rent to own homes

our home, while keeping thieves out.
If you’re looking for a digital lock with a little more heft, the Sunnect AP501 weighs in at 6 pounds and boasts a bullet-proof zinc-alloy exterior. However, at $350, it might just end up signaling to criminals that this is a house worth robbing.
Simple Security
For those who rent rather than own, installing a security system can be an expensive way to stay safe in a temporary home. SimpliSafe attempts to solve this problem with a portable, modular security system. Relying on a main base station, sensors and a control pad, the system is easy to set up and can easily be taken with you when you move. And because it is modular, you can buy a few extra sensors to expand the system if you upgrade to bigger digs in the future.
Take Control
To make your home truly safe, you need to do more than just keep potential intruders at bay. Using your iPhone or iPad, Control4 puts access to all aspects of your home in the palm of your hand. Did you shut the garage door? Shut off the oven? Turn off the lights? Whatever the nagging worry, there’s an app for that.
Remote Monitoring
If you’re looking for a simpler, cheaper way to put your iPhone on guard duty, the Mobiscope Home & Video Surveillance app ($9.99) works with a wide range of webcams and IP cameras, giving you access to four streaming feeds at a time. And there’s no reason why you just have to use it for security purposes: Install a ca may want them detained for possible deportation.
Instead, starting Wednesday, deputies will treat those eligible for release just like U.S. citizens: They will be cited to appear in court.
City officials, however, aren't so sure about Sheriff Mike Hennessey's plan.
The new policy is his attempt to comply with a city law that prevents police from aiding federal authorities in non-fee to respond accordingly." The city has not said how many people were left homeless by the twister, but Rohr said 4,500 to 5,000 residents have registered with FEMA.
Temporary housing will be made available for up to 18 months. Some people along the Gulf Coast still live in FEMA trailers nearly six years after Hurricane Katrina.
Another FEMA spokesman, Bob Josephson, said the agency will consider bringing trailers to Joplin if enough existing housing isn't available. He said every effort will be made to find existing rental units closest to Joplin and that many residents may simply choose to find their own housing options.
People who lived in the 8,000 structures smashed in the storm have scattered to the homes of friends and relatives or camped out in emergency shelters in the city.
Some residents may leave town — New Orleans lost nearly one-third of its population after Katrina.
Penny Musgraves is happy — and almost surprised — to be alive. But for Musgraves, whose low-income housing townhouse was ripped away above her head as she protected her cowering 6-year-old daughter, the joy of surviving is beginning to give way to confusion and anxiety about the future.
"I'm kind of scared," said the 45-year-old mother, who is unemployed and currently living with her daughter at the Red Cross shelter set up at Missouri Southern State University. "There isn't much low-income housing. I can't rent a place. I don't know what I'm going to do."
While many of the survivors had insurance, it could be months, if not years, before they can rebuild. Removing the millions of tons of debris and remaking the city's destroyed infrastructure will likely take well into the summer if not longer, though Rohr said the first phase of debris removal begins later this week.
Rebuilding homes can't start until that work is finished. For low-income residents, the Housing Authority of Joplin provides some housing. But it was not known how many, if any, of the homeless it can accommodate.
Recent history suggests many people won't be able to wait for the answers to emerge or for the rebuilding to be completed. The current population could drop substantially.
New Orleans lost 29 percent of its population after Hurricane Katrina as residents left and settled elsewhere. Greensburg, Kan., which was leveled by a tornado in 2007, lost about half its population even though the town was rebuilt. It dropped from 1,574 before the tornado to 777 in 2010.
At the Red Cross shelter in Joplin, 150 people seemed grateful for the cot, warm food an
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