buy a condo

Sunday, January 8th, 2012

With the right help, buying a condo can be simple and rewarding. But avoid these mistakes, or you could end up with a unit full of nasty surprises.

By Julie Cazzin | From MoneySense Magazine, April 2011

Craig Sebastiano’s first experience as a condo buyer was both exhilarating and annoying. The 35-year-old web producer knew what he wanted: a nice one-bedroom condo unit about a 10-minute walk from his job in downtown Toronto. He also wanted a workout room in the building so he could exercise late into the evening after long days at the office.

After months of looking, Sebastiano settled on a 650-square-foot unit in a building that hadn’t even broken ground yet: he bought it based on a floor plan. That was his first mistake. “The showroom model was a bit bigger than the condo I had bought, but the salespeople told me I would hardly be able to tell the difference,” says Sebastiano. “Well, my condo actually turned out to be quite a bit smaller than I had been led to believe. And it really wasn’t much like the showroom model at all.” Other details differed as well. Sebastiano was told he could move into his new condo in December 2004, but he didn’t actually get the keys until July 2006—19 months later. “I had heard stories of condo possessions being late—but not a year and a half. Even though I was able to keep renting my old apartment, it was frustrating.”

Finally, Sebastiano ended up paying a bundle in “occupancy fees.” When a new condo building is completed, it takes several months to be formally registered with the municipality’s Land Registry Office. You can live in the unit in the meantime, but technically you don’t own it yet. Until the registration goes through, you’ll pay occupancy fees—also called “phantom rent”—to cover the building’s costs, including property taxes. Usually this arrangement lasts three or four months, but in Sebastiano’s case, the payments went on for a year. “And they don’t count toward your mortgage,” he explains. “I wasn’t happy about that at all, but there wasn’t much I could do.”

Sebastiano’s story is as sobering as it is common. Condo lawyers can talk your ear off with stories about problematic and costly deals. It hasn’t helped that the market has been so hot in recent years—many buyers, afraid to lose out on a great condo in a prime location, have been pressured into making decisions that came back to haunt them.

The real estate market in most Canadian cities isn’t as frothy as in years past. If you’re a serious condo buyer, this is good news. It means you can wait for the right opportunity and not worry about bidding wars.

“Don’t rush into anything,” urges Nicolas Brunette-D’Souza, a real estate lawyer with Delaney’s Law in Ottawa. “There will always be a hot new building. Do your research thoroughly, because once you’ve bought, it’s a 30-year commitment.”

“A person will often go to Ikea several times before buying furniture,” adds Jeffrey Kahane, a Calgary-based real estate lawyer. “Yet you’d be amazed how many people look at a condo for 20 minutes and then write up an offer to buy. You need to put more thought into it than that.”

So let us help you put some thought into it. We’ll show you how to avoid the most common condo-buying pitfalls and end up satisfied with your new purchase.

Make sure you’re a condo person
Before you even think about looking for a condo, ask yourself whether you’re suited to the lifestyle. That means being comfortable living with certain rules, and in close proximity to others. You’ll also need to make sure you’re okay with shared common areas and condo board politics.

Karen Martin, a lawyer in Vancouver, lived in a condo for 11 years before finally accepting that she wasn’t suited to the lifestyle. “When I bought the condo, I didn’t realize that you get no independence whatsoever when it comes to making decisions,” says Martin, 56. “If you’re in a minority in the group when something has to get done, such as painting, and you don’t like it, you have to suck it up.” Martin was also shocked at how dirty some of her condo neighbours were. Some even let their pets pee in the building. “You could voice your displeasure, but you couldn’t actually do anything to stop that behaviour. As a condo owner you’re always dealing with everyone’s petty issues. I reached the point where I had to move out to stay sane.”

Decide between pre-owned and pre-construction
If you purchase a pre-owned (resale) condominium, you’ll see exactly what you’re buying. You can shop around, walk through various suites and pick the one that best suits you. Even if it needs some work, you can be secure in the knowledge that you got pretty much what you expected.

