Consumer
/Home & Leisure

National Association of Realtors cutting nearly 12% of staff as a part of a 'strategy to reduce costs, streamline operations'
CHICAGO — The Chicago-based National Association of Realtors is laying off nearly 12% of its staff and eliminating 20 open positions, according to a news release posted on the organization’s website Friday.
The cuts affect 41 of NAR’s 344 employees and, with the elimination of open roles, hit various departments including public relations...Read more

National Association of Realtors cutting nearly 12% of staff as a part of a 'strategy to reduce costs, streamline operations'
The Chicago-based National Association of Realtors is laying off nearly 12% of its staff and eliminating 20 open positions, according to a news release posted on the organization’s website Friday.
The cuts affect 41 of NAR’s 344 employees and, with the elimination of open roles, hit various departments including public relations and ...Read more

Expansive offices for Apple are rising in Culver City
At a time when many office developers are on the sidelines because of the soft leasing market, Apple Inc. is well underway on construction of a splashy new office complex of its own on the border of Culver City and Los Angeles.
With excavation for an underground garage completed, construction crews have erected cranes and are building upward on...Read more
Real estate Q&A: Can we force developer to put in area to walk dogs?
Q: We, along with others in our new construction condo, were all told there would be a dog-walk area. There was none when we moved, and there are no plans for one. The dog-walk area was not specified in our purchase agreement, but we were all informed verbally of the same information. Our building states it is dog-friendly in the contract. Do we...Read more

Modular housing may finally have its day -- as solution to wildfire rebuilding
LOS ANGELES — The sense of loss Sue Labella feels after the Pacific Palisades home she’d lived in for almost 50 years burned down in January’s wildfire is only matched by her desire to return.
To come back as fast as possible, the 83-year-old widow has decided on a home radically different from the 1939 Tudor where she and her husband ...Read more

Silicon Valley office market improves as vacancies shrink, deals grow
SAN JOSE, Calif. — The Silicon Valley office market is getting off to a good start in 2025, according to a new report that detailed improvements on multiple fronts in the region.
The vacancy rate fell, rents increased, and overall deal activity expanded in the South Bay during the January-through-March first quarter of 2025, Colliers, a ...Read more

Despite rising homeownership rates, large racial gaps remain in NC, US, report says
After homeownership rates dipped across the board the year before, Black households saw the greatest year-over-year increase among all races in 2023, a new report from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) says.
Nationally, Black homeowner rates rose to 44.7% — up .6 percentage points from 2022, according to NAR’s 2025 Snapshot of Race...Read more

Wealthy white homeowners vote more on property tax hike proposals in Cook County, study finds
CHICAGO -- Some suburban voters are facing key decisions about hiking property taxes in the April 1 election, but if the past is precedent, “the few will decide for the many” again, according to a report from Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas’ office.
Referendums for $45 million in infrastructure spending in Western Springs, $94.9 ...Read more

San Diego falls in national home price rankings
SAN DIEGO — San Diego home price gains slowed to their lowest level to start 2025 in almost two years.
In January, the San Diego metropolitan area’s home price increased 3.39% annually, said the S&P Case-Shiller Indices report released this week. The highest gains in the 20-city index were in the New York metro area, at 7.75%, and Chicago, ...Read more

How to navigate pet rules when finding apartments
Finding my first place out of college, I didn’t need too much. So long as the walls weren’t stained with gunk from previous tenants and the kitchen was operable, I was satisfied.
For most people, that makes finding an apartment rather easy. But Freddie, my sweet — sometimes high-maintenance — pit bull mix, complicated matters.
Freddie ...Read more

WareSpace says it has a better way to rent cheap workshops, shipping centers in Philly
Tucked in a former textile-manufacturing section of the Philadelphia's East Falls section, an open warehouse space is home to a paintball-goggle maker, an online glass distributor, a seamstress, and other small-business founders.
It's the two-year-old, newly-expanded Philadelphia center of WareSpace, which is taking the U.S. warehouse boom into...Read more

Thousands in Florida struggle to find rental units they can afford
Eric McCullough spent months looking for an affordable place of his own but then moved into an apartment with his daughter, his only option to make ends meet.
McCullough, 59, lives on disability insurance and said he could not find apartments or houses for rent that he could afford on those payments alone.
“The magic question, to me, is what...Read more

Rats don't run this city: Why Philadelphia fields fewer rat complaints than New York City and D.C.
When Ilya Schwartzburg and his wife moved to Philadelphia from New York City, they were looking forward to lower housing costs, closer proximity to friends, and a shift from renting to homeownership.
But they expected that one of the more unpleasant aspects of urban life would remain constant.
“I thought I would have to deal with rats as a ...Read more

A CFP's 5-step plan to combat stubborn inflation
Inflation is like that houseguest who just won’t leave. Even though it has cooled since the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic, inflation is still hanging around 3% — higher than the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal.
But what really matters to your wallet is the impact inflation is having on your finances. Prices today are 23.3% higher than they were...Read more

This is the No. 1 reason to start taking Social Security at age 67
Deciding when to start taking Social Security benefits is one of the biggest questions retirees face. The truth is that the right answer will depend on your unique financial circumstances, but there are some general guidelines that can help you think through the decision.
If you’re looking for specific advice, it may be helpful to work with ...Read more

Suze Orman's top 5 retirement savings tips
Suze Orman is one of the most well-known financial advisers in the U.S. and has been offering Americans advice on saving for retirement for decades.
Orman got her start with Merrill Lynch in the 1980s before eventually founding her own firm. She has written several books on financial planning and hosted a show on CNBC for more than a decade. ...Read more

Despite volatility, these investment pros still think stock markets will grow this year
President Donald Trump’s rapid-fire efforts to reshape the federal government, from its size to immigration, regulation and foreign policy, has contributed to increased volatility and some deep drops in the stock markets' values.
With many Americans’ retirement savings tied directly to markets, the rollercoaster has upset many, with some ...Read more

Their corporate landlord kicked them out to fix their flooding home, suit says. Instead, it was sold
LOS ANGELES — Cody Recker and Jessica Perez loved their Boyle Heights rental — warts and all. Lots of warts.
The plumbing broke, spraying raw sewage puddles on the floor. The floor and foundation were falling apart, inviting hordes of mice and fleas. The basement flooded 14 times, and there were so many leaks in the attic that mushrooms ...Read more
Real estate Q&A: Is it a good idea to buy a starter home with my boyfriend?
Q: My boyfriend and I want to move in together but cannot find an affordable rental that allows pets. With interest rates and prices inching down, we are thinking about buying a starter home. We both have good jobs and strong credit. My mom reads your column and suggested I ask if this is a good idea. Thanks! —Rita
A: I cannot say if it is a ...Read more

Philadelphia usually only inspects rental homes if someone complains. The city may soon start doing proactive checks
Philadelphia is looking into proactively inspecting rental homes for safety and health instead of relying on tenants’ complaints to trigger inspections, according to a city official who testified at a City Council hearing Tuesday.
The Department of Licenses and Inspections has started working with the Pew Charitable Trusts to conduct research...Read more
Popular Stories
- This is the No. 1 reason to start taking Social Security at age 67
- National Association of Realtors cutting nearly 12% of staff as a part of a 'strategy to reduce costs, streamline operations'
- Expansive offices for Apple are rising in Culver City
- Real estate Q&A: Can we force developer to put in area to walk dogs?
- Buyers want remodeled homes, but they don't want to do the remodeling