McCall Idaho Real Estate

Information about McCall from Steve and Cindy Jones
Cabin in McCall

Cabin for Sale in McCall

Today’s market presents some very unique opportunities for buyers. With affordability near record highs and interest rates near record lows, many homeowners are making the decision to move up or on. Here a few simple tips to take into consideration when listing your home for sale.

1. Curb Appeal: Buyers make snap judgments about each home they view. These judgments are drawn largely from first impressions. Be sure your home has impressive curb appeal. Fresh flowers and mulched beds, along with trimmed hedges and grass are a must. If your home needs a fresh coat of paint, now is the time. And even if your paint or siding is in good repair, consider painting your front door an eye-catching color, such as red or blue.

2. Inspection: An inspection can make or break a deal. Even after they’ve fallen in love with your house, a buyer may decide foundation issues or faulty electrical are too much of a headache. The benefits of having an inspection done prior to listing can be two-fold. First, your buyers will be aware of what repairs are needed before they make an offer. Second, you can choose to address these repairs and therefore have them removed from the scenario altogether.

3. Repairs: Buyers are turned off by long lists of needed repairs. This goes double for time-consuming and costly repairs, such as roof work or foundation issues. By identifying and addressing the issues, you may be able to yourself save time and money in the long run.

4. Organize Paperwork: There may be contracts or warranties you have on your home that will transfer to a new buyer. These can include appliances, builder warranties, and even contracts with lawn and pool companies there were paid up-front.

5. Talk to your lender: How much new home can you afford? Are you able to sell your home for enough to cover the remaining balance of the loan? These are important questions to get answered prior to listing!

6. Prepare for showings: Staging a home for sale has multiple different layers. First, you should clean and organize. Have carpets cleaned and repaint dirty or loudly colored walls. Next, remove large and bulky furniture, as these make rooms appear smaller. And finally, take down personal pictures, trophies, and memorabilia that could distract the buyer from what they are actually interested in … your house!

Every seller needs a competitive edge in today’s market. By being prepared for selling prior to listing, you can gain an advantage. Talk to your real estate agent for more tips!

The homeowners association at Idaho’s troubled Tamarack Resort resurrected the ski area into operation this season while the drama continues over the resort’s bankruptcy. But despite the woes, skiers and snowboarders are returning to the slopes. Those still itching to get back to Tamarack can find lodging and lift ticket deals.

Tamarack’s operation is trimmed down from what used to be offered. The resort runs its lifts only four days per week, Thursdays through Sundays, and holidays. Three chairlifts, including the summit lift, and two surface lifts are running this season, but the Wildwood Express and Buttercup lifts are not. The terrain they served is closed, too.

The legal drama is playing out in bankruptcy court. Tamarack’s owner had chosen Green Valley Holdings, a Boise investment group that offered $40 million, as a buyer. But then, a federal judge in mid-January sent the resort’s bankruptcy case from Chapter 11 protection to the state court to begin foreclosure proceedings.

Despite struggles of the owner, the homeowners association has plodded on. Crews have put up two terrain parks. A beginner and family fun park is located on Discovery Run, and the No Business Terrain Park on Lower Showtime contains bigger features with rails, boxes, and jumps.

Skiers can get discounts every Thursday and Friday at the ticket window. Visitors that buy a lift ticket at regular price can get a second lift ticket at 50 percent off. Season passholders from other ski resorts can get $4 off the regular lift ticket by presenting their passes. Regular prices for lift tickets run $46 for adults, $36 for juniors, and $22 for youth.

Several lodging deals are available this season at Tamarack through Valet Vacation Rentals. They are available all winter until the final day of ski area operations April 3.

We have seen a bit of an increase in sales in our area the past year, the main cause of this is the lower prices from a year ago. We still see the Bank Owned and Distressed property leading the way in closings with over 50% of solds in our area of this type of property.

