Kevin keeps saying the same thing in every post on this thread. I have heard it from a friend who went to Arkansas to have a house built to live in and another friend in Texas who is on the job doing sheetmetal work. No matter where you go, no one keeps their promise, no one wants to work..
I think that this last statement is absolutely, blatently false.
Here's how I would rephrase it truthfully, to read between the lines and state what I have heard from the posters repeating this theme:
"Nobody wants to work on the time schedule I want, at the quality level I want, for the price I would like to pay."
Pretty much anywhere you go, there are numerous contractors with excellent reputations, that are busy all the time, building high quality projects, for satisfied owners. What you do not see those contractors doing is delivering half price quotes on garages to clients that express from the beginning of the project that they may be difficult to work with. The reason: They don't need to. They have a full plate with first class, full pay clients that will be happy with their work when it is completed.
A major reason that the second tier contractors have a hard time with delivery, is that the first tier contractors, who are dependable and pay well, have all the good subs ******* on their jobs. Even if the second tier GC's want to pay full price, the subs can't schedule it in because they give priority to the first tier.
It makes it a challenge for a guy who wants to do some of the work himself, wants high quality work equal to or better what he can do himself, for a bargain price. Ultimately, most of those guys have to do most of the work themselves to get what they want, or give up and pay what they think is an outrageous cost.
A major factor in all this complaint about delivery and cost is that the lower tier subs are there for a reason: They don't have the skills, particularly business skills to be an upper tier contractor (yet). One of the biggest mistakes they make is giving an off-the-cuff quote "Should be about $30,000". When they get sub quotes, materials takeoffs, and calculate their portion, they find out that their $30,000 job really is a $50,000 job. Yet the client, who didn't have a good grasp of the project cost to start with, has fixed their budget on that poorly thought out initial guess.
Another factor is what others have brought up: the Richard Cabeza factor. I, being the clean cut, well educated fellow that I am think of this as a risk factor instead. The guy that has a perfectly kept house, in a top quality neighborhood, and tells you how he built it all up himself to high quality for cheap is high risk. He has no plans or specs for what he wants, just wants an "average" garage. His average may be way beyond the gold plated, government spec standard. Without plans, how can you tell? How are you going to define what quality you bid on and make this stick, while getting paid for extras beyond your bid without going to court? His neighborhood likely has covenants, again, not in the plans and specs. The block foundation might have to be parsed. The siding might have to be something special. The required roofing probably is expensive, as are the windows and doors. There may be a requirement that dumpsters aren't visible from the street. Mud tracked onto the street may have to be cleaned up. There may be 8-5 work requirements, and not on weekends. Contractor parking on the street might not be allowed. Trucks for deliveries might be limited. The neighbors will surely complain about your dog, your speakers blasting out Rush Limbaugh, and about roofing bundle papers blowing into their yard. The lady next door will probably be over several times to complain about how your workers look or talk. Any cracks in their foundations will have been caused by vibration from you compacting the gravel under the garage slab. Then, there's the sense of entitlement: your dumpster will get lawn trimmings and an old couch in it, and of course no-one will know where they came from and want to pay. When there's a small flaw or some hairline cracks in the floor slab, you'll be expected to contribute an epoxy flake finish to compensate. No finish work is wanted, but someone has to install the sheetrock under the garage door that you are expected to install, and somehow you have to get in the mounts, controls and wiring for the garage door, without any electrical done or sheetrock or other finish work completed that needs to be under those items. All these items add up to additional time, irritation and costs, and no-one else is going to pay them except the GC.