Back in 2011, New York City’s Department of Finance released its annual property assessments for residential buildings in all five boroughs, and co-op and condo residents in Northeastern Queens were not happy with the results. The valuations were comically high, double- and triple-digit increases, setting up huge city property tax increases. Read the article…….
After their media investigation @LintonBesser and @NinahKopel from @ABCNews published an article High-profile strata company…
Flooding at a condominium car park along Balmoral Crescent was not caused by rainfall but…
New legislation signed into law this week sets clearer, stricter deadlines for filing loss assessment…
According to Redfin, the median time a Florida home spent on the market was 57…
Residents of affordable developments such as Park City Heights and Central Park Condos told the…
Community members packed the Wantagh American Legion hall for the meeting, which was hosted by…