Aussie real estate advice?

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney real estate

I want to experience living in Australia for a while. I currently live in the USA and have never even been "down under". I have been looking online at real estate options there. I would love to rent a home close to Sydney like in wales but all I am finding are homes that are rented on a weekly basis. I am finding lots of homes that are like 300-400 dollars per week (i sure can’t afford that). Is this the actual going rate for rental property there or is all this stuff vacation getaways?? I would love to have a web adds that provides access to long term rental properties at a reasonable price. I need somewhere to go that will steer me in the right direction. THANKS FOR ANY AND ALL HELP!!!!!

" am finding lots of homes that are like 300-400 dollars per week "

Lucky you! That’s quite cheap but as the other answerer said, that’s a normal weekly rental, if anything it’s quite low. I’d say that would only get you a studio or one bedder. Sorry buddy, Sydney is expensive. As for cheap accom? Hrmm, dunno but I can say to avoid Sydney Craigslist, it’s FULL of scammers. You can email me via my profile, I used to work in real estate and if you find a place, let me know, I can tell you if it’s shonk or a rip off.

Do You Think Julia Gillard is John Howard in Drag?

Author: admin  //  Category: property in sydney

Do You Think Julia Gillard is John Howard in Drag?

Further to Julia Gillard is John Howard in Drag may I ask Who wants to see Gillard as pro-Israel and anti-Islam?

A regular reader of this site sent this on, exact source unknown, but certainly speaks for itself.

The ALP and Israel is like a disease that no medicine can cure

Australian unionist Paul Howes loves Israel. He supports its criminality, murder of opponents, defends it from everybody and would ideally like to make love to the Jewish state. He’s also one of the key figures behind the recent coup of Julia Gillard when overthrowing Kevin Rudd.

Welcome to the modern Australian Labor Party, where Israel is a state religion.
His column in yesterday’s Sunday Telegraph is a typical rant that conveniently forgets to mention that one of Australia’s leading Zionist lobbyists, Albert Dadon, is actually an Israeli lobbyist. He wields influence but of course we can’t mention this. Furthermore, Howes doesn’t want to see that there is a profound conflict of influence with the Prime Minister’s partner working for a Zionist lobbyist who is trying to affect government policy towards the Middle East. But of course for some, anything related to the Jewish state is beyond criticism. Fat chance:

It hasn’t taken long for the double standards to emerge, in the week since our first female Prime Minister took office.

While it’s significant that Julia Gillard is our first female PM, what’s really significant is how long it took us to get there.

I’m writing this column in the Sydney CBD, where we have a female Lord Mayor and State member, and female federal MP, a female Premier and a female Governor.

In Canberra, there’s a female Governor General and – at last – a female PM. With the exception of the dual-Lord Mayor/Member for Bligh, all these women are, or were appointed by, Labor.

The Liberal Party, on the other hand, is so bereft of female talent that they’ve recycled Julie Bishop as deputy leader three times for different leaders, despite the fact that she’s not considered competent enough to hold the shadow Treasury portfolio.

But the progressive side of politics has always championed women. In my own role as a union official, we have had female leaders of the Australian Council of Trade Unions since 1996, with the newest president, Ged Kearney, taking office in the past week.

She replaces Sharan Burrow, who has been elected as the head of the global trade union movement.

Yet we’ve already seen double standards being applied to our new PM with significant media coverage of Prime Minister Gillard’s hair, clothes, voice and domestic arrangements.

The Melbourne Age carried a front-page story last week about the employment status of the Prime Minister’s partner, Tim Mathieson.

He works as a salesman for a Melbourne property company, chaired by Albert Dadon, prominent in the local Jewish community.

The article implied that, somehow, because Mr Mathieson works for a company associated with a Jewish community member, this would somehow impact on the PM’s stance on foreign policy, particularly in relation to her views on Israel.

It was one of the crassest examples of shoddy journalism I’ve seen. The implication was, firstly, that because Mr Mathieson is a man and the PM a woman, whatever he thinks about the world or who he works for will impact on what Ms Gillard thinks.

The second implication was that, simply because Mr Mathieson works for a company owned by a prominent Jew, his personal views on policy matters will be skewed by his job.

One Canberra press gallery journalist summed it up best on Twitter when he said: "I can’t ever recall a male politician being the subject of claims his wife’s job would influence his views on the Middle East."

He was spot on, summing up in one sentence the appalling double standards applied to Prime Minister Gillard in the article. In fact, outrage over the article was so intense that even former Age editor Michael Gawenda labelled it "bizarre".

Mr Mathieson’s employer, apart from being Jewish, is a well-known jazz musician and was chairman of the Melbourne Jazz Festival.

Following the logic of The Age’s article, one could presume that our nation’s leader will redirect the Government’s arts funding solely towards the Australian jazz industry.

Ludicrous, isn’t it? Just as ludicrous as saying that the PM is going to toe some pro-Israel line simply because of who her partner works for. It’s the type of double standards and sexist reporting that belongs in the past.