Here are the numbers

From Jan 1 2010 to Jan 1 2011

McCall Area Residential

We saw 205 solds in the McCall Area for this time frame, 3 homes sold on the lake for over $2 Million. Average days on market was 169. In 2009 the total sales was 198 with Average day on Market of 180.

McCall Area Lot and Land Sales

We saw 80 solds in the McCall Area with the highest price sold was in Whitetail for over $400,000.00
Average day on market is 473. In 2009 we saw 43 solds.

Donnelly and Tamarack Residential

We saw 124 homes sold in the area, with 36 of these in Tamarack. The average days on market was 120. This area saw a drop in sales from 2009 where we saw 142 solds, however there was an increase in sales at Tamarack as they only had 19 sales in Tamarack in 2009.

Donnelly and Tamarack Lots and Land

We saw 76 solds with a Average day on market 296, in 2009 we saw 23 solds.

We hope to see an increase in sales this coming year with out any more price drops, however we are told that the foreclosure rate will be the same in 2011 as 2010. If this is true we will still see the majority of sales being the distressesd properties.

Top of Tamarack

Tamarack Homeowners Lead Negotiations to Get Idaho Land Lease Paid Financial Arrangements Are in Place to Help Ensure a 2010-11 Ski Season at Destination Resort

The leadership team of Tamarack Municipal Association has culminated several weeks of intense negotiations by striking agreement among Tamarack Resort creditor Credit Suisse, the State of Idaho Department of Lands, and the equity-holders of the resort to allow payment of a land lease that is crucial leverage in the effort to open the resort to skiing and snowboarding next month. TMA, the homeowners association of Tamarack Resort, will contribute $80,000 to a series of payments of more than $350,000 that will be owed the State of Idaho by early 2011.

 In the process, TMA secured an agreement to negotiate a Sublease of state lands to enable the organization to operate Tamarack Resort’s ski facilities this coming ski season. All of the principals of the agreement have also committed to request Bankruptcy Court approval for the upcoming ski season.

Approximately 65 jobs, $550,000 in payroll and several million dollars in economic development are expected to result from the agreement, upon Idaho Bankruptcy Court approval of the deal. “The commitment of the homeowners of Tamarack Resort to restore wintertime recreation at this exceptional destination has paid off,” said Dr. Michael Carey, a pathologist based in Boise who is on the executive committee of the TMA board of directors. “The jobs, economic activity and morale booster that this deal represents for rural Idaho make this a compelling moment for our communities.”

 Tamarack Municipal Association, (TMA) composed of 389 homeowners at the Tamarack Resort, helped lead efforts to reach agreement among all parties to extend the State Lease and to allow the TMA a Sublease of the ski facilities that will ensure the 2010-2011 Season. That agreement calls for Credit Suisse and TMA, as third parties, subject to Bankruptcy Court approval, paying defaulted monies on the State Land Lease, and also agreeing to pay for the first half of 2011 of the State Lease.

 In exchange for the agreement among the affected stakeholders — Tamarack Municipal Association, the Idaho State Land Board, Credit Suisse, and Tamarack Resort, LLC — the State agreed to extend for two weeks the time for assuming or rejecting the Lease between the Resort and the State. All of the conditions needed must be met by November 19th, and TMA expects that the State Land Board and Credit Suisse will also have granted their approvals and join in any necessary motions in front of the Bankruptcy Court that would allow the use of these facilities for the upcoming ski season.

 TMA also believes that, if the Sublease has the approval of all of the affected stakeholders, it would also be more likely to survive any challenges that might arise if the matter is converted from a Chapter 11 to a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy.

 The annual lease payment is $250,000. Credit Suisse will pay the past due amount plus interest and fees for 2010. TMA will pay for the rent attributable to the ski season as part of the first half of 2011 rent, and Credit Suisse will pay the balance of the first half’s rent for 2011.

