March 25 Real Estate Weekly

Page 1

News Press Stillwater

REALESTATE W e e k ly Your best source for weekly real estate news and listings for Stillwater and surrounding communities

March 25, 2021

3.05%

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage continued to move higher this week, Freddie Mac reports.

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Weekly Features: • About Real Estate • Open House Map

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Utility bills overwhelming millions of American households jobs remain lost. And many people have lost income Associated Press even while remainSAN RAMON, ing employed, leavCalif. — Millions ing them unable to of U.S. households buy food, pay rent are facing heavy or afford utility past-due utility bills. bills, which have esPresident Joe calated in the year Biden’s $1.9 trillion since the pandemic rescue aid package, forced Americans enacted into law hunkered down at this month, will home to consume provide some supmore power. port. It includes $5 And now, govern- billion earmarked ment moratoriums for people who need that for months help with power had barred utilities and water bills. from turning off the Combined with power of their deother government filinquent customers nancing allotted for are starting to exenergy aid since the pire in most states. pandemic began, As result, up to 37 the total available million customers – to help struggling representing nearly households pay one-third of all utility bills is about households – will $9.1 billion. soon have to reckon But all that aswith their overdue sistance represents power bills at a just a fraction of time when many of the $27 billion in them are struggling past-due balances with lost jobs or in- of U.S. households, come. according to the NaA study done tional Energy Asby Arcadia, found sistance Directors that the average Association, which past-due amount by helps low-income those in its network consumers. The was roughly $850. aid will be distribThe crisis has uted through the emerged as one of Low Income Home the repercussions of Energy Assistance the recession that Program. was touched off by Caught in the the viral pandemic. squeeze are people Though the econlike Paula Desomy has achieved per, who lives in considerable gains Lancaster, Pennin recent months, sylvania, with her about 9.5 million husband and the

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Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

Michael Liedtke and Cathy BussewitzI

youngest two of their five children, ages 7 and 10. Desper worries about how her family will manage once the utility shutoff moratorium lifts soon in Pennsylvania. “It’s come to the point where I look at a bill, and either I’m going to pay a bill or I’m going to buy food,” said Desper, 45. “I’ve got two little children. I will go without food. My children will not.” After the pandemic erupted, Desper’s weekly hours and income were reduced by half. Her husband’s work hours were cut, too. Unable to afford his car payments, he lost his vehicle. With their sharply reduced income, Desper and her husband fell nearly $700 behind on energy bills and more than $1,100 behind on mortgage payments. In the meantime, she worries about being exposed to COVID at work, particularly because her 10-year-old daughter has asthma. Officials at agencies involved in financial aid for energy customers say the problem has become an urgent one. “We have never

had debts of this size before,” said Mark Wolfe, executive director for the National Energy Assistance Directors Association, which estimates that the total amount due has soared from roughly $11 billion, owed by nearly 20 million U.S. households at the end of 2019, to the more than $27 billion now. Those findings mirror the study of electricity bills in 13 states and the District of Columbia by Arcadia, which helps households find renewable energy sources to lower their utility costs. It found that one-quarter of the households belonging to Arcadia’s network in those states had past-due balances on their electricity bills as of January, with the average amount owed nearly $850 – a 67% jump from the end of 2019. Even bigger pastdue bills have been emerging in New Jersey, said Kathy Kerr, director of utility assistance for the Affordable Housing Alliance. Before the pandemic, people who approached the organization seeking help typically had past-due balances

of $800 to $1,000. Now, she said, it’s not uncommon to see past-due balances ranging between $2,000 to $3,000, reflecting a crisis that cast millions of people out of jobs, especially at restaurants, gyms, concert venues and small businesses and left them consuming more electricity at home. “People are at a crossroads,” Kerr said. “Do I pay rent? Do I pay bills?” Moratoriums on shutting off power for past-due households had existed in at least 35 states at some point during the pandemic. In response, some struggling consumers chose to funnel their money toward housing, food and other obligations because they knew they wouldn’t lose their electricity or natural gas even if they skipped their utility payments. Compounding the problem, American households have been using, on average, 10% more electricity during the pandemic lockdowns, which have kept them home more hours, with computers and other electronic devices, along with heat or air conditioning, swelling

utility bills. Now, the power shut-offs are beginning to lift, forcing customers to reckon with their piled-up bills. More than 30 states – including New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin – are ending shutoff moratoriums in March and April, according to the National En-

ergy Assistance Directors Association. California and New Jersey will do so at the end of June. Utilities are sometimes willing to negotiate repayment plans with delinquent customers rather than cut off their power. Still, a more comprehensive solution is urgently needed.

