Editorial Results (free)
1.
Dad means well, but he’s no expert on real estate -
Friday, July 29, 2022
As another recession looms, those in the mortgage lending community are absorbing the data and working with buyers and investors as they plot their financial courses.
Mary Littleton, a senior mortgage broker with Accurate Mortgage, notes “Bond pricing is worse this week as the 10-year Treasury yield opened at 3.028 last week and moved to 2.842 Monday morning.” She adds: “Treasury yield spread continues to show inversion, a typical sign of impending recession.”
2.
How debt-related stress affects body and mind -
Friday, May 27, 2022
Being in debt feels like you’re always a step behind. It doesn’t help that debt is spoken about as something that’s your fault – too much online shopping, or too many pricy pitchers of mimosas at brunch.
3.
In the Heights: Another neighborhood takes off -
Friday, January 14, 2022
Sylvan Heights is a neighborhood that played bridesmaid to Sylvan Park for years. Located off Charlotte Pike, as opposed to Sylvan Park’s boundary off Murphy Road, the area was filed with smaller residences, most constructed with asbestos shingle siding that clad the 1,200- to 1,500-square-foot homes.
4.
Top Davidson County residential sales for April 2021 -
Friday, May 14, 2021
Top residential real estate sales, April 2021, for Davidson County, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
Chandler Reports has been publishing Real Estate Market Data since 1968. That year, Chandler began collecting residential sales information for the Chandler Residential Report, considered the authoritative source for residential real estate sales information. Over the next three decades, the publications have been continually refined, enhanced and expanded, growing to include lot sales data, new residential construction and absorption information, and commercial sales. In 1987, Chandler Reports began one of the first on–line real estate market data services in the country, and is a nationally recognized leader in the industry. In 2004, Chandler Reports was purchased by The Daily News Publishing Co. In 2007, Chandler introduced RegionPlus, including property research for Nashville and Middle Tennessee. Visit online at chandlerreports.com.
5.
High-end homes carrying area market to new heights -
Friday, September 11, 2020
Davidson County real estate is weathering the storm as COVID-19 cases continue to cloud the community. This week, the Greater Nashville Realtors should release a healthy report for the entire Midstate area as pending sales had soared at the end of last month and, from all appearances, the area will break its record for transactions.
6.
McGlinchey Stafford expands consumer compliance team -
Friday, April 10, 2020
Lynette Hotchkiss has joined McGlinchey Stafford’s consumer financial services compliance team in Nashville as of counsel.
Hotchkiss brings two decades of experience as in-house counsel for a variety of banks and financial institutions, as well as experience working for the Federal Trade Commission.
7.
Davidson County clerk branches remain open -
Friday, March 27, 2020
Due to Covid-19 virus, the Davidson County Clerk’s Main Office and Green Hills branch will be closed to the general public, but some branch offices will be open.
Motor vehicle title and registration services will be available at the North, South, Madison and Hermitage branches. Business license and passport applications will be processed only at the Hermitage branch, while marriage and notary services will be available at the South branch only.
8.
Trial Lawyers name Welborn to state committee -
Friday, November 1, 2019
Butler Snow attorney Joseph F. Welborn III has been named to the American College of Trial Lawyers’ Tennessee State Committee.
Welborn has more than 28 years of trial experience in business and commercial litigation including shareholder, corporate merger and acquisition, banking, contractual, real estate, intellectual property and business tort disputes. He also is experienced in representing individuals and businesses in civil rights litigation, as well as catastrophic personal injury and wrongful death cases.
9.
Great rental for half the going rate? It’s likely a scam -
Friday, December 28, 2018
With the single-family home rental market tightening even more, scoundrels have once again invaded internet rental marketing venues, “renting” houses they don’t own to unsuspecting – sometimes desperate – victims.
10.
Events -
Friday, November 30, 2018
93rd annual Waffle Shop. Homemade waffles, hot chicken or eggs, spiced tea and coffee. Plus, live music, a silent auction, bake sale and free tours of the historic Egyptian-revival church. All proceeds benefit the homeless ministries of the Downtown Presbyterian Church. Thursday, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. $10. Information: https://dpchurch.com/93rd-annual-waffle-shop
11.
Former state ABC leader joining Adams and Reese -
Friday, October 5, 2018
Clayton Byrd, executive director of the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission, will leave the ABC to join Adams and Reese as special counsel, beginning Oct. 15. Byrd will head the firm’s Tennessee alcoholic beverage practice and serve as part of the firm’s Tennessee Government Relations team.
12.
Top Middle Tennessee commercial sales for June 2018 -
Friday, July 27, 2018
Top commercial real estate sales, June 2018, for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
13.
Events -
Friday, May 11, 2018
Salon 615. Friday, May 18, Salon @ 615 with Cal Turner, Jr. in conversation with Dave Ramsey, discusses his book, My Father’s Business: The Small-Town Values That Built Dollar General into a Billion-Dollar Company. Shamblin Auditorium, Lipscomb University, 4001 Granny White Pike. 7 p.m. Free.
14.