 The season is scheduled for “first tracks” on Dec.20. Adult season and family passes are now available and are bargain priced beginning at $199 per person. Daily lift tickets for full mountain access are $46 for adults and $22 for youth. Until web-based transactions are enabled at www.tamarackidaho.com, just call (208) 325-1736 for ticket and pass information. All funds will be held in escrow and are fully refundable until necessary final approval is granted by the court guiding the Tamarack Resort bankruptcy reorganization.

TMA’s plan is to conduct a 15-week season from Dec. 20-April 3. The resort will be open Thursdays through Sundays, with extended days during holidays of Christmas, New Year, Martin Luther King, Jr., President’s Day and Spring Break. Five lifts are scheduled to be operating this season, including the lift accessing the 7,700-foot summit of West Mountain.

The unfolding foreclosure-processing debacle is causing bank stocks to slide and putting millions of delinquent borrowers in limbo.

But how disruptive the crisis ultimately becomes—for homeowners,
 the housing market and the broader economy—depends on how quickly a number of
technical problems and legal challenges are resolved in the months ahead.

In essence, fast-paced modern finance is colliding with the much slower machinery of the U.S. legal system. While finance aims for efficiency and maximized profits, the courts demand due process. And that’s becoming a growing issue as lenders come under attack for taking short cuts to oust homeowners who haven’t mailed in a mortgage check for months.

Bank of America Corp. shares lost nearly 5%. Shares of Wells Fargo & Co. also fell nearly 5%, while J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. fell 4% and Citigroup Inc. lost nearly 3%. And the cost of protecting against the default of bank bonds continued to surge

BofA and J.P. Morgan said they temporarily suspended foreclosure sales as they review procedures, while other big banks have said they are reviewing files but haven’t promised to freeze foreclosures. But even here, bankers are having trouble slamming on the brakes.

Banks still are referring some loans to foreclosure in states where they issued suspensions, despite the moratoria. This week in Illinois, Florida and Ohio, Bank of America and J.P. Morgan Chase continued proceedings that allow them to sell foreclosed homes at public auction, according to court clerks.
A J.P. Morgan spokesman said Friday that “we have asked our local foreclosure attorneys not to seek judgments.”

The financial system and legal system have been on a collision course for some time in residential real estate. Both the lower standards for loans and the lax controls involving foreclosures were based on the premise that home prices would never fall, making it unlikely that many loans would go bad at once. Once that premise fell apart, the flaws in the system became obvious, and the long-term challenge now facing lenders is to rebuild the mortgage system on more solid footing.

Banks argue that these problems will be repaired swiftly, and they’ll soon be running the foreclosure machinery at full speed again. But analysts say the problems could expand into a legal crisis if banks can’t prove that they are following standard property-law procedures.

Lawyers, politicians and consumer advocates, meanwhile, are using the legal problems to stop foreclosures and extract settlements for troubled borrowers that lower their mortgage debt.

Industry executives note that few, if any, borrowers in the foreclosure process dispute the fact that they’re not paying their mortgages. “We’re not evicting people who deserve to stay in their house,” James Dimon, J.P. Morgan chief executive, told analysts Wednesday.

The legal drama partly represents the clash between a financial sector that developed electronic processing to speed up procedures versus the U.S. property-law system, which relies on physical paperwork filed by individuals.
There are two different problems. The first resulted after lawyers for troubled borrowers discovered that banks were using “robo-signers,” or back-office employees who approved hundreds of foreclosure documents daily without reviewing them, in states where repossessions must be approved in court.

Banks had no choice but to suspend foreclosures in those states because submitting false witness testimony meant they hadn’t properly proved ownership of the loans in foreclosure.

The second, and perhaps thornier, issue is that banks could have trouble proving they have standing to foreclose as they go back to correct errors. That problem stems largely from mortgages that were bundled into pools and sold to investors as securities. This process, known as securitization, became the preferred method of financing U.S. home loans over the past 30 years.

