by Tammy Murphy | Dec 9, 2013 | Neighbor Chat, Real Estate News
Home Buying in Winter
NEW YORK (MainStreet) — So what if winter’s looming. Go ahead, buy a home!
Granted, buying a home in the dead months from December though March does not appeal to many people. But this year it might make sense, due to low mortgage rates and a lull in home price gains. A home on the market now might cost more in the spring as prices and loan rates drift up. (more…)
by Tammy Murphy | Dec 2, 2013 | Neighbor Chat
Top 10 Projects that should be on Your List!
by Tammy Murphy | Oct 29, 2013 | Current Events, Investor Relations, Neighbor Chat, Networking, Real Estate News, Real Homes to Love
Born and raised here – there are MANY things about the Dayton Communities that I know about first-hand and LOVE! That is the reason why I wanted to take the continuing education courses offered by the DABR and for the right to earn the designation of “Dayton Region Ambassador.” I want to be the person you call with questions about what our area has to offer…so I’ve compiled some of the highlights from the class to share with you here: (more…)
by Tammy Murphy | Oct 13, 2013 | SOLD/Pending/Expired

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by Tammy Murphy | Oct 7, 2013 | Current Events, Neighbor Chat, Real Estate News
This is a belief that I have and something that allows me to work with people from across the walks of life to find a house that they can call “home.” This is an excellent article from the New York Times regarding our very own “WELCOME DAYTON” program working with the Turkish Community and opening doors for all other cultures…
DAYTON, Ohio — Fighting back from the ravages of industrial decline, this city adopted a novel plan two years ago to revive its economy and its spirits: become a magnet for immigrants.
The Dayton City Commission voted to make the city
“immigrant friendly,”with programs to attract newcomers and encourage those already here, as a way to help stem job losses and a drop in population.
In north Dayton — until recently a post-apocalyptic landscape of vacant, gutted houses — 400 Turkish families have moved in, many coming from other American cities. Now white picket fences, new roofs and freshly painted porches are signs of a brisk urban renewal led by the immigrants, one clapboard house at a time.
“We want to invest in the places where we are accepted better,” said Islom Shakhbandarov, a Turkish immigrant leader. “And we are accepted better in Dayton.”
CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL ARTICLE