Archive for June, 2007


How many feet from the property line is the setback requirement for a new home?

Jun 20 2007

The House Detective by Barry Stone, Certified Home Inspector

There is no universal dimension for property line setbacks. They vary from one municipality to another and from one neighborhood to another, depending upon such factors as lot size, terrain, population density, the predisposition of developers and bureaucrats, etc. To learn the required setback for a particular property, check with your local building department.

The House Detective is distributed by 1000WattConsulting. Do not republish without written consent. To purchase reprint rights please contact marc@1000wattconsulting.com

Questions regarding home inspection please email Barry Stone at questions@housedetective.com

Do Contractor License Bureaus Protect Consumers

Jun 20 2007

The House Detective by Barry Stone, Certified Home Inspector

Dear Barry: I disagree with published comments you’ve made about the state agencies that license and regulate building contractors. In one article, you told someone “…don’t be too surprised at agency officials’ seeming lack of interest.” As one of the agents of whom you speak, I can assure you that the people in my office take every consumer complaint very seriously. While we receive thousands of complaints every year, every one is handled with concern, and every effort is made to ensure that construction is performed in a safe, competent, and professional manner. I encourage you, therefore, not to imply that we regulators are disinterested. Richard

Dear Richard: Many of the consumer complaints filed against building contractors are indeed handled with fairness and concern by licensing agencies such as yours. But there are also cases where fairness and justice are denied to damaged consumers, where unqualified or unethical contractors slip through the cracks of the system. The following examples illustrate this unfortunate reality:

Several years ago, I was hired to inspect a newly-built patio enclosure. The contractor who did the work had failed to use tempered safety glass. The framing members for the roof were undersized for the span, causing the structure to sag. The framing was not secured with adequate hardware, and the visible quality of workmanship was appalling. I advised the homeowners to file a complaint with the state contractors licensing agency. They did so. After reviewing the matter, the agency approved the contractor’s work and dismissed the complaint.

In another incident, two retired sisters hired a general contractor to construct a building on their property. The general hired a subcontractor to grade the building site, at a cost of $6000. The sisters, however, were approached by another grading contractor who offered to prepare the site for $5,500. But there was a catch: He proposed a time and material contract, rather than securing the quoted price in writing. When the grading was completed, his bill exceeded $17,000. The ladies protested, but he threatened to take legal action if they did not pay. Under duress, they met his demand but later regretted that decision and filed a complaint with the contractors regulatory agency.

During the investigation, the grading contractor claimed that the location of the construction site had been changed after the work was begun and that this accounted for the additional cost for his work. According to the general contractor and the building plans, that claim was entirely untrue. Yet the state contractors agency ruled against the two property owners. They overpaid $12,000 for the work and were denied justice by the agency empowered to prevent this kind of abuse.

Both of these cases deserved better consideration. In view of their outcomes, “don’t be too surprised at agency officials’ seeming lack of interest.”

The House Detective is distributed by 1000WattConsulting. Do not republish without written consent. To purchase reprint rights please contact marc@1000wattconsulting.com

Questions regarding home inspection please email Barry Stone at questions@housedetective.com

Barry Stone

Barry StoneKnown today as "America's House Detective," Barry advises readers from coast to coast about home inspection and real estate disclosure, providing honest clarity, fresh wit, consumer protection, and even-handed fairness in his responses to real estate questions. Read more.

  Ask The House Detective

  1.  *
  2.  *
  3.  *
  4.  *
  5. captcha

    Categories

    Agents Agents referring inspectors Aluminum wiring Asbestos ASHI As is Backdraft Banks Basement Bathroom Bedrooms Breaker panel Builder Liability Builders Building code Building contractors Buyer Beware Carbon Monoxide Central Heating System Certificate of occupancy Chimney Commercial real estate Complaints Concrete concrete pavement Contractor Copper piping Cottage cheese ceiling County Assessor Crawlspace CREIA Damage Deal Killers Demands Disclosure Double tapping Drainage Dryer exhaust ducts Dryrot Electrical Electric Radiant Heat Ethics FHA Appraisers Fire Damage Fireplace Fire wall Forced air French doors Furnace Gas Easement Gas piping Hard wood flooring Heat exchangers Heating System Hidden defects HOA Home inspection career Home Inspector Hot Water HUD Inspection advocacy Inspector Liability Inspector referral Inspector responsibility Insurance International Residential Code Investor Leaks Legal action Liability Lot line Mold Municipal building inspectors NACHI NAHI National Electrical Code New Home New Realtor nternational Residential Code Permits Plumbers Plumbing Polybutlylene Pipe Radon Realtors Red Tagged Red tagged home Roof Safety San Luis Obispo Seller Seller Liability Septic System Setback Sewer line Shady inspection Shower Skylights Tenant Termites Tile roof Toilets Tree roots Uncategorized Unethical Home Inspector Uniform building code Unpermitted addition Unpermitted home Vapor barrier Ventilation Ventless gas fireplace Ventless Gas Fireplaces Ventless Gas Heater Very bad advice Wallpaper Water Heater Water stain Windows