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Inflow / Outflow Fupdate

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  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,735 Founders Club

    Houston school districts blow...you’ll put them in private if you live there (lots of good ones). Burb school district are really good...Friendswood, Katy, and Pearland all have very good schools...think Kingwood and Woodlands do too but not familiar with them.

    Houses are cheap...in the burbs for $500k-$600k you can get a 4,500 ft2 house on a lake with a really nice pool...for $400k you can get a 3,000 ft2 house with a pool easy. Move inside 610 and that goes way, way up.

    Taxes are actually progressive here...main tax is real estate on your house so you have to keep that in mind as well. And if the house didn’t flood in the last two events unlikely it ever will. Main problem is just the mass amount of building without building out the drainage system with it...that’s happening now.

    Is the property tax fairly big in Texas? I've always been told that's the other side of the value proposition.
    3+% of appraised value in many parts (where you’d want to live) with some homestead deductions and such. It’s part of what keeps house prices down overall so it has its pluses and minuses...as conservative as I am I think it’s a great way to tax people. To many ways to hide income...much harder to hide how you live.
    I can see the merits in higher property taxes and lowering them else where. In OR it's like 1% of assessed value, but the assessed value can only be raised like 1 or 2% per year from the original home price . So our current assessed value is like half the current fair market value. What I don't have going for me is the 9% income tax. Fuck.
  • creepycoug
    creepycoug Member Posts: 24,293

    Since I work for an oil company whose U.S. base is Houston, I have a lot of coworkers who have swapped between that area and this in both directions. Everyone I know who's sold their place in Anacortes/Bellingham/etc. and moved to Houston ends up showing me pictures of their gross gigantic brick mansion with pool in Houston with cash left over to buy a boat. They pay the same there, too.

    What's funny is that the people who grew up in the south and move here ALWAYS want to find their way back to the south. A coworker from Louisiana ended up transferring back. Another one from Louisiana is looking to do the same. Ditto two from Texas. On the other hand, I can think of only one who went from this area to Texas and didn't either find their way back at the first chance or wants to ASAP.

    Seems there's a certain lifestyle (climate, outdoor activities, scenery, attitude) that people get used to, and it's hard to change.

    Winter in the deep South, summer in the Pacific Northwest.

    It's what people of a certain, shall we say, affluence are able to do.

    That right there is the goal. Pray Creepy gets the property in the Keys from Pops and I'll have a Finance Board rally down there in January just to drive the point home to everyone.

    Note that we? will be watching post counts and taking a daily average of Tug vs. Finance posts. You'll want to be on the right side of our algorithm to get an invite.
    For dumbasses with no financial acumen like me, can you just count my kissass chins of your posts instead?
    I'll allow it.

    Chinning my posts is, I must admit, a huge gesture of charity.
  • PurpleThrobber
    PurpleThrobber Member Posts: 48,624 Standard Supporter

    Houston school districts blow...you’ll put them in private if you live there (lots of good ones). Burb school district are really good...Friendswood, Katy, and Pearland all have very good schools...think Kingwood and Woodlands do too but not familiar with them.

    Houses are cheap...in the burbs for $500k-$600k you can get a 4,500 ft2 house on a lake with a really nice pool...for $400k you can get a 3,000 ft2 house with a pool easy. Move inside 610 and that goes way, way up.

    Taxes are actually progressive here...main tax is real estate on your house so you have to keep that in mind as well. And if the house didn’t flood in the last two events unlikely it ever will. Main problem is just the mass amount of building without building out the drainage system with it...that’s happening now.

    Is the property tax fairly big in Texas? I've always been told that's the other side of the value proposition.
    3+% of appraised value in many parts (where you’d want to live) with some homestead deductions and such. It’s part of what keeps house prices down overall so it has its pluses and minuses...as conservative as I am I think it’s a great way to tax people. To many ways to hide income...much harder to hide how you live.
    I can see the merits in higher property taxes and lowering them else where. In OR it's like 1% of assessed value, but the assessed value can only be raised like 1 or 2% per year from the original home price . So our current assessed value is like half the current fair market value. What I don't have going for me is the 9% income tax. Fuck.
    Subjective property taxes are bullshit. Oppressive on old people. "Assessed" value. Blow job....blow job...blow job (Animal House reference).

    Take that to the Tug (TTTTT), I know.

  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 115,662 Founders Club
    @dflea is right about the midwest you know.

    Weather power rankings show the Northwest behind California and ahead of everyone else

    Rain never bothered me until it bothered my wife
  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 115,662 Founders Club

    @dflea is right about the midwest you know.

    Weather power rankings show the Northwest behind California and ahead of everyone else

    Rain never bothered me until it bothered my wife

    The humidity is what gets me. Anywhere. I don't mind humidity if I'm in flip flops and swimming trunks. But goddamned, I hate the sweat running down my back while wearing a button down/sport coat (fuck ties) when I have to suit up for bidness. Air conditioning is fine once you're settled inside but the Throbber just doesn't like to glisten.

    Even in SoCal, it's so much more humid than the Inland Northwest. If it weren't for this goddamned snow, it would be perfect here. No bugs, no poisonous reptiles, no humidity, lots of Trump flags....oops, TTTTT, I know.


    The real Inland Empire is very dry. Humidity under 20% most of the time