If, however, you decide to purchase a pre-construction condominium like Sebastiano, you’re entering the unknown. Sure, you can view sketches in the sales office, but you have no idea what your unit will really look like once it’s built. Still, there’s an attractive trade-off: you’ll be the first owner of the unit, and everything in it will be brand new.

If you find it hard to visualize what your new space will look like, do what Brunette-D’Souza did when he was condo hunting: view similarly sized units in other buildings. “I set up viewings in older buildings with condos that were about 700 square feet,” says the real estate lawyer. “What I learned is that 700 square feet can be big or small, depending on how it is laid out. It gave me a feel for the type of space we were talking about when trying to chose a unit from a plan.”

Research the builder
If the building hasn’t been completed yet, take some time to do an Internet search on the builder, their past projects and any complaints about the workmanship. If it’s a resale, find out if the builder is still in business and whether the company is financially stable. If it’s no longer around, the condo board (the group of volunteers who manage the building’s affairs) may have no legal re­course if major flaws are discovered later on.

As well, try to get some feedback from people who have bought units from the same builder, either through Internet forums or from residents of the company’s other buildings. A high rate of people selling their units is a red flag. So is the fact that your builder is in court a lot. There are a few places you can go to look these things up: British Columbia has a Homeowner Protection Office where you can check whether there are complaints or lawsuits against a particular builder. J.D. Power and Associates recently ranked condominium builders in the Greater Toronto Area with a five-star system. In other areas, your local Better Business Bureau may have details.

If you’re buying a resale unit, ask for the last two years’ worth of minutes from condo board meetings. They will give you a good idea of the types of problems you might be dealing with in the building.

To make sure your condo is structurally sound, you may want to hire an home inspector. That’s what Pauline van Hemert and her husband Michael did when they bought their Vancouver condo in 2009. They had heard horror stories about leaky West Coast condos, so they hired an independent inspector (not one recommended by the real estate agent) to get an honest assessment of their individual unit and the overall building. “When we heard those key words from our inspector—‘You’ll never see a tarp on this place’—we knew it was the condo for us,” says Pauline. “We had another condo inspected in the past that turned out to be a nightmare, so we were extra cautious.”

Work with people who know condos
Hire a professional realtor to help with the buying process. Then speak with a mortgage broker (or meet directly with lenders) so you get a feel for the type of mortgage you will qualify for before you start your search. You should also make sure you have a good lawyer to review both the offer to buy and your financing arrangements.

It pays to use a realtor who has a lot of experience with condos, as they are very different from houses. “I spend half my time dealing with real estate agents who know very little about what’s involved with buying or selling a condo,” says Gerry Miller, managing partner of Gardiner Miller Arnold LLP in Toronto. “You can end up making some very costly mistakes if you rely on people who don’t pay attention to the details.”

For instance, Miller recalls a recent condo buyer who was relocating to Toronto in a hurry. He saw a large suite, loved it and asked his real estate agent to make sure it came with a parking spot and locker. (He was a big skier who needed a locker to stash his skis and poles.) Unfortunately, the agent didn’t ask enough questions. Once the deal was signed, the buyer discovered that his unit was in Phase 1 of the complex, his parking spot was under the Phase 2 tower, and his locker was below Phase 3. “When that buyer needs to get his skis, he has to take two elevator rides to get to his locker, then another elevator ride to bring them back to his parking spot,” says Miller. “He sealed the deal before dis­covering any of this and had to suck it up.”

Other oversights? Not all parking spots are the same size: some are slightly smaller because they are positioned next to a pillar. With one of these compact spaces, you won’t be able to open your car door without risking a nasty dent.

Pay close attention to the location of the unit itself. Do you want to live on a high floor or on a lower one? In general, the higher up your suite, the higher the price—usually between $3,000 and $8,000 more for every floor above the main level. Of course, you may want to pay extra for the better view. But if you’re on a limited budget, sticking to the lower floors can save you money.

