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After residing in her first home located in a suburb northwest of Atlanta for six years, Keeva Haynes sought an upgrade. A divorced single mother, Ms. Haynes, 44, was keen on securing a home in a district with a high school her eighth-grade daughter Jaida desired to attend. Her dissatisfaction with her existing house in Powder Springs, Ga. stemmed from having spent several thousands on repairs.
The older state of the house meant it harbored issues like problematic plumbing and septic tanks, which were economically draining. Her daughter’s wish to enroll in a more diverse school district was another leading cause for this move. Ms. Haynes was eyeing a recently constructed four-bedroom house with a fenced yard for her pets. Her position as a senior manager in an accounting firm necessitated a spacious, two-story home for distinct living and workspaces to institute work-from-home regime more smoothly.
She expressed issues she faced at the old house, where her daughter could overhear her phone conversations. Being a teenager, her daughter required added privacy. After receiving an offer for her house, Ms. Haynes was hard-pressed to find a new one before November 1, 2023, which was the closing date for the sale of her current residence. Armed with a budget of $450,000 and a Federal Housing Authority loan, she aspired to find a durable home that would last at least two decades.
Ms. Haynes wanted to avoid polybutylene pipes that had been subject to a lawsuit before and cost her $6,000 to replace in her present home. Septic tanks were also on her avoid-list. According to her agent Pat Arzet, Ms. Haynes aims to acquire something larger than her old three-bedroom, two-bathroom house complete with a basement. Her options for the new house are yet to be disclosed.
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