“This is back-office work. This is not all going to resolve itself immediately, and we’re going to have to be patient,” says Richard Dorfman of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association’s securitization group.

Real-estate law requires the physical transfer of paperwork whenever mortgages trade hands, and analysts are raising questions about how often that happened during the housing boom. One concern is that banks may have lost, or didn’t ever have, mortgage certificates. If that happened, banks will have to pause foreclosures for months as they track down certificates and refile paperwork.

“The best case is this is going to slow the process considerably but not change the outcome,” says Joshua Rosner, managing director at investment-research firm Graham Fisher & Co.

Under a far gloomier scenario, the problems created by using robo-signers may be irrelevant if, instead of being lost, mortgage documents weren’t ever properly transferred during each step of the securitization process, says Adam Levitin, a professor of law at Georgetown University. If that happens, “the whole system comes to a halt,” he says. Investors could argue in court that they never owned the mortgages backing their money-losing securities.

Banks and their attorneys say such fears are overblown. Procedures for transferring loans into mortgage-backed securities “are sound and based on a well-established body of law governing a multi-trillion dollar secondary mortgage market,” said Tom Deutsch, the executive director of the American Securitization Forum, in a statement Friday.

For now, the foreclosure machinery operates in fits and starts. For instance, Bank of America said it had suspended foreclosures in Ohio while it reviews procedures there.

Still, attorneys for Bank of America moved to take back three homes through foreclosure on Oct. 12 in Franklin County, Ohio, according to a court clerk. In Summit County, Colo, J.P. Morgan on Friday took back a foreclosed condominium unit on the courthouse steps with a bid of $154,278, according to the county treasurer. A J.P. Morgan spokesman said the bank isn’t suspending foreclosure sales in Colorado.

In Lee County, Florida, both J.P. Morgan Chase and Bank of America continued to pursue judgments moving homes through foreclosure, according to court records. April Charney, a Florida-based attorney with Jacksonville Legal Aid says she’s been contacted by at least five attorneys across the state who represent borrowers whose homes are proceeding to sale. A J.P. Morgan Chase spokesman said “we have asked our local foreclosure attorneys not to seek judgments.”

Michael Holmes, 55 years old, an antique dealer, is upset that GMAC Mortgage, a loan servicer, is going to auction his home in Belfast, Maine, next week. Mr. Holmes expected the company to suspend his foreclosure sale because the lawsuit against him included an affidavit from Jeffrey Stephan, a GMAC employee who testified to signing as many as 10,000 loan documents without reviewing them. “There’s all this news everyday that foreclosures are being halted, but that’s just not the case for me,” he says.

GMAC had originally scheduled an auction of Mr. Holmes’ Victorian-style home for Thursday of this week, but postponed the sale for seven days after Mr. Holmes’ attorney, Andrea Bopp Stark, contacted the company.

A GMAC spokeswoman said Friday it won’t pursue a foreclosure sale based on a “defective affidavit, and in Mr. Holmes’ case “an amended affidavit was filed and accepted.”

: Does the new health care law impose a 3.8 percent tax on profits from selling your home?

A: No, with very few exceptions. The first $250,000 in profit from the sale of a personal residence won’t be taxed, or the first $500,000 in the case of a married couple. The tax falls on relatively few — those with high incomes from other sources

At the last minute, Democratic lawmakers decided on a new 3.8 percent tax on the net investment income of high-income persons. But the claim that this would amount to a $15,200 tax on the sale of a typical $400,000 home is utterly false.

The truth is that only a tiny percentage of home sellers will pay the tax. First of all, only those with incomes over $200,000 a year ($250,000 for married couples filing jointly) will be subject to it. And even for those who have such high incomes, the tax still won’t apply to the first $250,000 on profits from the sale of a personal residence — or to the first $500,000 in the case of a married couple selling their home.

