Strand Beach
Dana Point, California
Dana Point offers some of the most spectacular beaches in all of Orange County. Strand at Headlands offers spectacular ocean front lots at Strand Beach, Dana Point.
These lots offers the last true empty canvas space for any spec builder or home builder to create a masterpiece on a south Orange County beach front community.
Due to its location, these lots are some of the greatest real estate investments for spec builders.
Video Tours of the remaining lots & views can be provided upon request.
Click the photo to request a video tour or more information.
Enjoy this Ocean and Coastline view from your master bedroom and master bedroom balcony!
Adress: 24381 Vista Point, Dana Point CA 92629
Bedrooms: 2
Bathrooms: 2.5
Square footage: 1,796 approx
Features: Gated community location with ocean and coastline views from master bedroom and balcony. 2 bed/2.5 bath. 2 bedrooms up, each with their own bathroom. 2 car attached garage and small yard ideal for BBQ or gardening. Master bedroom has a covered balcony. Comes furnished or can be unfurnished.
Located a short drive distance from Dana Point Harbor, restaurants and Dana Hills High School.
For more information contact Scott Maeda at 949-295-1199 or scottymaeda@gmail.com
FOR LEASE
Adress: 15 Aleria, Laguna Niguel CA 92677
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 3
Square Footage: 2,158 approx
Features: Largest Terracina floorplan in beautiful Marina Hills with four bedrooms, three baths (one bedroom and bath downstairs). Formal living and Dining room, family room with fireplace, kitchen with breakfast nook. Close to Marina Hills Clubhouse with competition sized pool, spa and 6 night lighted tennis courts. Close to bike/walking trails to ocean. George White Blue Ribbon Elemntary School.
For Lease at $2,995 / mo
Contact Scott Maeda at 949-295-1199 or scottymaeda@gmail.com for more information.
This information was provided by Orange County Association of Realtors and source information in PDF format can be found by clicking here.
California Statewide Ballot Measures - November 2010
Ballot Item: Prop 19: Legalize, Regulate and Tax Cannabis
The proposed measure would:
-Allow adults over the age of 21 to possess and/or cultivate limited amounts of cannabis for personal consumption (not sale) and allow local governments to regulate these activities.
-Permit local governments (but not the state government) to impose and collect marijuana-related fees and taxes.
Fiscal Impact: Estimated it could generate $1.4 billion per year in state revenues
Ballot Item: Prop 20: Redistricting of Congressional Districts
The proposed measure would remove elected officials from the process of re-drawing California congressional districts. A 14-member commission (already established by Proposition 11 and comprised of five Democrats, five Republicans, and four voters registered with neither party) would be responsible for re-drawing congressional district boundaries. Would require that any newly-proposed district lines be approved by nine commissioners, including three Democrats, three Republicans, and three from neither party.
Fiscal Impact: No significant impact.
Ballot Item: Prop 21: Vehicle License Surcharge to Fund State Parks
The proposed measure would establish an $18 annual vehicle license surcharge to help fund state parks and wildlife programs. Surcharge would be applicable to all vehicles, including commercial vehicles under 10,000lbs. Would grant free admission to state parks for all vehicles.
Fiscal Impact: Increased state revenues of about $500 million annually, to be used solely to fund state parks and wildlife conservation programs. Potential state savings of up to $200 million annually, to the extent that the surcharge revenues would be used to reduce support for parks and conservation programs from the General Fund. Potential loss of $50 million in state parks fees.
Ballot Item: Prop 22: Ban on State Borrowing from Local Governments
The proposed measure would prohibit the State from:
-Shifting, taking, borrowing, or restricting the use of local tax revenues (those revenues dedicated by law to fund local government services, community redevelopment projects, or transportation projects and services).
-Delaying the distribution of tax revenues for these purposes even when the Governor deems it necessary, due to a severe state fiscal hardship.
Fiscal Impact: Would impose significant constraints on state authority over city, county, special district, and redevelopment agency funds. Would result in higher and more stable local resources, while reducing state resources, potentially affecting billions of dollars in some years.