NEW LISTING - 712 S DEVON STREET - Commercial office building has over 3000 s/f with 10 separate offices. The flooring is carpeting and tile, furniture and desk will remain, large reception/waiting area, large kitchenette area, alarm system, outdoor garden area, and 23 paved parking spaces. ........................................................$398,500

NEW LISTING - 2320 N DRYDEN - 3BR, 2BA, 2-car garage. Open PENDING entry to large living room, kitchen & dining area inside this beautiful brick home. Located close to shopping & schools ................. $168,500 3124 N MONROE - 4 BD / 3 BA / 2-car attached garage. Home is very open LISTING with large- living-dining room fireplace, has many NEW 615 E 13th Placewith - 2 BD / 1 BAkitchen / 1 detached car PENDING cabinetsHardwood plus a serving bar, and pantry. 3-1 split bedroom on door a corner garage. floors, some tilt-in windows, new back and lot close to Boomer Lake. ................................................... $219,900 several other updates. Great investment. ............................ $69,900 1105 ES CAMDEN LANEDRIVE - 2 BD SOLD garage. ....$189,900 1503 BERKSHIRE -/ 32 BA BD//2-car 2 BAattached / 2-car attached garage. Bay window in the dining room, kitchen ..................................$169,900 HOUSE FOR RENT - 3 BDattached / 2 BA - No pets oronsmoking 623 E MAPLE AVE.- -1618 3 BDE/Willham 1 BA / 1-car garage a corner lot. Brick home is ready to move in with many updates ...... $122,900

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Horticulture Tips for April Please consider the following tips for your April landscape: If you have not already done so, April is a good time to fertilize your cool season turfgrasses like tall fescue. Delay fertilizing warm season turfgrasses such as bermuda, zoysia, or buffalo until late April or early May.

Home Grown KEITH REED

applied on windy days. If your lawn is overtaken with weeds and you are determined to “not let this happen again next year”, mark your calendar now to contact our office in August to discuss a plan of

action.

reached via email at keith.reed@okstate.edu, phone at For more infor405-747-8320, or in mation on this or person at the Payne any other horticultural topic, you can County Extension contact Keith Reed, office, located at 315 the Horticulture Ed- W. 6th in Stillwaucator in the Payne ter. County Extension office. Keith can be

Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

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warm season vegetable crops until danger of frost has passed. Normally, this means about mid-April for Payne County. Continue to keep For apple growa close eye on newly ers, monitor cedar apple rust on neigh- planted material for irrigation needs. boring cedar trees. Our spring winds If you see a signifcan do a lot of damicant number of cedar-apple galls (a age to a drought large orange growth stressed plant in a short period of a that resembles a time. Christmas ornament), be prepared Mulching is an to spray your apple important water trees with an appropriate fungicide. and weed management tool in our Insects begin region. However, showing up in mulching this early, April. Remember that the majority of especially with a insects in the land- cool spring, can scape are not harm- delay the growth ful to plants or peo- of some plants. In some cases, it ple. Monitor your might be better to garden and landpostpone this task scape regularly, as insect problems are a few weeks. Call or email the extenmuch easier to address when they are sion office if you are uncertain about caught early. See which plants might OSU publication E-1023 Conserving benefit. Beneficial ArthroThe best window pods in Residential of opportunity for Landscapes for an enlightening look at applying herbicides to control pesky helpful gardening broadleaf weeds insects. like henbit and chickweed is closely Delay planting tender annuals and quickly. Treatment

effectiveness is reduced as these weeds mature and complete their life cycle. Also, the products used to control these weeds can be a real problem for tender garden plants and should not be


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Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

