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While at the annual retreat board members of the Macalaster Groveland Community Council shared what they loved about living in this community:
Some of the favorites things mentioned were:
- you can easily bike anywhere, including to downtown Minneapolis to go to work
- kids can walk to great community schools
- the Halloween Extravaganza on Sargent between Finn and Cretin
- long standing connections and neighbors know the history of neighborhoods
- can walk everywhere
- Widmers Super Market
- beautiful walks along the river and other areas
- quiet, yet in the middle of the city
- the people
- ice skating at Edgecumbe and Groveland rinks in the winter
- people know each other at the coffee shop
- adult soccer league at edgecumbe community center
- to be able to live close enough to walk to my favorite restaurants
- how adorable it is, it's like a movie setting
- living on Grand Ave
- people's commitment to environmental issues
- other people love it here enough to come to visit as a destination
- St Paul Cheese Shop has the best cheese
Please feel free to comment about your own favorite thing!
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Although we wouldn’t know it from watching the six o’clock news, mortgage underwriting guidelines and
mortgage insurance underwriting guidelines have been in a pattern of loosening, not tightening. This trend started in late 2009 and continues today with such examples as lower minimum credit scores for mortgage underwriting guidelines and fewer declining markets for mortgage insurance guidelines. As this has happened, another trend has emerged. The phrase “underwriting exception” is coming back in practical contexts rather than a nostalgic reference to days gone by. These days, underwriting exceptions are more and more common where a mortgage loan file has “Compensating Factors.”
At face value, the phrase compensating factor seems to have a common sense meaning (an element of a credit application that is so strong that it offsets something weaker in the application) but it’s more complicated than that. Different mortgage types manage the consideration of compensating factors in different ways. For instance, conventional loans backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac typically evaluate them using an Automated Underwriting System (a software system that determines a borrower's loan eligibility based on a predetermined set of financial criteria and is subsequently reviewed by a human). FHA and VA mortgages are also evaluated this way but are underwritten manually too. Through all these models, the principles of Compensating Factors remain the same.
FHA’s written guidelines outline specific examples of what compensating factors may be taken into consideration:
There are other examples not specifically mentioned here such as a monthly housing payment being low by comparison to the borrowers’ monthly income or a high debt to income ratio might be allowed if a house with a mortgage against it is pending sale but won’t close prior to the need for the new mortgage. Any compensating factor used to justify mortgage approval must be supported by documentation to be considered.
With lending guidelines taking a more open mind, it’s time to look to compensating factors when a situation arises where a credit score is slightly low, a debt to income ratio is high, a buyer needs to temporarily assume 2 housing payments and a number of other circumstances. Be sure not to buy into what you see on the evening news and trust that common sense in mortgage underwriting is more real than many might think. Be in the know and take advantage of it!
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