going to?
1/16/2010 10:40:05 PM
The best you can hope for is that it doesnt pass inspection, but it will.Reading back over your initial post, it seems like you are just pissed off that one of them is going "at a snails pace" as you say, and you feel like thats one of the reasons you cant sell your house, even at the lower price.I doubt there is much you can do, aside from whine enough for them to investigate, and maybe get him fined a little. You won't speed up the process, or "improve the quality" as your cover story states your intent as being.
1/17/2010 12:10:38 AM
1/17/2010 12:13:49 AM
Not to mention him filing complaints against those doing the work is sure not going to get the house finished any quicker.[Edited on January 17, 2010 at 12:38 AM. Reason : k]
1/17/2010 12:38:33 AM
there's nothing wrong with looking out for your neighborsthere's nothing wrong with trying to protect the integrity of honest people
1/17/2010 12:51:44 AM
1/17/2010 10:18:13 AM
^apparently you missed the part where they are fraudulently listing the construction work as being under $30,000. You must have also missed the part about the homeowners paying the working contractor directly instead of the GC. The whole reason for requiring a GC on jobs larger than $30,000 is to protect the customer in the event that the contractor screws something up. If the contract for the work isn't bid and/or invoiced by the GC, then the job isn't being done legally.The fact that the guy claimed he was a sub of some other GC even though he filed the permits listing the construction under $30,000 hints that something isn't on the up and up. He doesn't need a contractors license if the project is truly under $30,000.
1/17/2010 12:22:12 PM
1/17/2010 1:19:17 PM
i did miss the $30k part.
1/17/2010 1:44:33 PM
^ I feel like you of all people in this thread should be able to put two and two together since you are a GC or have attempted to become a GC. This situation is legal if...-The "guy on the ground" is directly employed by the GC that pulled the permit.or-The "guy on the ground" is a subcontractor of the GC that pulled the permit. The people that hired this guy are paying "the guy on the ground" directly. Please tell me how the GC that pulled the permit is getting paid...My subcontractors do not get paid by the owner, i do. I then pay them. "further, the GC who the permit is under has all of the liability, so the customer is still protected"that GC could say that he didn't know the guy was using his license. All "the guy on the ground" needs is his license number and address and he can pull a permit. The revenue of the City of Raleigh permits is down. They are just looking for the money. This is why I requested a letter from that GC saying that this guy works for him but they are having a hard time producing it. If I had an employee, the owner would not pay him and then he pay me. Makes no sense.
1/17/2010 3:35:17 PM
IT'S NOT YOUR PROBLEM!STOP WORRYING ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE'S BUSINESS!
1/17/2010 3:39:02 PM
directly employed can mean a lot of things...in a 1099 situation for example. I agree the flow of money is important and I admit that I am not sure what the contractual law says in this case...does the "GC" on the permit have to be paid directly by the owner, or can the GC be paid by the "broker" or middle man of the deal to act as the qualifier? if the GC isnt aware his information was used to pull the permit, thats a whole other issue.
1/17/2010 3:55:32 PM
a qualifier has to work for a company. You cant pay one on a per job basis. That would be "using" someone else's license. if this "guy on the ground" is the broker in the deal then why is he managing the construction of the project. this is what you are suggesting is going on. owner pays "guy on ground" to hire a real GC. Real GC hires him to manage construction??? that is a lot of hands in the pot... The two reason that I think I am having a hard time seeing this letter...1. The GC doesn't know that he has pulled a permit under his company's name.2. The GC knows he is in the wrong and is hoping it will go away.
1/17/2010 4:17:17 PM
1/17/2010 4:25:01 PM
Then guy on the ground's company would have a license number. you can be a qualifier for up to two companies but if you are, there will be two separate license numbers. this is the only development in a neighborhood(that is surrounded by positive development) that has been neglected for 50 years. i started it and invested in it and I want it to remain positive. this guy and the developer are misrepresenting themselves to people that wouldn't know the difference so that is why I expressed my concern to the homeowners and the developer. if these homes cant sell because of quality and the developer keeps dropping prices then that will cause my property value to potentially go down. I think it is somewhat my business.