Real estate license not required to sell your own home

A real estate license is not needed to sell a home that you own, even if the home is not your residence. DEAR DAVE: I already know that I can sell my own home without having a real estate license, because I have done it before. Now I have inherited my late brother’s small home that’s a few blocks away through the living trust he created about four months ago. I would like to sell it myself, too, but would I have to get a sales license first? I wonder, because the trust is a legal document, and the property is not my personal residence. ANSWER: No, you won’t be required to get a sales license. Your late brother’s home now belongs to you, so you can sell it yourself, hire an agent to market it for you or simply rent it to tenants for some extra monthly income. Your brother was wise to form an inexpensive living trust. That thoughtful action allowed his home to pass quickly to you instead of making

If you have a standard homeowners policy and your roof was damaged or destroyed, the insurer would be required only to reimburse you for the cost of a new wood roof. The cost of upgrading to the more home is damaged you suffer through expensive tile roof or destroyed and the long and costly in order to meet the extra costs are inprobate court pronew building code ceedings that would curred because the would have to come have been required repairs must meet out of your own if he had made only higher construction pocket. standards than a will. However, if you your property does ••• had added a law today. DEAR DAVE: and order endorseLet’s say you live ment to your policy, We recently in an older home received the rethe insurer would that has a woodnewal letter for have to pay for the shake roof, but our homeowners upgrade instead of you’re in one of the you. insurance, and many communities our broker is The endorsepushing us to add that have recently ments are relatively changed their build- inexpensive and a “law and order ing codes to require are certainly worth endorsement” to more expensive, our policy. We considering, espetrust our broker, fire-resistant tile cially if you live in roofs in all future but it seems like an older home that the endorsement new-construction may not meet toand repair jobs. would simply day’s stricter buildduplicate the coverage we already have. Would adding the endorsement be a good idea, or would it just be a waste of money? ANSWER: Generally speaking, the older a home is, the more sense it makes to have a law and order endorsement. Adding such an endorsement to your existing policy would allow you to be CENTURY 21 Global Realtors reimbursed if your

About Real Estate

DAVID MYERS

ing requirements. But if your house is relatively new, you probably could skip such an add-on -- at least for now -- if the home was built using the latest construction materials and techniques. ••• DEAR DAVE: I live in an older home that does not have any smoke alarms. Are these devices required by law? ANSWER: Most cities and counties require that each home have at least one smoke alarm, and many have stiffer ordinances that require alarms be placed in each

bedroom or even every room. Some municipalities actively inspect individual properties to ensure compliance, while others only enforce their smoke-alarm laws when a home is sold and the transaction goes into the closing process. Relatively few communities across the U.S. have no alarm policies at all, instead leaving the decision to install the devices up to the individual owner. But with top-quality, battery-operated alarms now available for between $10 and $20 each,

there’s really no reason for owners not to have at least two or three alarms spread across their homes. Fire department officials say that the batteries in such easy-to-install alarms should be changed at least twice a year. A good way to remember to make the semi-annual switch is to replace the batteries when daylight saving time begins in the spring, and then do it again when you move your clock backward in the fall. ••• (c)2021 Cowles Syndicate Inc.

405.624.2626 www.c21global.com 131 N. MaiN, Stillwater

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Benefits to upgrading low-income housing

Boston University

all related. Energy-efficiency investments in low-income housing have broad ripple effects, including financial relief for residents, lower carbon emissions and healthier indoor environments. But there are key questions. Will agencies address these issues as siloed challenges or in an integrated way? And will federal leaders and members of Congress see strategic investments in housing as a strategy that offers broad societal benefits? Data from the American Housing Survey demonstrates some of the challenges low-income households face. Many of the more than 30 million Americans who live below the poverty line crowd into smaller, older homes. Often these dwellings have structural deficiencies like pest infestation, mold, peeling paint and exposed wiring. Living in these environments creates health risks from exposure to lead paint, allergens and indoor air pollution. The economic challenges of the pandemic, with people spending

much more time at home, have heightened these risks. Poor conditions also plague many chronically underfunded public housing developments. Given how vulnerable many public housing residents are, I see upgrading these buildings as critical. The benefits of energy efficiency Well-designed energy-efficiency measures provide economic, health and climate benefits in single-family and multifamily homes, including in low-income housing. My research demonstrates both the promise and potential pitfalls of

