MLO12308 (Federal and Massachusetts State Licensed Loan Officer)
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I am "YOUR" Personal Mortgage Coach. I educate, inform, mentor, guide, explore and help you make sound decisions when financing your home. I will "save you and those you know from the many pitfalls and mistakes of today's home financing complexities". Getting a mortgage is complicated but I can help make the process easy. Experience, expertise and knowledge are a winning combination every time and nothing less is what every one of my clients receives. Mortgage Master celebrates 25 Years of Providing the Lowest rate and Best services in the Industry. As a Mortgage Banker we lead the industry in best practices and serve our clients as long term relationships providing them with services and knowledge far beyond the Closing of their loan. Specialties:Conventional Banking for both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans. Along with indepth knowledge of FHA & VA loans and Mass Housing loan expert. Low money down, Investor, First Time Buyer or 2nd Home purchase.
Coyotes moved into Connecticut around the middle of the last century and have outcompeted foxes for territory, according to Paul Rego, a state wildlife biologist. There are still some foxes in the area, he said, but state officials receive a large number of complaints about coyotes attacking pets an
Date: Oct 16, 2014
Source: Google
Cougar killed in Connecticut once roamed Northland:
Its a topic of high public interest, said wildlife biologist Paul Rego of the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. This was the first time we have confirmed the presence of a cougar.
The distance between the first documentation of the cougar in Minnesota and the spot where the animal was killed is nearly 1,000 miles, nearly double the longest previously recorded journey of 640 miles, according to DEEP wildlife biologist Paul Rego. If the cougar was from South Dakota, as suspecte
Date: Jul 27, 2011
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
Connecticut Mountain Lion Traveled from South Dakota
2009, snow tracks, photos from trail cameras, tissues collected for genetic testing and the young males unmanicured condition, led analystsincluding in a lab in Rocky Hill, CTto the conclusion mountain lion had not been held in captivity, according to Paul Rego, a supervising wildlife biologist
Gianni Testolin, Michele Varian, Debra Dickstein, Ingrid Magnuson, Giselle Roldan, Donald Fish, Anthony Belanger, Keshia W, Sam Triumph, Marie Joudy, Grisell Baez, Kaoutar Belgada