1/17/2010 4:36:11 PM
If you are a GC the whole system is flawed.
1/18/2010 12:21:44 AM
^^Oh, I get it now. No, no, no.If the builder is lowering the prices, it's not because the houses are poor quality. All new homes are pretty shoddy these days.If he's lowering the prices, it's because the economy is total shit, and the house isn't worth as much, and yes, the same probably goes for your house. Hundreds of thousands of people are reckoning with precisely this thing right now. Bought at the wrong time/built at the wrong time (bad luck)...it happened to a lot of people, and you can't fucking blame that shit a perceived lack of quality in some random dude's work, like you got screwed in a unique, special way. You're actually just like every other unlucky schmuck getting fucked. Just be glad he's still building and selling houses.
1/18/2010 12:58:44 AM
^^I am assuming that you have never heard any of the thousands of horror stories about people having work done and a contractor misrepresents themselves and the homeowner end up screwed? How is the whole system flawed if I am a GC? There is a reason that NC requires someone to be licensed and this guy is it. ^I am not selling for another year because of capital gains. what you are saying doesn't make much sense. You are telling me that all products are worth the same amount of money because the economy is bad? I should go to the Cadillac dealership and ask for KIA prices? The builder has the prices at $235/sqft right now(which is a lot). If people end up saying those houses aren't well done then they wont pay that for them and they will lower prices.
1/18/2010 8:53:40 AM
1/18/2010 8:53:54 AM
looks like he was talking to me, which brought the funny...
1/18/2010 9:11:28 AM
1/18/2010 9:24:09 AM
1/18/2010 7:38:54 PM
^ He has a point.
1/18/2010 7:40:17 PM
if i didn't know the laws I wouldn't know he was doing anything illegal. I came looking for opinions because if I report it the development will come to a stand still but if I don't the development wont be all that it can be, the new owners could get screwed, and I think it could potentially hurt my property value. Not once did I ask about a law, several people (in TWW fashion) provided what they thought they knew about it. I am in a sticky situation and thought that maybe, just maybe, someone could offer insight.It also annoys me that the developer told me that a house that is well done and one that is shoddy with the same curb appeal will sell for the same price because people don't know the difference...I don't want my neighborhood having that reputation.[Edited on January 18, 2010 at 8:21 PM. Reason : ..]
1/18/2010 8:19:25 PM
1/18/2010 8:29:46 PM
its not just one house. it is going to be like 15-20
1/18/2010 8:35:32 PM
dude your property value has bigger forces than that working against itthe whole area would be rehabbed already if money still flowed like it used to.
1/18/2010 8:38:59 PM
You need to report this.Having done this work, the homeowner could NEVER pay us directly for any subcontracted work. Anything that required a GC permit, inspection or signoff we had to legally do through the GC, both in terms of paperwork and payment.What is happening is not at all uncommon, but it sure as shit isn't legal, and it's going to cause a world of hurt for the homeowners if anything happens down the line.The reason this happens is because it allows both the developer (GC) and the builder to easily skim money. It's a highly effective and simple form of tax evasion. The builder gets paid, and only reports a fraction of that to the GC. The GC then has a much lower tax burden on the income, and the builder usually will offset the difference in material billing to cancel out any reported income for him as well.Where this comes to hurt the homeowner is in the event something goes wrong. Because it's pretty likely that the work orders, bill of materials, and every other piece of documentation about the work being done isn't going to match up to what ACTUALLY gets done. So a pipe bursts, and the homeowners work order shows 3/4" copper was used, but when you go look at it, it's actually 3/8". Or the homeowner got billed for 200 feet of siding, but there's only 100 on the house.You reporting this isn't going to do anything horrible to anyone. It'll just make the builder have to do the paper work he's supposed to be doing anyway, and it will give the homeowners a much better traceable set of materials and work orders in case of any disputes later.KaYaK: Shut your goddamn mouth.