Measure your unit
Before completing the sale you should actually pull out a tape measure and make sure your unit is as large as advertised. You would be amazed by how much the actual square footage can differ from what you were told.

Ken Grunberg, who works at a video production house in Toronto, found out too late that the unit he bought in 2007 wasn’t nearly as large as advertised. When he and his partner measured the area before replacing a linoleum floor, they discovered it wasn’t 700 square feet after all. “We trusted what the real estate agent said,” says Grunberg, 30. “But our condo is actually only 560 square feet if you don’t count the balcony and bathroom.” They ended up taking down all the walls in the unit, except for the ones around the bedroom, to get the feeling of spaciousness they wanted.

Know your closing costs
Closing costs can add roughly 1.5% to 4% to the purchase price of your condo. On a $400,000 unit, that’s between $6,000 and $16,000 on top of your agent’s fee. These costs may include a land transfer tax (an escalating levy that rises to 2% of the purchase price), a bank appraisal fee ($300), legal fees (roughly $1,200), as well as a high-ratio mortgage insurance premium, which is required if you make a down payment of less than 20%. That premium is hefty: it can make up 1% to 4% of your outstanding mortgage.

For pre-construction units, your closing date is the day the building is officially registered by the builder, which could be several months—or even years—after your occupancy date (the day you move in). If you buy a new condo from floor plans, you could be on the hook for two months’ worth of maintenance fees, plus occupancy fees until the building is registered, depending on your province. Only after the closing date will you begin paying down your mortgage.

Understand your legal obligations
Make sure all the details of your condo purchase are in writing and never rely on verbal agreements. Every builder’s Agreement of Purchase and Sale documents are unique, so it’s important to have your lawyer review them fully.

If you’re buying a pre-construction unit in Ontario you have a 10-day cooling off period, in Manitoba it’s 48 hours for a new or used condo. Use this time to discuss concerns with your lawyer and confirm your financing. If you decide you don’t want the unit anymore, you can cancel the deal and get your deposit back. But once that period passes, you’re bound to the agreement.

Jonathan Reilly, president of English Bay Law Corp., in Vancouver, points out a nightmare scenario that happened in Vancouver a couple of years ago. Shortly after the financial crisis of 2008, prices for pre-construction condos in several markets fell abruptly, in some cases by 20%. Many people in Vancouver watched as the price of their pre-built condos plummeted to the point where they would lose thousands of dollars. In some cases, lenders withdrew the mortgage pre-approval, because the condo was now worth less than the loan amount. The harsh reality? Those buyers still had a legal obligation to buy the condo units at the price agreed to: if they walked away, they would not only lose their deposit, but the builders could sue for the difference in price, Reilly says. “If you have to pull out of a pre-sale contract, you’re often out of luck. The magnitude of the losses can be huge.”

Luckily, some builders did choose to renegotiate during the downturn. But other buyers lost their deposits and were sued, says Kahane, the Calgary lawyer. “There was a stretch in 2009 where people were calling my office every week for help. There was nothing I could do.”

Understand condo fees
The good news about condos is that you’ll never have to worry about replacing the roof or tinkering with the furnace again. But that convenience comes with a price: monthly fees. As a condo dweller, you own the inside of your unit. The outside of your unit and the land surrounding the building are owned collectively by you and all the other building residents. The general maintenance and insurance for these “common elements” are covered by everyone’s monthly fees, as are some—but not necessarily all—utilities. A portion of your condo fees will also go into a reserve fund, which is set aside for major repair and replacement costs that occur as a building gets older.

Of course, the more amenities your condo development boasts—24-hour concierge, upscale fitness centre, valet parking—the more you’ll have to pay. When he was shopping for a condo two years ago, Grunberg realized what a huge difference having fewer amenities made to the monthly maintenance fee. “Our condo fees were a low $330 a month when we moved in two years ago, and they’ve stayed low,” says Grunberg. “But I know another building nearby that has a huge greenhouse that’s expensive to maintain. The condo fees there are $900 a month for a suite like ours. That’s a huge difference.”

