Your permit process is going to take longer than 6 months in most cases.
The recession does not have as many of us awaiting your call with baited breathe as is blogged on the main page of your computer.
The problem is YOU. YOU need to be persistent. YOU need to get your permit process rolling. YOU need to get multiple estimates. YOU need to get the job done when it can be done, no excuses, a baby could sleep through anything.
One thing that will not work is being a guy who blames all others. No one wants to work for one, deal with one, read about one.
Hike them up, get out there and find your contractors and get your job done. Start asking all your pals who they used. Look in the church bulletin, cruise your hood looking for ongoing jobs, they're already in your area, keep them there for another week or so.
**** starts, finishes and ends with YOU. If YOU do not have the drive, bravado and initiative to get your **** done for your own benefit, WTF would anyone else?
Pissed? Good now use that to get your *** motivated and rolling.
Get going so we can read about your build thread.
Who, me ? Well excuse me for insinuating, and excuse you for assuming I project the wrong vibes somehow... All I meant was that all we hear in the news is that the construction sector is in the crapper, yet here I am, serious customer, project funded, *not* looking for a cheapie job, ready to go. Yet it's been over 2 months and I still don't have the inkling of a beginning of a build. I think it might be easier to sell my house and buy one with a bigger garage.
As for "you should do this, You should do that", well, I disagree... I am a professional at what I do, and that is NOT construction. I know enough to hire professionals at what they do. I expect the contractor to have something for me in order to pull the permit, like, I don't know... maybe a blueprint or something? I don't build home additions for a living.
I should also point out it's not a hard one. One wall, one flat roof, one hole in my garage back wall to pass-thru, a concrete floor. I've got everything else lined up (plumbing and A/C) awaiting the construction.
Good to see Milt in that thread, I'd hire him in a heartbeat because I know him from lots of years on Pelican...
I'm not taking a shot at the entire profession, I'm (rightfully, I think) expressing my surprise that it's been almost 3 months now and I still haven't got the second estimate, or the beginning of a project. I thought people wanted to work ;-) From this thread, I see I am not alone.
Other than that, thank you everyone else for the useful info on legal aspect and time to pull a permit. If it really takes 6 months, $%#$% me !!!!! I was hoping for a quicker turnaround. Damn !
Yeah YOU!
YOU want something? YOU have to figure out how to get it. YOU can not just wait for another to get his ducks in line, They're your ducks.
You can't get frustrated, you have to push through the thing, you have to make it happen.
Yes I'm harsh, You're not in this profession is no excuse. And yes it may take months, persistent months of back and forth and negotiations with the city contractors etc.
And the most challenging thing is that through all of it, those that get the most done have a calm and serene outer corona that keeps from scaring off all of the potential partners in the project.
So yes YOU, all intended as insight not insult.
Now gather yourself and get YOUR project accomplished.
If you wait for others to call you back you will never get anything done.
Put a date target reward upon your project. A compensation for a project done on time on budget and per spec of 5 to 10%.
Get in the car and go hunting good contractors.
Get in the car and go ring door bells on recently completed projects and get the names of the guys who did them.
YOU can do IT.
You know Frank most of the time I agree your opinions, but your attitude about what I should do is way wrong. When I call somebody to do work for me it is because I cannot do it. The reason is immaterial.
If I call a contractor to do a job, I expect him/her to do the entire job. From providing an estimate to putting the last screw in. When that last screw is in I'm right there ready to pay for a job well done. I don't expect to manage the job, worry about material delivery, etc. that is what I expect that I am paying for.
I expect an estimate so I will have a close idea of what the project will cost, I can ballpark **** on my own, but we all know how close those estimates are. I want properly specified materials, scopes of work, timelines,etc. It's not like building something is troubleshooting some screwy symtoms. I would not necessarily expect the cost to match the estimate exactly because I understand the real world of change. But I also am not handing out blank checks and saying go to it.
As far as permits, prints, and codes, that is what I'm paying for your expertise. That is your job, not mine. My job is to pay for it when it's done.
I design and build radio and telephone system that span states. If I were to build one for you would you expect to design it? Would you pull permits and worry about codes and enviromental issues, land use rules, etc. in 40 or 50 counties or two or three states? I didn't think so. You would tell me what you wanted it to be capable of and I would build it. But wait you would expect a quote wouldn't you? You wouldn't just hand me your check book and say go to it.
Sorry for the rant, it is just that when I am paying for the job, that is what I want, the
whole job, no chasing around, no repeated call backs, basically no ********.
My garage re-roof I just had done is what sets me off about poor customer service. I called three local contractors, because three estimates is the standard I am used to, because I know when I quote a system there will be a minimum of three bidders.
The garage is 1450 sqft so its like roofing a small house not a 20x20 shed. We set appointments, I took time off work to be sure I was there so there would be no questions or confusion. The first two never showed, not even a courtesy "I can't make the appointment" call. After waiting two hours I called their offices, I got every excuse from the truck broke down to "oh we couldn't find which house on the street" it was. Hmmm, two houses on my street and only one has a huge garge in the back yard.......... I guess your cell phone broke too because it felt sorry for the truck.
The third guy I called made the appointment five minutes early, measured, asked what I wanted, and said he would send me the estimate with options within the week. Two days later the estimate was actually hand delivered. It was for the whole job, permit, debris removal, all materials, clean up, everything. My part of the job was to pay for it at completion. The cost was less than 2/3 of what I thought it would and the job was beautifully executed.
You can bet your *** I have recommend him repeatedly. As for the other two, I wouldn't piss on their shops if they were on fire.
I pride myself on thorough proffessional design and build in my job and I see no reason not to expect it from those that I hire.