various measures. For example, better insulation lowers electricity and fuel consumption. In turn, this saves money, improves outdoor air quality and reduces greenhouse gas emissions. However, upgrades can be done well or badly. We found that weatherization alone, without other improvements, may actually increase indoor air pollution in low income, multifamily housing, especially in homes where people smoke or cook frequently with gas stoves. That’s because steps like adding insulation and seal-

ing cracks trap indoor air pollutants inside. Coupling weatherization with steps such as adding kitchen exhaust fans and high-efficiency particle filters in heating and air conditioning systems produces healthier results. A recent study showed that providing stable, affordable housing improved physical and mental health for both children and adults. Green building strategies have been shown to improve health, lessen asthma symptoms and reduce health care costs. Healthier kids miss less school and earn better grades.

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Fisher Provence, REALTORS® REALTOR

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(405) 377-1000

Page Provence, CRS Broker Associate (405) 612-0194

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sities like food or medicine to pay energy bills, or endure unhealthy temperatures. As changing climate lengthens summer, and there are more scorching hot days, those who lack air conditioning or can’t afford it are in danger. Racial inequities in housing aren’t random. For generations, discriminatory policies kept Black and other minority households from purchasing homes in many neighborhoods. There are large racial gaps in both homeownership rates and the availability of high-quality housing across the country. Now, for all of these reasons, housing is in the political spotlight. The Biden-Harris presidential platform included home energy efficiency retrofits. The new American Rescue Plan Act, which President Biden signed into law on March 11, includes housing provisions meant to forestall an eviction crisis and to reduce energy insecurity. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Marcia Fudge has pledged to prioritize fair housing. These efforts are

Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

of color. In my view, retrofitting low-income housDuring a presing in particular idential election is a high-leverage debate on Oct. 22, way to tackle some 2020, former Presi- of our nation’s most dent Donald Trump pressing health, railed against Dem- social and environocratic proposals mental challenges. to retrofit homes. The pandemic “They want to take has spotlighted buildings down how directly housbecause they want ing affects people’s to make bigger win- health. It’s intudows into smaller itively clear that windows,” he said. physical distancing “As far as they’re is hard if your famconcerned, if you ily lives in a few had no window, it rooms. And studies would be a lovely have shown that thing.” crowded indoor What a differenvironments, inence five months cluding houses and makes. While reapartments, are placing your big high-risk settings windows with small for contracting ones is not on the COVID-19. Biden-Harris adHousing also is ministration’s agen- a substantial conda, increasing home tributor to climate energy efficiency is. change. About 20% Addressing these of all U.S. greenand other housing house gas emisissues is critical for sions come from three of the new ad- residential energy ministration’s imuse. Large homes mediate priorities: generally use more ending the COVID- energy, but low19 pandemic, ader-income homes dressing climate are often less enerchange and tackling gy-efficient, which racial and economic makes them costly inequality. to heat and cool. As an environOne recent survey mental health found that between researcher, I have spring 2019 and studied ways in spring 2020, 25% of which inadequate low-income Amerhousing influences ican households health and disprowere unable to portionately affects pay an energy bill. low-income families Families may be and communities forced to cut necesJonathan Levy


Study links green communities to lower stroke risk

be trees or shrubs or grasses or whatnot,” Aitken The greener the said. neighborhood, the Researchers adlower the stroke justed for factors risk, a new study such as gender, suggests. income and race Researchers and ethnicity. matched images They also took gathered from into account space to health whether residents data from resihad health factors dents to come up – such as diabewith their findtes, high blood ings. The work pressure or high adds to evidence cholesterol – that that shows where would affect their someone lives af- risk of having a fects their health, stroke. said study co-auWhen compared thor Dr. William to people residing Aitken. He is a in the least-green cardiology fellow areas, those living at the Universiin the most-green ty of Miami and had a 20% overall Jackson Memorial lower risk of a Hospital in Florstroke or tranida. sient ischemic at“There’s a lot of tack, also known evidence that our as a TIA or “mininatural environstroke.” ment does influSpecifically, the ence health, and greenest neighwe wanted to look at it particularly with stroke,” Aitken said.