We can understand how this misconception got started. The law itself is couched in highly technical language that only a qualified tax expert can fully grasp. (This provision begins on page 33 of the reconciliation bill that was passed and signed into law.) And it does say the tax falls on “net gain … attributable to the disposition of property.” That would include the sale of a home. But the bill also says the tax falls only on that portion of any gain that is “taken into account in computing taxable income” under the existing tax code. And the fact is, the first $250,000 in profit on the sale of a primary residence (or $500,000 in the case of a married couple) is excluded from taxable income already. (That exclusion doesn’t apply to vacation homes or rental properties.)

The Joint Committee on Taxation, the group of nonpartisan tax experts that Congress relies on to analyze tax proposals, underscores this in a footnote on page 135 of its report on the bill. The note states: “Gross income does not include … excluded gain from the sale of a principal residence.”

And just to be sure, we checked with William Ahern, director of policy and communications for the nonprofit, pro-business Tax Foundation. “Some home sales would see a tax increase under this bill,” Ahern told us, “but it would have to be a second home or a principal residence generating [a gain of] more than $250,000 ($500,000 for a couple).”

So there you have it. The sort of people who would have to pay the tax might include, for example:

  • A single executive making $210,000 a year who sells his $300,000 ski condo for a $50,000 profit. His tax on the sale of that vacation home would amount to $1,900, in addition to the capital gains tax he would have paid anyway.
  • An “empty nester” couple with combined income of over $250,000 a year who sell their $1 million primary residence to move to smaller quarters. If they cleared $600,000 on the sale, they would be taxed on $100,000 of the profit (the amount over the half-million-dollar exclusion). Their health care tax on the sale would amount to $3,800 over and above the usual capital gains levy.

However, a typical home sale would not incur any tax. In March, for example, half of all existing homes sold for $170,700 or less, according to the National Association of Realtors. Obviously, none of those sales could possibly generate a $250,000 profit, and so none would be subject to the tax.

Thus, for the vast majority, the 3.8 percent tax won’t apply. The Tax Foundation, in a report released April 15, said the new tax on investment income (including real estate) “will hit approximately the top-earning two percent of families” when it takes effect in 2013.

Footnote: Some of the chain e-mails that claim ordinary home sales will be taxed include a copy of an article written by Paul Guppy, a policy analyst with the conservative Washington Policy Institute (that’s Washington state, not Washington, D.C.). The article appeared March 28 as an op-ed in the Spokane, Wash., Spokesman-Review, and Guppy claimed that “[m]iddle-income people must pay the full tax even if they are ‘rich’ for only one day.” That brought a quick rebuttal from Sara Orrange, the government affairs director of the local Realtors association. She wrote a letter to the newspaper calling Guppy’s article “inaccurate” and saying, “Most people who sell their homes will not be impacted by these new regulations. This is not a new tax on every seller, and that correction needs to be made.” In a news article the next day, business reporter Bert Caldwell confirmed that only “a very few” home sellers would pay the 3.8 percent tax.

The Internal Revenue Service says that to qualify for the $250,000/$500,000 exclusion, a seller must have owned the home and lived there as the seller’s “main home” for at least two years out of the five years prior to the sale.

: Does the new health care law impose a 3.8 percent tax on profits from selling your home?

A: No, with very few exceptions. The first $250,000 in profit from the sale of a personal residence won’t be taxed, or the first $500,000 in the case of a married couple. The tax falls on relatively few — those with high incomes from other sources.

 

Higher taxes on real estate investments. The 3.8% Medicare surtax would hit average, middle-class investors in real estate. A middle-class taxpayer who happens to sell real estate for a gain in a particular year would be liable for this new tax, regardless of how low her income might be in other, more typical years.

FULL ANSWER

We’ve been flooded with queries about this one ever since the health care bill became law. At the last minute, Democratic lawmakers decided on a new 3.8 percent tax on the net investment income of high-income persons. But the claim that this would amount to a $15,200 tax on the sale of a typical $400,000 home is utterly false.