Also remember that the larger the unit, the higher the fees. In Toronto, as an example, typical condo fees for a pre-construction suite are about 55¢ per square foot of your unit for the first year. Builders guarantee that the maintenance fees on pre-construction units will not increase for one year after your purchase, but after that, don’t be surprised if they go up substantially. That’s what happened to Donna Brodie, an educational assistant in Ottawa. She and her husband, Alex, bought a condo a couple of years ago for her son to use while attending university. “The condo fees were a low $60 a month the first year, but the second year they more than doubled to $126,” says Brodie. “We were expecting an increase, but didn’t realize it would be that much. It can make budgeting difficult.”

The Blossoming

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

By Sue Ricketts

Isaak Markovici was nothing like what people thought she was. Her life ambition was to be a scientist who discovered a cure for some of the worst diseases that plagued human’s. Inside she dreamed of magical powders able to be administered to all those in need. To be on call at any point on the globe just in time to effect a cure. Her special interest was diseases spread from contaminated water.

When Isaak was a child in Nairobi, she had contacted measles and was almost totally deaf as a result. Her missionary parents had taught her to be quiet and self-effacing so she never stood out in a crowd. Because of her hearing loss she always felt that she was not speaking properly and so she remained silent most of the time. It was easy to overlook Isaak. Inside was a caring, beautiful blossom waiting to be discovered.

She worked with a Professor on a method to purify water and keep out the contaminants which spread the most debilitating strains of dysentery. She and two other students did all of the work but when the time came to publish their findings, the vaunted Professor took all the glory for their ground-breaking discovery and only listed one of her fellow researchers. When Isaak and the other researcher confronted the third student he told them that his Father had paid for the grant which allowed them to do the research so he was entitled. This was the death of many of her hopes for being rewarded for her long years of study and shattered her faith in the good of others.

As she finished Grad School in Montreal, she began to carefully research which of the major drug companies were looking for researchers. That’s how she first met Barker Howden, the person at Merson Pharmaceuticals who was charged with finding top-notch talent for their world-wide operations. She was looking for a way to get hired for the labs at Merson and was introduced to him through a friend of a friend who knew somebody.

When they met over dinner at a Thai restaurant, Isaak was surprised to find that Barker was clean-cut and handsome with his wavy dark hair and amber coloured eyes. He was soft-spoken but confident and took charge effortlessly. They surprised each other by both ordering spicy Pad Thai with chicken and peanuts. Both confessed that they weren’t much into drinking anything stronger than pop. Over coffee and desert he coaxed her into talking about herself and what she was looking for in the next few years. Isaak confessed about her dreams of providing cures to everyone at cheap cost as needed. Barker listened sympathetically but said very little. She spoke about her research and did her best not to sound bitter about not being cited for her work.

It turned out that Barker had gone on a school trip to Africa one year to help build wells for two villages and had passed through Nairobi a few times during his stay. His father was a Minister in their hometown and encouraged all his children to get involved with helping others who didn’t have the luxuries and benefits they did.

When they parted, Isaak found that she had agreed to meet him again at the same restaurant for dinner next week. She’d never had a real date before which wasn’t arranged by a relative or a friend and didn’t know how to handle this new turn of events.

In a panic she turned to the researcher who worked with her at school and confided that she thought Barker Howden was the most special person she had met to date and that she wanted to impress him and get to know him better. That week was a whirlwind of choosing the right outfit to wear and getting her hair cut and styled professionally for the first time in her life. For the first time, she wanted to look special for someone else.

As Isaak walked into the restaurant, Barker stood and took her hand. He was speechless at the change in her appearance. The quiet mouse could really roar! She was everything he looked for and he had an offer for her which surprised her more than she ever imagined. He offered her the job of second-in-command at Merson’s world-wide Distribution Centre to work with him and his crew on how to provide just in time medicines to those in need. He explained that the job would require travel and dealing with government officials around the world. He promised to help her learn how to confidently present plans to them all. That’s how the dowdy researcher came to life and found her dreams coming true. If you believe in your heart that you want something, it will find it’s way to you.