Julia Gillard has shown she is her own person. It doesn’t matter what her hair looks like. I don’t think anyone is really interested in how she dresses. It doesn’t matter who her partner works for or what their living arrangements are.

What matters is that she’s the best pe
What matters is that she’s the best person for the job and light years ahead of Tony Abbott when it comes to understanding the needs of ordinary Australians. Yes, she’s different from her predecessors, but just like Kevin Rudd, John Howard, Paul Keating and Bob Hawke, she is her own person.
Any suggestion that her partner’s views, or her hairstyle, has any bearing on how she runs the country is laughable at best, sexist at worst.

Paul Howes is national secretary of the Australian Workers’ Union
For more: http://911andmanyunansweredquestions.blogspot.com/2010/07/julia-gillard-is-john-howard-in-drag.htm

Correctomondo!

Australian tourist visa help please?!?

Author: admin  //  Category: properties in sydney

Hi i’m an Australian citizen and my boyfriend from the philippines is planning to visit me and my family here in Sydney for three weeks. We’re following all the requirements so far but i was wondering in the letter of invitation i’ve written that he is my boyfriend. Will this hurt our chances for him to be granted a tourist visa? Will they suspect that he will overstay even though he has a job, property/ assets and enough funds in his bank in the philippines?

I suggest you make sure he has a letter from his employer stating that he has been given leave from his job, for how long that leave is, and that he will still have his job when he comes back. I think you should be okay to say he’s your boyfriend, because that at least gives him a reason for coming to visit you and it gives you a reason for wanting him to come, and if you have said you will pay his expenses during his stay it gives you a reason for that too. In the end if he gets this visa and complies with the conditions it should make any later visa applications just that little bit easier.

Good luck, I think the immigration staff do their best to follow the guidelines, but sometimes they still manage to refuse reasonable requests.

My real estate agent is extremely irresponsible. What should I do?

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney real estate

I’m renting an apartment in Rhodes Sydney. There had been some problems with the property ever since I moved in a few months ago. For example, the air conditioning is broken, most of the lights (all the lights in the bathroom) are not working at all due to a circuit problem, the bathroom door is broken (and the lock is gone). These are just some of the problems the apartment has. I was promised before moving in that they should be repaired shortly. I have already called my real estate agent many many times and got kicked around to different people, but nothing has been fixed so far. What should I do?

You can talk to the department of fair trading in NSW and they can discuss this with you. Consider discussing with the tenancy tribunal. Threatening to take them to the tribunal will work however it will almost certainly mean that later on they will try to put up the rent or kick you out. Unfortunatley as a tenant you are not well protected in these situations.

If the Catholic Church sold all their real estate assets in one go, would it destabilize property markets?

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney real estate

Just think how much real estate the Catholic Church owns in your city. I live in Sydney and there would probably be over a thousand Catholic Churches, vestries, nunneries, monasteries, schools etc here all up. They are in prime real estate locations too. The Catholic Church also owns a lot of private real estate as well here. The total market worth of all their real estate assets in this city alone would be, I think, at least a couple of billion. If a couple of billion dollars worth of real estate went on the market in one go, would it make market values drop suddenly? And if you multiplied a couple of billion by the number of Western cities in the world, you’d get a very big number, something in the trillions; if this much real estate went on the market in one go, would it disrupt global financial systems?

What on earth ARE you smoking?

You’re assuming property markets are stable? Where? Maybe Afghanistan, but you don’t see pilgrims movin’ there!

Let me assume you have a fantasy that somehow the Catholic Church has an organized network of property ownership? Why would it do that? It has never needed to, and it never will. Property is owned on a local basis. The Church as a whole, sorry, don’t work like that. The Catholic Church does not need sophisticated schemes to hang on to money. Money is completely fluid. Whatever comes in goes right back out to feed, shelter and clothe the poor and to minister the needs of the faithful.

My suggestion? Pass on the next hit of whatever they’re passing around there. You’ve had enough.

Is it possible to buy a property in Sydney, Australia with 100K?

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney properties

With AUS$100k budget, do you think I can get a property in the Sydney area, or within 60 mins (public transport) into city? Any property with at least 1 bedroom, in a decent area ( not too much violence), and transport link.

You can check it out here:

http://geo.craigslist.org/iso/au

best websites for rental properties in sydney?

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney property

hi im moving to oz soon and was wondering if anyone had any good websites they could recoomend for trying to find an apartment in sydney

Firstly good luck. At the moment the rental market is firecly competitive and good cheap places get snapped up very quickly. As a general rule the closer to the city the more it’ll cost per week.

The 2 best websites to use these days are:

http://www.realestate.com.au

http://www.domain.com.au

120/8 Koorala Street, Manly Vale, Sydney Properties, Property Video, NSW properties, Eddy Piddington

Author: admin  //  Category: properties in sydney

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Luxury Home for sale in Sydney

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney properties

Luxury sydney property 5 mins to beaches

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2a Brighton Street, Balgowlah, Sydney Properties, Property Video, NSW properties, Georgi Coward

Author: admin  //  Category: sydney property

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