The truth is that only a tiny percentage of home sellers will pay the tax. First of all, only those with incomes over $200,000 a year ($250,000 for married couples filing jointly) will be subject to it. And even for those who have such high incomes, the tax still won’t apply to the first $250,000 on profits from the sale of a personal residence — or to the first $500,000 in the case of a married couple selling their home.

We can understand how this misconception got started. The law itself is couched in highly technical language that only a qualified tax expert can fully grasp. (This provision begins on page 33 of the reconciliation bill that was passed and signed into law.) And it does say the tax falls on “net gain … attributable to the disposition of property.” That would include the sale of a home. But the bill also says the tax falls only on that portion of any gain that is “taken into account in computing taxable income” under the existing tax code. And the fact is, the first $250,000 in profit on the sale of a primary residence (or $500,000 in the case of a married couple) is excluded from taxable income already. (That exclusion doesn’t apply to vacation homes or rental properties.)

The Joint Committee on Taxation, the group of nonpartisan tax experts that Congress relies on to analyze tax proposals, underscores this in a footnote on page 135 of its report on the bill. The note states: “Gross income does not include … excluded gain from the sale of a principal residence.”

And just to be sure, we checked with William Ahern, director of policy and communications for the nonprofit, pro-business Tax Foundation. “Some home sales would see a tax increase under this bill,” Ahern told us, “but it would have to be a second home or a principal residence generating [a gain of] more than $250,000 ($500,000 for a couple).”

So there you have it. The sort of people who would have to pay the tax might include, for example:

  • A single executive making $210,000 a year who sells his $300,000 ski condo for a $50,000 profit. His tax on the sale of that vacation home would amount to $1,900, in addition to the capital gains tax he would have paid anyway.
  • An “empty nester” couple with combined income of over $250,000 a year who sell their $1 million primary residence to move to smaller quarters. If they cleared $600,000 on the sale, they would be taxed on $100,000 of the profit (the amount over the half-million-dollar exclusion). Their health care tax on the sale would amount to $3,800 over and above the usual capital gains levy.

However, a typical home sale would not incur any tax. In March, for example, half of all existing homes sold for $170,700 or less, according to the National Association of Realtors. Obviously, none of those sales could possibly generate a $250,000 profit, and so none would be subject to the tax.

Thus, for the vast majority, the 3.8 percent tax won’t apply. The Tax Foundation, in a report released April 15, said the new tax on investment income (including real estate) “will hit approximately the top-earning two percent of families” when it takes effect in 2013.

Footnote: Some of the chain e-mails that claim ordinary home sales will be taxed include a copy of an article written by Paul Guppy, a policy analyst with the conservative Washington Policy Institute (that’s Washington state, not Washington, D.C.). The article appeared March 28 as an op-ed in the Spokane, Wash., Spokesman-Review, and Guppy claimed that “[m]iddle-income people must pay the full tax even if they are ‘rich’ for only one day.” That brought a quick rebuttal from Sara Orrange, the government affairs director of the local Realtors association. She wrote a letter to the newspaper calling Guppy’s article “inaccurate” and saying, “Most people who sell their homes will not be impacted by these new regulations. This is not a new tax on every seller, and that correction needs to be made.” In a news article the next day, business reporter Bert Caldwell confirmed that only “a very few” home sellers would pay the 3.8 percent tax.

The Internal Revenue Service says that to qualify for the $250,000/$500,000 exclusion, a seller must have owned the home and lived there as the seller’s “main home” for at least two years out of the five years prior to the sale.

From Factcheck.com

Whether it’s the state of the economy or because you just don’t get around to using your vacatin home a lot, you may find yourself thinking for the first time about renting out your vacation home.

Log Cabin in McCall

Log Cabin for sale in McCall

 

lots of consumers who already own and are looking to start renting  should follow these guide lines. The financial benefits  can be good and with thorough preparation, the process usually runs surprisingly smoothly.