A History of Money

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

From BankSITE Kid’s Corner

BARTERING

Barter only works as long as the things people are trading are worth approximately the same, and as long as two people want the things each other have. Thousands of years ago, when most people were hunters or farmers, bartering worked pretty well. A sheep farmer could trade wool for vegetables, or a hunter could trade meat for bread. As lives became more complicated, bartering did too. A farmer might give vegetables to the pot-maker, who would give pots to a hunter, who gave meat to the farmer. Confusing, isn’t it? They needed a better way to do business.

CURRENCY

Almost every society eventually created its own form of currency. Currency is anything that people agree to take in exchange for goods, like food, or services. Throughout history, people have used many different     things as currency: seashells, cows, animal teeth, even salt.People have chosen their currency because it’s useful, like grains or spices; or because it’s pretty, like seashells or jewels; or because it is hard to get, like sharks’ teeth. To do business with each other, communities had to decide how much their currency was worth compared to someone else’s currency. When settlers first came to Massachusetts, the native Americans used a currency called wampum, made of seashells strung together. Dutch settlers bought the island of Manhattan from native Americans for strings of wampum that were worth about sixteen dollars in Dutch money.

METAL MONEY   

People around the world used many different things for currency, but eventually metal coins became the most popular form of money in most of Europe and Asia.

People used gold, silver and copper as money because it was pretty, and useful, and hard to get. The first metal money was in lumps and bars, and how much it was worth depended on how much it weighed. This wasn’t very convenient, because if someone only wanted to spend part of their money, they had to melt
down the metal to divide it up.

Eventually, people figured out that they could make metal into pieces of equal size and weight. They stamped the weight on the piece of metal, along with some design that proved it was real, like a picture of the king. These were the first coins.

The problem with using metal as money is that it’s very heavy, and hard to carry around. People needed an easier way to make big payments, so they invented paper money.

PAPER MONEY                                  

The Chinese were probably the first to invent paper money as we know it. Around 86 BC, Emperor Wu declared that squares of white deerskin, decorated with the designs of a plant, would each be worth 400,000 copper coins.

In Europe, people wanted safe places to keep their coins, so that they would not have to carry them around everywhere. People left their money with goldsmiths, who gave them pieces of paper to show how much gold they had in safekeeping. Eventually, these goldsmiths became bankers, and the pieces of paper became “bank notes.” People could trade these bank notes for metal coins.

Do you have a dollar bill? Look at the words at the top: “Federal Reserve Note.” Our paper money is still a kind of bank note, and you can still trade it for metal coins. See the line that says “This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private”? This means that our government says you can use this piece of paper to pay for anything, and it will always be worth one dollar

In the Land of Invisible Women

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

By Qanta Ahmed

Qanta Ahmed is a trained medical doctor born in Pakistan, raised in Britain and trained in New York City, USA. She was raised as a Muslim with love and encouragement by parents who never discriminated because of her sex.

Her story chronicles the two years spent living and working in Saudi Arabia. The seat of her faith. The land of great oil wealth. And the most claustrophobic place on earth for women.

From her first night in the Kingdom when a co-worker lends her an abayah so they can go and buy her own complete body covering which she will wear every time she leaves her home until her final flight away from the land where she found many good friends both male and female, we follow her as she learns about the people and the lives they lead.

One of her most memorable chapters deals with her trip to Mecca to make the Haj, a holy pilgrimage usually made much later in life. This renewed and revived her faith while listing all the restrictions placed on the conditions both mental and physical which must be followed during this special visit to the black rock which is the centre of their beliefs.

We learn about working in the ICU unit of a military hospital and how the many restrictions affect the interactions of all staff as they try to handle the many emergencies which pass through the doors of their ward.

I’m sure you will find much to learn from this very compassionate look inside the mysterious desert Kingdom of Bedouins and guest workers.