Saturday, February 25, 2006

Denver announces a new Teen Kayaking club

Denver Area Gets New Affordable Teen Kayaking Club
This spring will bring the creation of a new unique and affordable opportunity for teens in the Denver Metro Area! Confluence Teen Kayaking Club is creating a not-for-profit club that will provide a safe, encouraging environment for teens to learn the fun sport of kayaking at a very low shared cost.
This Club will be a volunteer-run and safe opportunity for teens ages 12 to 18 to get together at least once a week to learn and practice kayaking. The sport of kayaking is a highly enjoyable and relatively easy to learn for beginners, and it provides avenues for greater fitness and health, building self confidence, positive individual and team interaction, along with an inherent ethic of water conservation and environmental education. Colorado teens typically love it! The Club will also help the teens learn more about Denver’s public transportation system (envisioning that a lot of the teens will take the bus and/or light rail to the Market Street Station, thereby reducing the need for dependence on parents for transportation), along with teaching them club organizational and fund raising skills with mentorship from responsible adults. Parent involvement is encouraged but not mandatory.
The Club is sponsored by Confluence Kayaks, a retail and instructional boating store on Platte Street in Denver that will help provide meeting space and club insurance, get the word out to their clientele, and identify experienced instructors. They have also offered to provide some equipment for instruction and use by teens that are interested in starting this sport but may not have their own equipment. Their shop is located just across the way from the kayaking area on the Platte River in Confluence Park, providing an ideal location for this Club’s base.
An informational and organizational meeting will be held at Confluence Kayaks, 1615 Platte St., 303-433-3676, on February 22nd, and the Club will meet on Wednesday nights at Confluence Park from 4:30 to 7 pm, April to October. Volunteer experienced kayak instructors are also needed. For more information call Teresa Penbrooke, Volunteer Club Coordinator at 303-870-3884 or email tgrafts@mindspring.com.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Foreclosures on the Rise

Foreclosures Rise 24.5 Percent Nationwide
02/16/2006 12:30 AM FEB 16, 2006 Realty Times
A nearly 25 percent increase in foreclosures last year, combined with slowing sales, softer home prices and higher mortgage rates reveal a housing market in the throes of change away from favoring sellers.
Foreclosure monitor RealtyTrac said the number of foreclosures nationwide was up 24.5 percent from the first quarter of 2005 to the fourth quarter.
"Over the past few years, we've seen historically low mortgage rates, consistently escalating home prices and steady, strong employment," said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac.
"This has translated into relatively low levels of foreclosure properties -- particularly bank-owned properties. With interest rates rising and an apparent slowing of property valuations in most markets, we'll be watching closely to see if there's a material effect on the number of foreclosures in 2006," he added.
Along with higher foreclosures, existing-home sales set an annual record, but declined in December falling 3.1 percent compared to December 2004, according to the National Association of Realtors.
The national median existing-home price for all housing types was $211,000 in December, up 10.5 percent from December 2004, but down from November's $215,000 median, NAR also reported.
And the average of fixed mortgage rates for conforming 30-year mortgages rose for the fourth consecutive week to an average 6.24 percent by Feb. 9, according to Freddie Mac. A year ago the average was 5.57 percent.
Hardest hit by rising foreclosure rates during 2005 were Massachusetts, up nearly 200 percent; Connecticut, up 188 percent; Michigan up 170 percent; Virginia up 151 percent and Maryland, up 117 percent.
RealtyTrac's report includes properties in all three phases of foreclosure: pre-foreclosures, Notice of Default (NOD) and Lis Pendens (LIS); foreclosures, Notice of Trustee Sale and Notice of Foreclosure Sale (NTS and NFS); and real estate owned, or REO properties (those that have been re-purchased by a bank).
It's not just the percentages. Numbers are growing too and that's statistically significant.
Nationwide, the number of foreclosures during the first quarter were 188,122. By the final quarter that number had risen to 234,278. In Massachusetts, the foreclosures jumped from 616 to 1,843; Connecticut, 1,456 to 4,202; Michigan, 4,411 to 11,937; Virginia, 380 to 956 and Maryland, 667 to 1,448.
Washington, D.C.'s foreclosures rose fastest, 300 percent, but the numbers remain relatively low, 10 foreclosures during the first quarter compared to only 155 during the fourth quarter.
Still, for some regions, the trend is obvious.
"Overall, U.S. foreclosure numbers climbed steadily over the course of the year, with more new foreclosures reported in every quarter," said Saccacio. "This trend appears to be moving the real estate foreclosure market back to its historic levels."
The percentage of foreclosure increases don't tell the whole story.
Florida experienced a 29 percent decrease in new foreclosures from the first quarter to the fourth quarter, but accounted for more than 14 percent of the nation's new foreclosures in 2005. Foreclosures in the Sunshine State represented 1.67 percent of the state's households, RealtyTrac reported.
"Even with almost 850,000 properties entering some stage of foreclosure across the country over the course of the year, this represents less than 1 percent of all U.S. households," Saccacio said.
Likewise, No. 2 Colorado saw foreclosure decreasing 4 percent during the survey period, but the 29,630 foreclosures in 2005 represent 1.62 percent of the state's households.
Utah was third with 1.5 percent of that state's households entering foreclosure in 2005.
Texas, Georgia, Arizona, Indiana, New Jersey, Ohio and Tennessee also revealed foreclosure rates of at least 1 percent of total households. Copyright © 2006 Realty Times. All Rights Reserved.