Top Middle Tennessee residential sales for February 2018 -
Friday, March 16, 2018
Top residential real estate sales,February 2018, for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
15.
Top Middle Tennessee residential sales for December 2017 -
Friday, January 19, 2018
Top residential real estate sales, December 2017, for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
16.
Financial personality Ramsey eyes new Tennessee headquarters -
Friday, July 28, 2017
FRANKLIN (AP) — Financial personality Dave Ramsey has broken ground on a new corporate headquarters in Tennessee.
17.
Financial personality Ramsey eyes new Tennessee headquarters -
Friday, July 21, 2017
FRANKLIN (AP) — Financial personality Dave Ramsey is breaking ground on a new corporate headquarters in Tennessee.
18.
Events -
Friday, March 17, 2017
Food Truck Thursdays. Enjoy a gathering of up to 20 local food trucks parked along Deaderick Street between 4th Avenue North and 5th Avenue North! This event will take place every other Thursday November through March on days 40 degrees or warmer.
19.
Events -
Friday, March 10, 2017
Real Estate Investors Network. Williamson County Lunch - Rehabbers, Builders, Commercial, Mini-storage, Wholesalers, Private Lenders, Transaction Funders, Hard-Money Lenders, Bankers, Title Attorneys, Realtors, and Vendors discuss deals, the state of the market, and how they can help each other prosper. Thursday, 11:30 a.m., First Watch, 1000 Meridian Blvd, Suite 118, Franklin. Information: www.reintn.org.
20.
Events -
Friday, March 3, 2017
LGBT + College Conference Pre-Event, Cocktails and Conversation. Noted panelists share open dialogue on the capacity of our community to successfully navigate the intersection of diversity with education, commerce, community, government and each other. Thursday, Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis, LLP, 511 Union Street, 275h floor, Nashville. Cocktails & Networking: 6 p.m., Program: 6:30 – 7:45 p.m. Space is limited. Information: [email protected]
21.
Vols open hardest stretch of season by breaking Gator streak. On to Georgia -
Friday, September 30, 2016
Tennessee football coach Butch Jones went from goat to hero in a matter of hours last Saturday.
The Vols trailed Florida 21-0 in the first half – and 21-3 at halftime – and appeared headed to their 12th consecutive loss to the Gators.
22.
Looks like 10-2, SEC title game, Orange Bowl for UT -
Friday, September 2, 2016
Tennessee’s football team and its fans have the best of both worlds this weekend.
They get to relish in a season-opening victory Thursday night and enjoy a feast of good college football all day Saturday.
23.
Tennessee leads the nation in bankruptcies -
Friday, May 6, 2016
Tennessee has a model program for financial literacy in its public schools. All high school students must pass a personal finance course to graduate, and even kindergartners are learning about money under a new initiative to extend the curriculum to primary school.
24.
Title IX lawsuit against Tennessee could loom for some time -
Friday, February 26, 2016
KNOXVILLE (AP) — There's been a flurry of activity at and around Tennessee since the university was sued over its handling of sexual assault complaints by athletes with news conferences, legal motions, amendments.
25.
Tennessee head coaches defend school -
Friday, February 19, 2016
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Tennessee's head coaches held a rare joint press conference Tuesday to say an unfair picture of the athletic department is being portrayed, two weeks after the school was sued over its handling of sexual assault complaints made against student-athletes.
26.
Top Middle Tennessee residential transactions for January 2016 -
Friday, February 12, 2016
Top residential real estate sales, January 2016, for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
27.
Ready to cut the cord on cable/satellite? -
Friday, January 29, 2016
If you’ve resolved to lower your bills this year, you might want to look at your TV screen. No, not for help from Dave Ramsey or Suze Orman, but at the cable connected to it.
Can you can envision life without hundreds of channels? If so, you might be able to save money by becoming a cord-cutter.
28.
Demand beats supply for Habitat houses -
Friday, December 11, 2015
Danny Herron, the president and CEO of the Nashville Area Habitat for Humanity, told a Realtor group last week that he and others in the affordable housing realm are faced with numerous challenges as Nashville-area property values continue to escalate.
29.
State’s landlords find hidden costs of privatization -
Friday, November 13, 2015
Murfreesboro businessman Tom Hyde felt the sting of Tennessee’s privatization practices two years ago when a representative of Jones Lang Lasalle notified him he would have to pay the company a commission as part of his next lease agreement.
30.
Vols coach struggling on and off the field -
Friday, October 9, 2015
Please, coach. Just say the right thing. Please. Tennessee football coach Butch Jones lost another press conference Monday, two days after his team blew a 14-0 lead and lost to Arkansas 24-20 at Neyland Stadium.
31.
Preseason analysis: Vols will defeat Oklahoma, finish 8-4 -
Friday, August 7, 2015
Tennessee’s football team has something to prove as it concludes the first week of preseason practices and moves forward to the 2015 season.
The Vols must prove they belong in the national picture in Butch Jones’ third year as coach.
32.
Top residential real estate transactions for April 2015 -
Friday, May 15, 2015
Top residential real estate transactions, April 2015, for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
33.