1/18/2010 9:43:05 PM
1/19/2010 9:16:09 PM
interesting developments since the last post in this thread. the 10th illegal renovation started and it happens to be directly beside my house. I came home one day to find 6 nails in the drive way. I emailed the guy that was doing it and told him that I don't mind parking in the street so that I don't run over nails and my cars don't get hit with debris. He said he was sorry and that he would do that. Well a couple days later I found like 10 more nails. I emailed him again (politely) and told him I found more nails and to please let me know when they were working on that side of the home. He said "ok." Right after that email I found a nail in the sidewall of my wife's car. I sent him an email with the pic and he agreed to pay for it. I then found one in my truck tire. It was repairable. A few days after that I found like 12 more nails in the drive way. I sent him a really ugly email and then turned him in to the licensing board. He got his letter this week. He sent me an email asking to bring me a check and sign a paper saying that he did so. He has also asked me to "stay off of his property and out of his permit box." Any real general contractor knows that you don't need to go in someone's permit box to find out information on permits pulled. It is public knowledge and most info is online. I'll keep you guys updated.PS he is doing a terrible job on the renovation. My parents came by the other day and were like "wtf is this?" lol
4/11/2010 9:12:40 PM
I would have already installed surveillance cameras all down the side of my house.
4/11/2010 10:20:33 PM
FWIW if you are still contemplating anything, I would take action now, because as you wait, the likelihood that this will happen to more of the homes in your area increases. If I am a developer and I get away with something once, and it saves me money, you can bet I have zero incentive to be more stringent in the future.
4/12/2010 12:13:49 AM
the guy that's renovating the house next door has been using the lady that lives on the other side's water without her permission. what a class act...
4/24/2010 9:34:09 PM
Tell the lady, get him in trouble for trespassing.
4/24/2010 9:43:21 PM
oh she knows...
4/24/2010 9:57:33 PM
can you prove that he used her water line illegally? if so, she can have the guy arrested for theft. technically the guy never trespassed if he was never told to leave the property, but a theft charge won't go away easily.
4/25/2010 1:54:37 AM
I'm not sure how it all played out. I was at work. I do know the police came.
4/25/2010 10:46:49 AM
Jesus christ at all of these "I'm going to stay here with my head in the sand while my neighbors are getting fucked over". Seriously, you people are the same that took out your cameras and videotaped an old woman being beaten in traffic by a mugger.
4/25/2010 4:31:44 PM
It is out of my hands now. I reported this guy and may or may not have given a little/lot of information about all the other folks.they can do with it what they would like.
4/25/2010 9:34:11 PM
does this even need to be bttt?
6/1/2010 7:08:53 PM
sorrySo, I have had several issues with the guy that is renovating the house next door. He has had a hard time being respectful of our property. The first issue had to do with nails in our driveway. I sent him several emails telling him that due to the close proximity of the house that is being renovated we didn't mind parking on the street. He just needed to let us know when we needed to do so. He failed to do that and clean our drive at the end of each day so we ended up having to replace a tire on our tahoe and plug a tire on my truck. He agreed to pay for it but it was taking him a long time to do so. I turned him in to the licensing board (he is not licensed but borrowing a friends) and it didn't take him long to pay up.I had my truck cleaned this weekend and noticed that the driver side is covered in paint overspray. I bought a magnifying glass and to me it looks like the same color as the house (they just sprayed it last week). I've tried to get it off but it doesn't seem to be working and since it is a black truck I don't want to do too much.The only other overspray I can find is on some windows on the same side of our house. It is hard for me to tell if it is the same color though. You guys/gals are smart... Any ideas?
6/1/2010 7:26:26 PM
ok, i didn't read the rest of this thread, but ... does no one live in the house? you would have better luck talking to the owner, if possible. besides very rare cases, contractors don't care about quality. they care only about speed. quality only becomes any issue when the quality is so poor that the owner/buyer demands the work be done over. paint overspray, leaving a mess, generally not giving a shit is the norm. forget trying to get them to do the right thing - park your car on the street until the work is completed.
6/1/2010 9:07:16 PM
Pretend you are in Clayton and torch it.
6/1/2010 9:13:09 PM
an investor owns it and hired a "contractor"(that borrowed his buddies license) to renovate it. i am going to try and call the owner tomorrow
6/1/2010 9:49:51 PM