Posted on 10/09/2005 1:03:44 PM PDT by summer
Perhaps it was the long, wet winter or its abrupt transformation into a hot, humid summer, but my own vision seems to have been obscured by low-lying fog in May and June. Below, I revisit several columns from those days that prompted particularly vigorous - and persuasive - disagreement from readers.[...]
A woman wanted to build a lakeside dock but feared that applying for a permit would alert the authorities to her neighbors' unauthorized docks. I stated that her neighbors' flouting the law did not require her to do likewise, but instead of quitting while I was ahead,
I went on to offer an "adventurous" - and foolish - alternative: build your dock without a permitbut so that every joist and piling meets the most exacting demands of all laws and building codes.
Many readers - impressive, really, how many are up on the laws governing coastal construction - rightly chided me for failing to consider that building permits do more than set construction standards. Permits can be a source of revenue, a way to alert officials to new building, a way to assess property values, a means of limiting waterfront growth. These are legitimate public concerns; I should not have encouraged anyone to undermine them.
[...]
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
FYI.
Who exactly is doing a new book on how stuipid liberals can be? Is it one of you guys? If so, please consider including this thread in some chapter. Thanks, summer
Who exactly is doing a new book on how stupid liberals can be? Is it one of you guys? If so, please consider including this thread in some chapter. Thanks, summer
And, no, like many others -- I did not always know these things. But thank goodness I am not relying on Randy Cohen of the NYT for how I conduct my life. He is a JERK, IMHO.
Maybe you have some sort of dissenting view you wish to share on this issue.
FYI. And, I'm out of here! :)
The legalities aside, most municipalities, should they discover you've done permit-required work without obtaining a permit, will cheerfully triple (at least) your permit fees and force you to pay them by condemning your improvement(s). They can even, in some cases, revoke the certificate of occupancy for the structure, which could mean you might not be able to get insurance, and that, in turn, could lead to a foreclosure due to a default in the terms of your mortgage. In these days of computer-based records and bldg inspectors who need to find violations to justify their jobs against shrinking budgets, building w/o a permit is pure insanity.
Nightmare story: The sister of a good friend wanted to build a pretty expansive deck on the side of her fairly large home overlooking a lake (or river) in Aspen, CO. The cost of the deck et al was maybe $150K. Serious deck. Anyway...the contractor 1: forged the permits 2: co-mingled the money she paid him with other monies he was paid for other work he was doing for other clients, 3: co-mingled materials from other jobs, and 4: when he was found out, he committed suicide in the travel-trailer she graciously allowed him to park in her driveway.
The deck turned out to be so utterly prohibited by the building codes in the area, she not only had to pay to have it removed, she also had to do significant remedial work to the house as it was "grafted" onto the house and incorporated into a more general remodel. (eg; sliding glass doors that opened onto a deck that couldn't be there, plus the headers and wall openings for the sliding glass doors...stuff like that)
The end result was that she paid out nearly $250K to obtain utterly nothing except a huge pile of lumber, which she couldn't use for anything and so had to pay to have THAT removed.
I think you're being too critical. We all make mistakes. In this case, the writer admits his mistake in print. That's a very un-jerk-like thing to do. And if more writers could do this, it would go a long way to repair my anger at others in the MSM.
A jerk is someone like Paul Krugman.
True story: a few years ago my wife and I decided to capitalize on the rising property market and sell the lake home (a weekender) we'd bought a decade earlier and fixed up real nice. I was sick of spending my weekends in the crawl space/on the roof/repointing the chimney/refilling the hot tub/collecting the empty bottles from beside said hot tub. Not only that, our son had reached an age when his idea of hell was spending the weekend in a forest retreat with Ma and Pa, so on the whole it seemed a good and timely idea to cash in and move on.
We had a buyer ready. We had his deposit. Everything was sweet and we're heading for closing.
Then the local council intervened.
A decade earlier, not long after we bought the joint, I had built my son and his pals a tree house. It was solid as a rock (I know; I once had to sleep in it when I'd said some indiscrete things to my mother-in-law that resulted in being no longer welcome in the matrimonial bed -- and I couldn't sleep in the guest room because said mother-in-law was polluting the mattress with her vile presence). But basically, it was just a kids' tree house, albeit a very neat and tidy one.
Well the building inspector said it had been erected without a permit and the sale couldn't go ahead until it had been inspected by a structural engineer or taken down.
Then the buyer got wound up. One of the reasons he was buying our house, he said, was because of the neat tree house, which his kids loved. If it came down, he wanted $5000 off the price!
So I asked the building inspector to be reasonable.
You know what the bastard did?
He said, "If that's your attitude, pal, I've got a lot more grief for you. Your front fence is two inches higher than code, so take that will have to come down as well."
By the time we had done everything this petty bureaucrat wanted, it had taken $10,000 out of our profits.
Building permits and building inspectors -- may they all rot in hell. (And if the Almighty isn't prepared to go quite far, may they at least spend eternity listening to my mother-in-law whine and whine and whine.)
The very definition of a contemporary "ethicist" is that there is no underlying logical or philosophical basis. If there is any basis, it is more like shifting sands than a firm foundation: Is it currently fashionable? Is it politically correct? Does it feel good?
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