Guns-in-parks proposal headed to governor -
Friday, April 17, 2015
NASHVILLE (AP) - Legislation that would allow handgun-carry permit holders to be armed in all of the state's parks - including greenways, playgrounds and sports fields - was sent to the governor for his consideration Thursday.
34.
Compromise legislation keeps Tennessee academic standards -
Friday, March 20, 2015
NASHVILLE (AP) - Tennessee Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey said Thursday that an agreement has been reached on legislation that would keep the state's current academic standards intact - for now - despite efforts to repeal them.
35.
Coverage gap leaves Tennessee hospitals on life support -
Friday, September 12, 2014
Four rural hospitals have closed and dozens are at risk of shuttering: That’s the fallout, some say, from Gov. Bill Haslam’s decision not to join the Affordable Care Act in 2013 and tap into millions in promised federal funds for Tennessee’s financially-strapped health care institutions.
36.
Tennessee tea party supporters take heart from vote -
Friday, August 22, 2014
NASHVILLE (AP) - For U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, the elder statesman of Tennessee politics, a primary challenge by a little-known tea party opponent was supposed to be little more than a glorified victory lap around the state.
37.
Lueken moves from Goldman to CapWealth -
Friday, April 25, 2014
Franklin-based CapWealth Advisors has tapped former Goldman Sachs investment veteran John Lueken to lead its research efforts.
Lueken comes to CapWealth from the Manhattan offices of Goldman Sachs, where he served in a number of investment roles as a vice president in the company’s securities division. While there, Lueken developed and built custom solutions for client portfolios based on his monitoring of worldwide economic developments and their impact on the equity and fixed-income marketplace. Under his leadership, the business became the fastest growing and most profitable desk in the Goldman Sachs Securities division from 2006 through 2012.
38.
Middle Tennessee auto parts supplier Calsonic Kansei offers a blueprint for worker wellness, cost containment -
Friday, January 3, 2014
With health care dominating the national conversation in 2013, it would be easy to view cost reform as a top-down proposition mandated by the federal government and forced on a reluctant market.
But in Middle Tennessee, companies were working on bending the cost curve long before Obamacare grabbed headlines.
39.
‘Trickle-up economics’ boon for real estate buyers, sellers -
Friday, October 4, 2013
The late Ronald Reagan delivered some of the best one-liners, sometimes two-liners, of any modern-day president.
In a presidential debate, Hank Trewhitt of the Baltimore Sun asked then-Pres. Reagan the following: “You are already the oldest president in history, and some on your staff say that you were tired.”
40.
Habitat on pace to build 30 new homes in 2013 -
Friday, May 10, 2013
Habitat for Humanity of Greater Nashville is well known and greatly supported by the area, yet the scope of its work is often overlooked. The Nashville group has absorbed responsibilities for Dickson, Cheatham and Wilson counties to go along with Davidson County.
41.
Top Midstate commercial real estate transactions for March 2013 -
Friday, April 19, 2013
Top March 2013 commercial real estate transactions for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
42.
Ghosts of owners past haunt potential buyers -
Friday, April 19, 2013
In the movie “Terms of Endearment,” Shirley MacLaine played the mother of a character played by Debra Winger, who is diagnosed with cancer.
In a moving-yet-comedic moment, the MacLaine character loses it after being asked a number of times in a normal voice “Does she have …” followed by an almost inaudible whisper “… cancer?”
43.
Cupcake Collection takes challenge to streets -
Friday, January 25, 2013
She’s an incredibly sweet woman (pun intended), but The Cupcake Collection founder Mignon Francois is also a fighter.
After all, Francois – who says she had no natural baking abilities – founded her Germantown bakery to save her family from financial hardships.
44.
Top residential real estate transactions for September 2012 -
Friday, October 19, 2012
September 2012 residential real estate transactions for Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties, as compiled by Chandler Reports.
45. VUMC’s Stover receives Young Physician Award - Friday, October 21, 2011
Daniel Stover, M.D., chief resident on the Department of Medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, is the recipient of this year’s Holt Young Physician Leadership Award presented by the Southern Medical Association.
46. Haslam's Cabinet making fewer out-of-state trips - Friday, July 22, 2011
KNOXVILLE (AP) — Gov. Bill Haslam's Cabinet members have taken fewer out-of-state trips this year than their predecessors did in their last six months of Gov. Phil Bredesen's administration.
Haslam's Cabinet members have made 18 trips outside the state between Jan. 20 and July 1, according to the Knoxville News Sentinel, which compared reports posted on the Department of Finance and Administration's website. The reporting of reimbursements for the trips online was a practice begun under the Bredesen administration that has been continued by Haslam.
47. Bredesen, mom no longer get Haslam news summary - Friday, July 8, 2011
NASHVILLE (AP) — Among those no longer receiving Republican Gov. Bill Haslam's daily news roundup are 74 lawmakers, five dead people, former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen — and Bredesen's mother.
Haslam's staff cut distribution of the widely read "Daily News Clips" email from more than 1,200 to 183. A spokesman has said the change makes the email list more manageable and hasn't saved any money.