Michael Merschel

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Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

American Heart Association News

The study used records from more than 249,000 Medicare beneficiaries ages 65 and older who lived in Miami-Dade County in 2010 and 2011. The records were matched against satellite measures of their neighborhood’s greenness – “whether that

borhoods correlated with 26% lower odds of TIA and 16% lower odds of ischemic stroke, the most common type of stroke. The odds of hemorrhagic stroke weren’t reduced by a statistically notable amount. But overall, the apparent effect of greenery was noteworthy, Aitken said. He estimated the increased stroke risk of living in the least-green neighborhoods as compared with the most-green may be comparable to what someone would get from developing diabetes. The study was presented

Wednesday at the American Stroke Association’s virtual International Stroke Conference. It’s considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. Previous research using the same Medicare data linked green spaces to reduced risk for heart disease and heart attacks. Aitken said he and his colleagues couldn’t account for how much time people spent outside or how they interacted with the environment. But he said there are several possibilities. Dr. Elizabeth Jackson agreed. “It makes sense to most people that if you’ve got

walking paths and green spaces, people will tend to take advantage of them,” said Jackson, the Bourge Endowed Professor in Cardiovascular Disease at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Jackson, who was not involved in the study, noted that in the urban park near her, “It’s not hard to see lots of different people walking and running,” or doing outside yoga or aerobics classes. People who don’t have access to such spaces or who face safety or other barriers to getting outside would have fewer opportuni-

ties to be physically active, which she called “super important” to their health. Jackson, who helped write an American Heart Association statement on housing and cardiovascular risk in 2020, said green spaces might also provide a buffer against problems such as stress and air pollution. Aitken said the study could help leaders and policymakers think about the potential of fighting stroke in large swaths of people at once, instead of just individuals. It can be tough to convince

large numbers of people to get regular exercise, quit smoking and watch their blood sugar and cholesterol, he said. But nudging cities to incorporate more green spaces and providing encouragement for people to spend “a little more time in the environment, maybe that would affect everybody living in that area.” Jackson praised the researchers for being part of a trend of not just looking at people in isolation but “thinking about the whole person – where they live, where they work, where they play.”

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-3 P.M.

1527 S Ashton • $445,000

Beautiful Greg Avery built home in Berry Creek Addition. Walking distance to both Stillwater Middle and Sangre Ridge Elementary Schools. Three bedrooms downstairs with split living arrangement. Master Suite boasts a walk-in closet that can also be accessed through laundry room. Upstairs you will find a spacious bonus room with a half bath. A beautiful home with so many extras including lawn sprinkler system, enclosed sunroom with fireplace, and access to Berry Creek’s clubhouse and pool. Mary Davenport Broker/Owner/ CRS/ GRI 405.747.5651 mary@teamstillwater.com

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Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

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Yost Rd.

To Cimarron Turnpike

McMurtry Rd.

Chateau Ct.

Topaz Ave.

Amethyst Ave.

Duncan

Nancy Lee Dr.

Hartford

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Star Dr.

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Payne St.

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Mockingbird Ln. Collins Ct. Colby Lance

Villa Dr.

Drury Ln.

4th Av.

Eastgate St.

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3rd Av. 4th Av.

Peach Tree Av. Stonegate Av.

19th Av.

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Perkins Rd.

Husband St.

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Western Rd.

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Av.

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Lydia Ln.

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Wedgewood Ct. Wedgewood Dr.

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Sunrise Av.

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Will Rogers Dr.

Dryden Cr.

Hall of Fame Av. Mathews Av.

University Av.

Saddl

Isabell Pointe Dr.

18th Ct.

24th Av.

Quail 25th Av. Ridge Ct.

Ct. . nery ock Ln R dle Sad

Ln.

n St.

r. one D

st Wood

Helena Hts.

22nd Av.

Scott Av.

Scott Av.

Lakeview Rd.

Fountain View Ct.

Red Rose Dr.

Aloysius Cr.

18th Av.

Cantwell Av.

