A level head in real estate since 1989.

Inside Real Estate
Let Me Help You!
503-312-8038
Follow My Blog
lesliejones
Leslie Jones
Principal Broker
    Years of Experience: 22

    GRI: Graduate, Realtors Institiute
    CDPE: Certified Distressed Property Expert
    Green: NAR Green Designation
    CIAS: Certified Investor Agent Specialist

Direct: 503-312-8038

Office: 503-287-8989



Company Info

RE/MAX equity group
237 NE Broadway
Portland, OR
503-287-8989


Real Estate Tools

Schoolsschools

Communitiescommunities

Calculatorscalculators

Archive for November 2010

Select Portland Holiday Festivities

Monday, November 29th, 2010
 

Amid all the hustle, bustle and commercialism, Portland has a variety of small scale holiday events.  Below are two that have caught my eye. 

1) The Cathedral Park Place Open House.  My friend, Jason Seale, does exquisite wood and metal work (I’ve seen him use a few other mediums also).  You may have seen his sign work on the Dava Bead Store on NE Broadway, or at the DragonTree Spa at the Portland Airport.  Jason, along with about 99 other artisans will open their studios and offer their wares this coming Saturday, December 4th from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm. 

Cathedral Park Place

 2)  This is the time of year many folks seek out a Christmas tree.  Even in the Pacific Northwest, trees can be spendy.  Many enjoy a trip to find and cut the tree themselves, while others opt for the quick and easy lot.    This year, I’ll be getting my tree from the Dowling Road Nursery.  The folks there are friends of mine through our animal rescue connections.  Rather than selling their trees wholesale ( as they sell the bulk of their nursery stock, they open up for two days in December (Saturday 12/4 and 12/11) to sell $10 trees.  ALL proceeds benefit  Fences for Fido, Family Dogs New Life and Best Friends Animal Society.  I’ll be helping out both Saturdays.  We’ll have goodies to share, will help you cut your tree and even help tie it on your car.  Its not quite “over the river and through the woods”,  but out past Sandy on Highway 26.  Hope to see you there! 

 

I thought Portland would be smarter!

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

The Daily Beast, an avant garde news and information web site, has made their second annual attempt at ranking the United States smartest cities.  These folks kept it fairly simple using existing data and only inserting their opinion or subjectivity in the weight given to the chosen factors.  For instance, in identifying what cities to use, they used Nielsen rankings to define cities, and census data for population and other stats.  This is an attempt to quantify the overall, general intelligence of cities, not just looking at the smartest individuals.

Education made up one half the rank, with intellectual environment rounding out the whole.  Education was calculated looking at the ratio of the population that has college or graduate degrees – no credit was given for “some college or some graduate work.  Intellectual environment was defined by the ratio of non-fiction book sales to fiction book sales.  Think Freakonomics as opposed to the latest Danielle Steel romance.  Also a part of intellectual environment was the number of institutions of higher education per capita and the number of libraries per capita. 

It would be easy to offer up some other factors that might be notable.  As a Portlander I might advocate for the number of independent bookstores (Powells!).  Or one might choose to look at education differently; the total number of years in higher education divided by the number of people.  But in general, I think the folks at The Daily Beast chose some pretty good factors to study.

So where is Portland?  # 11!  Eleven!??! Really?  Okay so not surprisingly Boston is #1.  Heck Boston practically invented institutions of higher education.  And #2 is Hartford/New Haven Connecticut – see my comments for #1.  Our neighbors to the north in Seattle are ranked at #6. I  Guess all that Microsoft money helped.  And our sometimes thought of as sister city, Austin, TX, is #7. And then there is Portland at #11, bracketed by Rochester,NY in the #10 spot and Kansas City,MO in the #12 spot.  Hmm.   22% of Portland’s population has bachelors degrees and 12% have graduate degrees.  Year to date we have bought 2,936,000 non-fiction books.  That sounds like a lot of books.  I wonder if they’re tracking e-books.  I bet that would put us higher.  And so, you might ask, what would be considered the dumbest city?  Why, Las Vegas, of course. 

