Robyn Thompson and Frank McKinney need your immediate help…
The poorest Country in the hemisphere, Haiti is in shambles. The Haiti Earthquake has devistated the island nation to the same degree as having an atom bomb dropped on it…these people have nothing and their entire infrastructure has been destroyed. The death toll may reach 500,000 without massive immediate help. The Haiti Earthquake victims need our help…not just a little, but a lot.
This is a call to action and I am asking you, as champions, to step up!
Tomorrow, Frank McKinney is flying two jets to Haiti with relief supplies…they have no food, medicine, nor water…its all gone and the island is paralyzed. Roads are blocked, communications are down and every second counts right now.
Frank learned this evening that the Bishop that was in charge of feeding the children at the Orphanage that Robyn built is dead.
Send money NOW…it will go to Caring House Project which is Frank’s Charitable Foundation which builds housing for the poor in Haiti…Right now, all funds have been diverted to the basics…food, water, medicine.
Robyn is raising money right now…She is going to hold a one day event in Orlando on March 27th to support the relief effort. 100% of the funds will go to Haiti relief. Robyn will host her new program “Becoming A Real Estate Champion”. You can come live, but seating is limited to the first 120 registrations. The program has been recorded and you can opt to receive the new “Becoming A Real Estate Champion” Home Study Course and Audios which will retail for $399.
Step up and make the maximum donation that you can, but for a minimum donation of $99 you can come to Robyn’s live event or receive her course when published in April. Its your choice, but you must take action and commit now. The dollars are needed immediately. Frank has dropped everything and expects to be in Haiti for months.
Place your order now by telephone and you will receive your receipt by email from Caring House Project.
Robyn Thompson 203-910-7972
Traci Barttles 407-860-5792
Ryan Gauthier 410-903-4359
Capt Pete 202-556-3325
Do it now…tonight…
I will send you videos and pictures from Frank when he arrives on the scene to keep you posted. Please bookmark this site and share it with all you know. Let’s make a difference!
Peter Gauthier
House approves extension by vote of 402-12; buyers now have until June 30, 2010 to close on a home.
Lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday voted 402-12 to approve an extension and expansion of the popular housing tax credit and, they hope, supporting the fragile housing market until the economy improves. The Senate passed the measure 98-0 Wednesday; the bill will now go to the White House, where President Obama is expected to sign it.
Builders, who say the tax credit has revived their buyer traffic and sales in a very difficult year, promptly celebrated.
“We commend lawmakers for acting in a bipartisan manner to extend the first-time home buyer tax credit beyond its Nov. 30 deadline and expand it to a wider group of home buyers,” said Joe Robson, who is chairman of the National Association of Home Builders and a builder in Tulsa, Okla. “The tax credit has proven to be a powerful economic incentive. Today’s action by Congress will further stabilize housing and the economy by creating new jobs, stimulating home sales, reducing foreclosures, cutting excess inventories and stabilizing home prices.”
Mortgage bankers agreed. “At a time when we are finally starting to see some signs of life in the housing and mortgage markets, extending and expanding the home buyer tax credit is a critical step to keeping the momentum,” said Robert E. Story, Jr., who chairs the Washington, D.C.-based Mortgage Bankers Association.
The tax credit approved today will take the housing market into the critical spring selling season. To receive the credit, buyers must sign a purchase agreement by April 30, 2010, and close on the home by June 30, 2010. As was the case with the credit that has been in use for most of this year, the extended credit will provide first-time home buyers up to $8,000, depending on the price of the home and their household income.
But there are several important differences, too. The newly approved tax credit also covers people who have lived in their homes for at least five years; they can claim a credit of up to $6,500 if they purchase a new home. Finally, Congress raised the income limits on the program, which will now allow singles who make up to $125,000 and married couples with a household income of $225,000 to be eligible for the credit.
The new version of the credit has a price tag for the government of $10.8 billion in lost taxes.
Alison Rice is senior editor, online, at BUILDER magazine.