Five things to know about getting ready to rent out your vacation home:

1. Find out if there are any legal prohibitions or restrictions on short-term rentals.

You’ll definitely have to check with your city government.  Some towns may limit the number of weeks per year you can have short-term renters, and some of them may charge special taxes. Some towns limit the number of unrelated adults who might occupy a dwelling, she said. The same questions need to be asked of your condo or co-op board or homeowners association,

Some  markets will require you to have a business license and collect sales tax, a tourism tax, a bed tax, etc.

2. Get the place ready.

You’ll have to depersonalize it a bit and you’re going to have to take the toothbrushes out of the bathroom, sort out your closets, get the drawers cleaned out, remove family pictures, and clear out the refrigerator. Anything you leave will be considered fair game for renters to use.

HomeAway.com and other rental sites provide checklists of furnishings and implements needed for renters’ use.

You want to double what you ‘sleep, if your place sleeps six, you want 12 forks, 12 knives, etc.

Plan on a certain amount of wear and tear, replaces towels annually, get good, fluffy ones. Renters expect good quality. The sofa might need to be swapped out every 2 1/2 years.

3. Some financial considerations:

Decide on the rental amount by checking for comparable rentals on the Web or by calling local property managers. Typically, managers who provide rental services will charge the owner a percentage of the rent.

The size of rental deposit can be a sticky issue,  for new people who are renting: take $200, or 10 percent of the rental cost.”

A housekeeper who will come in between rentals is a must,  that’s the most difficult part of starting to rent.  The homeowner needs to find someone who’s reliable and can report on the condition on the place between renters.

When mechanical problems arise, sometimes the solution is as easy as dialing for a local plumber or heating contractor.   Some homeowners prefer to contract with a maintenance company to be on call, handle yard work, etc.

4. The property must be marketed properly, whether you’re handling the rentals yourself or using a professional company,

Would-be renters want information about nearby transportation, shopping, entertainment, beaches, skiing, etc.

They also want to see photos of the place.   The photos should include an exterior view, and if there’s a scenic view, include it.   They’re also concerned about seeing adequate seating in the living room, the comfy-ness of the master bedroom and additional bedrooms, and the workability of the kitchen.

5. How to screen the renters?

The Internet is a great starting point for finding renters, but the phone is a must many agencies say.

Ask them why they’re coming to the area, and (if) they’ve ever been in a vacation rental.  If not, then it is good to go through a few more things. They might not realize the nuances of staying in a vacation rental that are going to be a bit different, such as the cancellation policy, and that there’s nobody on the premises to field questions.

Idaho ranks number five in the nation when it comes to foreclosure filings. According to RealtyTrac’s U.S. Foreclosure Market Report for July 2010, filings increased nearly 7.5 percent from July 2009 and were up nearly 19 percent from June 2010. 975 notices of default were filed statewide during July. One in every 240 homes was affected by a foreclosure filing statewide during the same time period.

Marc Lebowitz, executive director of the Ada County Association of Realtorssaid in July that 46 percent of all sales in Ada County were distressed properties. Lebowitz said a distressed property could be a property in short sale, in the process of foreclosure, or bank-owned.

Of the active inventory of single family homes currently listed through the Intermountain Multiple Listing Service, 38 percent of them are in distress in Ada County.

“It was the highest in the spring. It has been drifting downward ever since. It’s not a drastic recovery, but it hasn’t gotten worse,” Lebowitz said.

Intermountain MLS CEO Greg Manship said from January to July 2010, 19 to 22 percent of listed single-family homes were bank-owned. The Intermountain MLS encompasses the southern part of Idaho, extending from eastern Oregon to Twin Falls.

The top three states with the highest number of foreclosure filings in July were Nevada, Arizona and Florida.

Homeowners at Tamarack resort want to resurrect ski lift operations next winter and are asking the state, a bankruptcy judge and creditors who are owed hundreds of millions to go along with their plan.