Ballot Item: Prop 23: Initiative to Suspend AB 32, the Global Warming Act of 2006
The proposed measure would suspend existing State laws, which require reduced greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming, until California's unemployment rate drops to 5.5% or less for four consecutive quarters. Would require the State to abandon implementation of its comprehensive greenhouse-gas-reduction program, which includes increased renewable energy and cleaner fuel requirements, mandatory emission reporting, and fee requirements for major polluters such as power plants and oil refineries, until suspension is lifted.
Fiscal Impact: Potential positive, short-term impacts on state and local government revenues from the suspension of regulatory activity, with uncertain longer-run impacts.
Ballot Item: Prop 24: Repeal Changes in Corporate Tax Formulas
The proposed measure would repeal recent legislation that, as of the 2011 tax year would allow a business to:
-Shift operating losses to prior tax years (up to two years) or shift operating losses to future tax years (up to 20 years as opposed to only 10).
-Share tax credits with affiliated corporations.
-Calculate its tax liability based on a choice of either a sales-based income calculation, or a combination property-, payroll- and sales-based income calculation (for multi-state businesses).
Fiscal Impact: $1.7 billion when fully phased in (2012)
Ballot Item: Prop 25: Majority Vote for the Legilature to Pass the Budget Act
The proposed measure would:
-Change the legislative vote requirement necessary to pass the state budget from two-thirds to a simple majority.
-Provide that if the Legislature fails to pass a budget bill by June 15 of each year, all members of the Legislature will permanently forfeit any reimbursement for salary and expenses for every day until the day the Legislature passes a budget bill.
Fiscal Impact: Unknown.
Ballot Item: Prop 26: Two-Thirds Vote to Pass New Taxes and Fees Act
Currently, new fees and taxes are subject to different requirements in order to be passed into law. Taxes require a two-thirds majority, whereas fees require a simple majority. The proposed measure expands the definition of a "tax" or "tax increase" so that a greater number of proposals would require a two-thirds majority vote in order to pass into law. Examples of regulatory fees that could be considered taxes under the measure are: fees for oil recycling, hazardous materials, or alcohol retailers.
The measure would require:
-Any law that results in any taxpayer paying a higher tax must be approved by two-thirds majority in both houses of the legislature.
-Repeal of existing laws that conflict with the provisions of the measure, including fuel tax law changes.
Fiscal Impact: Potentially major decrease in state and local revenues and spending.
Ballot Item: Prop 27: Elimination of the Citizen Redistricting Commission
The proposed measure would:
-Eliminate the 14-member redistricting commission, selected from applicant pool picked by government auditors.
-Make elected state representatives responsible for drawing state Assembly, Senate, and Board of Equalization districts.
-Reduce the budget for and limit the amount the Legislature may spend for the redistricting process.
-Provide that voters will have the authority to reject district boundary maps approved by the Legislature.
-Require the populations of all districts, for the same office, to be exactly the same.
Fiscal Impact: Likely decrease in state redistricting costs, totaling several million dollars every ten years.
At deVre International Real Estate Group Inc. our goal commitment is to help our clients by finding them the properties that fit their preference and lifestyle, while providing exceptional negotiating skills and diversified personal service.
The Dana Point harbor offers specialty shopping, fishing and whale watching excursions, kayaking, Catalina transportation, and a variety of restaurants from coffee shops to fine waterfront dining. Across the bridge to Dana Island, more walking paths lead to yacht clubs, a restaurant and a continuation of the quiet waterside parkways.
Beaches
Dana Point possesses some of the finest beaches in the world. Dana Point has a commendable surf history and is popular for its tide pools, breaks or just a beautiful stroll along the gorgeous coastline. Enjoy yourself at Strand Beach, Salt Creek Beach, Doheny Beach or Capistrano Beach.
Address: 27 Ritz Cove
City: Dana Point
Zip: 92629
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 3 Full, 2 Half
Square Feet: 7,200 approx
Features:
Private access to Salt Creek Beach. Close location to Ritz Carlton and St. Regis Resorts, Monarch Links Golf Course and Dana Point Harbor.
Offered at: $5,650,000
For a showing or more information please contact Scott Maeda at 949-295-1199 or email scottymaeda@gmail.com
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