Voting for Democrats over and over is like asking the people that were on the Titanic if they would vote to hit the iceberg knowing the result.
Keeping the same Democrat Party that caused the problem in power with your vote is the definition of asking to maintain everything that will sink Illinois.
Make sure you vote and bring a friend. Every vote counts! Fix our State Vote Republican.
Steve Balich Editors Note:
As property taxes increase so does the value of your home and the money you have left to spend from your pay check. Your disposable income is also taking a hit when sales tax and fees are increased. Bottom line, The more the government takes the less you have. With increased demand from government taking more and more of your hard earned money every way they can think of many people find it difficult to pay their mortgage. For those on a fixed income, the government is forcing some out of their homes.
More Illinois homeowners sinking
underwater on mortgages
·
Illinois
has more homeowners with mortgages that are higher than what their homes could
fetch on the market than nearly any other state – and the problem is getting
worse.
In the
second quarter of 2018, 18 percent of Illinois’ homes were considered seriously
underwater, or mortgaged for more than 25 percent of the potential sale price
of the house. That’s according to ATTOM Data Solutions’ report released
Thursday. That’s higher than it has been since 2016. In some of Chicago's
western suburbs, more than 70 percent of homeowners owe 25 percent more
than the price their home would sell for.
The
national average for the second quarter was 10 percent.
Many of
those areas are seeing big home value deficits because buyers pulled the
trigger at the height of home prices. Geneva (76.0 percent); Elgin (75.5
percent); St. Charles (73.6 percent); and Sugar Grove (71.9 percent) were
behind only Springfield, Missouri, in terms of percentage of residents more
than 25 percent underwater on their homes.
“Even
though those markets are recovering and home prices are coming back slowly,
they haven’t recovered the equity loss during the downturn,” ATTOM vice
president Daren Blomquist said.
Twelve
of the top 20 markets for percentage of seriously underwater homes were in
Illinois.
State
County
City
Population
Units
Underwater x 125%
Percentage
Missouri
Greene
Springfield
11,867
4,768
2,443
81.0%
Illinois
Kane
Geneva
29,127
10,579
6,514
76.0%
Illinois
Kane
Elgin
20,761
7,209
4,843
75.5%
Illinois
Kane
Saint Charles
26,334
8,427
5,325
73.6%
Illinois
Kane
Sugar Grove
11,877
4,287
2,566
71.9%
New Jersey
Mercer
Trenton
25,906
9,815
2,354
71.5%
Missouri
Greene
Springfield
22,857
9,448
3,840
71.5%
Illinois
Kane
Elburn
10,169
3,636
2,093
71.2%
Missouri
Jasper
Webb City
14,635
6,139
1,953
70.3%
Illinois
Kane
Saint Charles
31,047
12,850
5,477
67.6%
Illinois
Kane
Batavia
29,502
11,233
5,087
66.7%
Illinois
Kane
Dundee
15,705
6,490
2,849
66.2%
Pennsylvania
Clearfield
Du Bois
19,266
9,496
2,133
66.1%
Missouri
Greene
Republic
18,037
7,278
2,932
65.5%
Illinois
Kane
Hampshire
15,985
6,040
3,134
65.4%
Missouri
Saint Louis
Saint Louis
20,460
8,779
3,080
65.4%
Losses
in population, seen in nearly every county in Illinois in 2017 Census reports,
tend to push home values down since the demand for homes is slowed.
“It
even makes it tougher for those who still own homes there to recover equity
and, in fact, you may see them lose equity,” Blomquist said.
The
city of Peoria, which saw the biggest percentage of population loss in 2017,
had 46 and 29 percent of homes in it’s two zip codes register as seriously
underwater.
High
property taxes, something notorious to Illinois, will suppress home values,
pushing a homeowner further under, Blomquist said.
Homeowners
underwater on their mortgages will also be hesitant to sell their homes since
they would have to afford the difference between the lien and the sale price.
This will leave homeowners chained to their
residence that they may want to vacate.
The
statewide median price in June was $225,000, up 4.5 percent from June 2017,
according to Illinois Realtors.
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