The Tamarack Municipal Association, which represents property owners at Tamarack Resort in Donnelly, said they’d use some of their reserves to initiate a four-day, Thursday-through-Sunday ski season starting in December. The resort hasn’t had a ski season since mothballing the lifts in March 2009.

Its majority owner, Jean-Pierre Boespflug, is trying to find a buyer while the resort’s finances are sorted out in bankruptcy court.

Zurich-based Credit Suisse Group is among dozens of creditors trying to recover hundreds of millions in unpaid debts.

The homeowners said Thursday they have a business plan showing they could break even.

Two ski lifts that are subject to litigation because Bank of America Corp.’s leasing unit wants to repossess them wouldn’t be operated, according to the plan. The five lifts that would be used provide access to most of the skiing terrain on 7,700-foot West Mountain.

The homeowners would likely have to work out an agreement with the state, because the resort failed to pay its $250,000 annual lease for state land where most ski runs are located, and another payment is due next year. Homeowners pledged to make a “substantial payment” in exchange for a winter recreation season.

“That’s one of the things that will need to be resolved,” said Scott Peyron, a spokesman for the homeowners who hope their proposal can go before the Idaho Land Board in September.

Season passes would cost $199.

George Bacon, director of the Idaho Department of Lands, didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

A Credit Suisse Group spokeswoman in New York declined to comment.

Last year, the bank opposed a previous plan by some owners to fire up lifts with a $7.9 million loan from a Mexican real estate investor. That deal collapsed amid opposition from the Swiss bankers to provisions ensuring the Mexican lender would be repaid before other creditors who are already owed more than $300 million.

Peyron said the homeowners aren’t asking for similar concessions with their latest proposal.

Boespflug told The Associated Press Aug. 5 he supports this proposal, in part because operating ski lifts will help make the resort easier to market to potential buyers and because it will help prop up flagging property values of homes whose prices collapsed when the lifts were idled more than a year ago.

Boespflug has so far been unable to find a buyer, amid a complicated tangle of demands from a syndicate of lenders – headed by Credit Suisse – who want their money back.

“There is nothing to report on this process,” Boespflug said.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Terry Myers would also have to agree to the homeowners’ plan.

In April, Myers agreed to give Boespflug a chance to reorganize Tamarack’s debt and ask creditors to modify terms of loans, rather than holding a fire sale.

On Aug. 2, Myers gave Boespflug another 90 days to resolve lease issues with Idaho over 2,124 acres of state-owned land, according to federal bankruptcy court documents.

Home on over 3 acres

Sales of foreclosed properties and homes  continue to dominate the real estate sales market, according to the latest figures from the Multiple Listing Service of the Mountain Central Association of Realtors.

A total of 211 homes were sold in the first six months of 2010, a 51 percent increase over the 140 homes sold during that period in 2009, the MLS figures showed according to the Star News. 

Almost  two-third of this year’s sales, or 132 transactions, were distressed properties either bankowned or a short sale.

The MLS report covers sales from Cascade in the south to Riggins in the north and includes McCall, Donnelly and New Meadows.

With the foreclosure sales included, the total sales for January through July passed the 182 homes sold in all of 2008 and began to approach the 247 homes sold in all of 2007.

However, taking out the 132 distressed sales brings the total for this year down to just 79 sales, or about half of the 2009 total to date.

The most homes sold were in McCall (95) followed by Donnelly/Tamarack Resort (73), New Meadows (24) and Cascade (19).

Teh median prices for homes were $199,500 for McCall, $187,500 for Donnelly or Tamarack Resort, $81,000 for Cascade and $146,000 in New Meadows.

Sales of bare lots faced the same skewed figures due to foreclosed properties.

A total of 98 lots sold in the region during the first six months of 2010 compared to 44 lots sold in 2009.   53 of those

lots, just over half the total, were bank-owned properties or sold at auction.