Read the article at The Daily Beast and watch their accompanying slide show here.

Even in rainy Portland, we conserve our water.

Monday, November 1st, 2010

What is so important about saving water? This is rainy Portland for goodness sake!  Yes, but fresh water is hard to come by, and much of the Pacific Northwest is not as rainy as Portland. 

So a quick education on water in the Northwest.  We get our water from two main sources, rain and snow pack.  Rain is a fairly immediate source, with some being stored in reservoirs.  Our reservoir system does not have enough capacity to store these fall rains into late summer.  Our second water source is melt from the winter’s snow pack. So in general, we use rainfall rain as it comes and hope for a healthy snow pack (nature’s water storage system) for our summer water.  Climate change seems to be bringing us wetter winters (less snow) and drier summers (less rain for immediate usage).    In addition, population growth in the Pacific Northwest has put increased demands on our water; farm irrigation, industrial uses, municipal uses and now increased fish protection.  Often these uses have conflicting goals and demands. 

While we are doing okay with our water, the future may be a bit different.  You may have seen the article in the Oregonian last week talking about a Federal project to take water from the Columbia River both for irrigation purposes and to help restore the Columbia River Basalt aquifer.  This article by the USGS tells about the variety of effects of declining aquifers,  including 

  • drying up of wells
  • reduction of water in streams and lakes
  • deterioration of water quality
  • increased pumping costs
  • land subsidence

There is hope!  There are LOTS of things you can do at home, in your every day life to reduce your usage and reliance on municipal water.  As with many changes, small translates to big.  Small savings on a daily basis add up.  If we can reduce our usage by 10 gallons per day for every person in our household, that becomes a HUGE savings over the year.  And if our neighbors change too, wow!

So here it is.  And many of you may already have done some or all of these.  Yay.  If not, here you go.  The City of Portland (if you are a water customer) has all sorts of tips, tools and devices.  Their top 10 water saving tips for indoor usage are:  

  1. Replace older toilets with WaterSense labeled high efficiency toilets.
  2. Regularly check for and repair leaks
  3. Wash only full loads (my daughter and husband need to read this!)
  4. Let your dishwasher do the work
  5. Check your toilet for leaks(that running sound is your water and $’s going down the drain
  6. Install a high efficiency shower head (available free of charge to Portland Water Bureau customers ) 
  7. Install aerators on your bathroom and kirchen sinks (also available from the Portland Water Burea)
  8. Turn the faucet on only to rinse when brushing teeth, washing hands and shaving
  9. Know where your water water shut off valve is and
  10.  Select an Energy Star-approved clothes washer.

I recently ordered a five minute shower timer from the water bureau and will install in tomorrow.

Shower Timer

 I think I take quick showers, so I’ll be curious to see how quick they really are.  My daughter made it known, loud and clear, that her showers will NOT be timed.  And my husband, while a saver of much, takes pretty long showers. The shower timer even came with a small disclaimer: This device does not “shut off” the water after 5 minutes, although many parents of teen agers have asked for the feature.   It doesn’t look as though it would turn off the water.

The Portland Water Bureau also has tips for cutting down on our door usage, along with lots of other great information on water conservation.  If you aren’t in the City of Portland, your local government may have similar resources.  In addition, the State of Oregon has pretty good resources too.

Market Recap

  • Avg. Sales Price: $276,800

  • Avg. Days on Market: 165

Free Market Alerts

Get local reports delivered to you

 
Ask Me a Question

Do you have questions you need Answered?

Recently Asked Questions
    Featured Listings
    » View More Listings

    - Copyright © 2010 Inside Real Estate, LLC

    Inside Real Estate does not endorse the agents on this site, and does not guarantee the content submitted by the site's members. Blog and page entries, content, and other information contributed by agents that are members of the site are accountable to the particular agent.