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Home Resources Related News Sacramento Realtors giving $2,000 for certain energy-efficiency improvements 8/25/2010

Sacramento Realtors giving $2,000 for certain energy-efficiency improvements 8/25/2010


Buying an older home? Realtors giving $2,000 for certain energy-efficiency improvements

Aug 23, 2010

The Sacramento Bee

Jim Wasserman

Aug. 23, 2010 (McClatchy-Tribune Regional News delivered by Newstex) -- The Sacramento Association of Realtors, aiming to overcome consumer reluctance about buying older, energy-guzzling houses, has launched a program to give qualified buyers $2,000 to help make energy-efficiency improvements.

The grant program, funded by a $234,000 SAR fund, is believed to be the first of its kind in California.

"We help buyers who need it the most, and improve houses that need it the most," said SAR coordinator Charlene Singley, a Lyon Real Estate agent in Sacramento. "And we're out there trying to help improve energy conservation in the area."

To qualify, buyers must purchase a home built in 1978 or earlier. That covers about six in 10 Sacramento-area houses, said Comstock Mortgage Senior Loan Consultant Kevin Nunn, who created the grant program for SAR.

It also covers many of the bank repos that have become a large share of the region's for-sale listings.

Buyers must use a SAR Realtor or lender. The homes can be located anywhere that one of those members sell.

Buyers must also use a Federal Home Administration or Veterans Administration Energy Efficient Mortgage. Those mortgages, in use since the early 1990s, allow buyers to roll the costs of energy efficiency improvements into their home loans.

The idea behind Energy Efficient Mortgages: they save buyers more in the long run than it costs for the financing.

Nunn said energy efficient mortgages allow buyers to borrow up to 5 percent of the sales price -- $10,000 in the case of a $200,000 house -- to install new air-conditioning, add dual-pane windows or extra insulation to the older house.

He said energy efficiency mortgages most commonly help buyers finance new air-conditioning systems, dual pane windows and insulation. The SAR program requires that a SMUD-certified contractor do the work.

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Call The Bee's Jim Wasserman, (916) 321-1102. Read his blog on real estate, Home Front, at www.sacbee.com/homefront.

Newstex ID: KRTB-0178-48113480

 

 

 

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