Connell Av.

Connell Av.

Morrill Av.

31st Av.

Woodland Trails Dr.

Pheasant Eagle Creek Ave. Ridge Ave.

e

Shin

Park

Deer Crossing Dr.

17th Av.

Ln.

29th Ct. 30th Av.

Inverness Ln. Fox Ledge Dr.

15th Av.

Av.

Emma Swim Ave.

Krayler Ave. Ridgecrest Av. Brooke Av. Moore Av. Franklin Ln. Knapp St.

177

a Ct.

uit Chiq d Ct. woo Wild Brentwood Dr. n Dr. Peca Redbud Dr. Redbud Dr. Randolph Ct. Eskridge Av. Windrock Hartman Av. Cr. Tyler Av. Tyler Av. Highview Av. rgia

Cantwell Av.

13th Av. 14th Av.

20th Av. 21st Ct.

erd aV

Lom

St.

k Dr.

Fox Ledge Ln.

32nd Av.

Culpepper

Savannah

Willow Park Cr.

Black Oak Dr. Countryside Dr.

St.

Sawgrass St.

eld

low

Lyndsey Ct.

erfi

Bristol Rd. Av. 24th Av.

Fox Ledge Ct.

Briarcreek Dr.

Ridge

Pioneer St.

Sangre Rd. Murphy St. Fairfield Dr.

Fairfield Dr. Mansfield St. r Ridge Ct.

Hillside St.

Davinbrook Ln. Fiddlers Hill St. Berkshire Dr. Dublin Dr.

Shumard Ct. Oak St. W. Shumard Dr. Williamsfield

Westridge St. Hillside Ct.

Ceda

Windsor Dr.

Squires St.

Tanglewood Cr.

Iba Dr.

Oak Trail Dr.

pp

Su

Crescent Dr.

Ramsey St.

Lincoln St. Lincoln Brooke Lincoln St. St. Hollow Ct. Monroe St. Monroe Monroe St. St. Jefferson St.

Liberty Ct.

Ivy Ct.

Cleveland St.

McFarland St.

McDonald St.

Willis St. Ridge Rd.

Country Club Rd. Abbey Ln.

Windsor Dr. 2nd Ct. Kea ts D r.

Oak Ridge Dr. Basin Ridge Dr. e Dr. Ridg lue Charles Dr. Sprin B gdal Wo e Dr. odc re 11th Ct. st Dr. Edgemoor Dr.

Greystone St.

Stoneridge Dr.

Westwood Ln.Westwood Dr.

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Vil la

Co

Wil

Chapel Hill

10th Av.

Knotts Av.

51

P rrey

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19th Av.

18th Av.

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4th Av. 5th Av. 5th Av.

Wehr Ln..

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Lincoln St.

d. sR ces

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Valley Dr.

Mark Circle

Charolais Dr.

Warren Drive

Valley View Bradley Pl. Sangre Rd.

Keely Ct.

Range Rd. Crosswinds

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Shiloh Creek

r. k D r. r. 15th Av. Old Forest D D roo stb hire ar Charleston Cypress Mill We orks alam Y Sh 18th Ct.

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Austin Ct.

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Shadow Creek Ln.

Scissortail Dr.

Stillwater NewsPress • Thursday, March 25, 2021

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Westbrook Ct. 15th Av.

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Cove

Sunset Av. University Av.

Scott Av.

Dells Av.

Wiley St.

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land Ct 18th Av. . Ja Lind a Lou Ct. Loper Billin gslea Ln. Ct.

Summer Hill Ct. Germaine Ct.

St.

Lauren Lane

Keller Dr. Lakeview Ct.

d Dr.

t.

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Ashton Ave.

Crestview Ct. Cowboy Ct. High

ld

Wentz Ln. University Cr.

7th Av. 8th Av. 9th Av.

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Murphy Dr.

Charring Cross

rC

liff

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Woodlake Dr. Deer Creek Ct.

Canterbury

Bria

Richfield Ct.

Dr.

Ashbury

d lan

rfie

St. Tyler Av.

Farm Av. Olive Ln. Drummond Av. Athletic Av. Monticello Dr.

Arrowhead Pl.

Arrowhead Av.

5th Av.

Aggie Dr.

ood

Kenslow Dr.

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Devo

Admiral Av. Sherwood Av.

4th Av.

Prescot Dr.

w gle Tan

Durham Ct. Ashford Ct.

8th Av.

. Club Dr . Country Club Ct Country 14th Av. Woodland Ct. Oakfield Ct. r. 16th Av. D

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5th Av.

Pecan Lake Av. Trenton Ct. Pecan Trail Ct.

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Pecan Hill St.

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Miller Av.

Virgina Av. 2nd Av.

10th Av.

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Thomas Av.

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Franklin Ln.

Dr. nett Graham Av. Ben Will Rogers Dr. Eskridge Av. Eskridge Av.

Eskridge Pl.

Hall of Fame Av.

1st Av.

9th Av.

Boo

McElroy Rd.

Tyler Av.

Farm Av.

8th Av.

. Dr

Reese Landing

Walnut St.

Tyler Av.

Harned Av.

Mohawk Av.

e Lak

Brooke Jefferson St.

Knapp

Oak Crest Rd.

Eastland Dr. Marcus Dr.

Swim Av.

Brooke Moore Franklin

Eskridge Av.

7th Av. 8th Av.

Boomer Lake

Osage Dr.

oke r. Brollow D Ho

Hereford Dobi Ln.

Vena Ln.

8th Ct. 9th Ct. Trenton Av.

Parkway Dr.

Liberty Rd. Preston Av.

Lakeview Rd.

Airport Rd.

Newman Av.

Hillcrest Av.

Lakeridge Av.

Rutledge Dr.

Windmill Ln.

Dr.

w illo

St.

d Win

177 Airport Rd.

ore

Harned Av. Madison Ct.

Thomas Av. Frances Av.

Memory Ln. Country Ln.

Cheyenne Av.

Tobacco Rd.

te Sta

r.

lD mil

Av.

Preston Ln.

State Ln.

Lisa Ct. Lori Ct. Lakeview Rd.

Liberty

t.

Arapaho Av.

W

Harned Av.

Dr.

nC

Dr. Park Cr.

Ramsey St.

Airport Ln.

Monroe St.

W rig h

tD r.

Land Run Dr.

Hartwood Av.

age

Wil liam

Pa rk Gr vie ee w C nv r. ale Cr Da . vis Ct. Ma rie

Washington St.

Ranch Av. Cherokee Av.

Os

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Ute Av.

Newman Av. Hillcrest Av. Brown Av.

4th Av.

Cla

Rogers Dr.

Lake Sh

3rd Pl.

ers

Rog

B

Stillwater Municipal Airport

Richmond Rd.

Britton Ct. B Dr. ritton Greenbriar Cr. Dr. Au d Ma ene D rieD r. r. Greenvale Ct. Ct. side rook

Golf Dr.

Falls Dr.

1. 1527 S Ashton - 1-3 p.m. ... Mary

gate Dr .

Hartford St. Dryden St. Benjamin St. Burdick St. Burdick St. Berry St. Arrington St. Marshall St. Doty St. Blair St. Grandview St.

Stonecrest Ct.

Coldwell Banker Team Stillwater

3rd Av.

Quartz Dr. Richmond Hill Rd.

Washington St. Garfield St.

Hunters Ridge

Stonecrest Ave.

Lynn Ln.

North

Benjamin

Husband Pl. Northgate Dr.

St.

Richmond Rd.

Park Pl. Tower Park Dr.

Richmond Hill Ct.

nd Husba

• Open Houses may be canceled in the case of inclement weather. If you have questions, please call the hosting REALTOR®.

2. 1405 E 4th Street - 2-3 p.m. ... Jennifer

Ct.

yon

Can

Chateau Dr.

Chateau Pl. Peaceable Acres Rd.

• All Open Houses are Sunday unless otherwise indicated.

Windsor Cr.

Burris Rd.

Burris Rd. 177

Week of Sunday, March 28, 2021

CENTURY 21

Jardot Rd.

OPEN HOUSEMap

Yost Rd.

Perkins Rd.

Yost Rd.


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