I figured it out. It’s not something that I can teach.I'm not a lawyer, so I won't even attempt to discuss the legal issues that might attach to "resolving" a permit that doesn't exist.
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I figured it out. It’s not something that I can teach.I'm not a lawyer, so I won't even attempt to discuss the legal issues that might attach to "resolving" a permit that doesn't exist.
Realities? Let's look at the Palm Beach County Building Department, a somewhat comparable county. LA County is one of the largest in the US, and PBC is the largest in Florida. PBC averages anywhere from 800-1200 inspections per day and issues, on average, between 50k-60k permits a year, which does NOT count sub-permits such as MEPs. The bottom line is that those are some huge numbers. It's not quite LAC, but certainly up there. Like my little town, 30 days before a permit expires, a notice is sent via email to the applicant warning them of the upcoming expiration. This is also posted on the customer portal. In addition, they work closely with Code Enforcement to help resolve these expired permits. So they are actually trying.I know that you guys mean well but you don’t understand the realities that I deal with. There was a time when inspectors were rotated from one area to another. I inherited file cabinets with more old “Expired” permits than active permits. Where is the benefit in expiring permits instead of getting them resolved?
The code does say shall. The codes are full of shalls . Do you always follow that particular letter of that law? Does the word shall put your brain in idle? Wait a minute here you guys are Jeff and the Yankee and you do.
Because they did not pass an inspection for 180 days, technically, the word is approved in Chapter 1, so we allow partial approvals to extend the permit.So how do you prove the work was suspended or abandoned for 180 days?
So how do you prove the work was suspended or abandoned for 180 days?
I spent 11 years building a stone house by hand. We have winter. One does not set stone in winter.No calls for inspection.
At my old job we had a guy who was building his own house, while also working a full-time job. We just told him to call us out at least once every six months to keep his permit active.I spent 11 years building a stone house by hand. We have winter. One does not set stone in winter.
Some builds take a long time between inspection points.
Because they did not pass an inspection for 180 days, technically, the word is approved in Chapter 1, so we allow partial approvals to extend the permit.
I will beat that in court every time...One nail (or in IG case), one stone in 180 days is activity and not "suspended or abandoned"....Not likely to get to court and if you refund their fee to the "unused" portion, there are no actual damages, but anyway....No calls for inspection.
For some reason - the building officials believed that I was keeping things active.At my old job we had a guy who was building his own house, while also working a full-time job. We just told him to call us out at least once every six months to keep his permit active.
I will beat that in court every time...One nail (or in IG case), one stone in 180 days is activity and not "suspended or abandoned"....Not likely to get to court and if you refund their fee to the "unused" portion, there are no actual damages, but anyway....
Understood. Any work is work. We weren't asking that the guy complete any phase, just that someone could do an eyeball on the job every six months to verify that something had been done to keep the permit alive.
Don't you guys do spot inspections? I find 30-40 per cent of the problems during "hey, I was in the area" visits....
Too complicated. You either pass an inspection, or the permit expires. Your state may be different. The software systems expire the permit automatically if there is not an inspection that passes. This has been time-tested for decades in Florida.I will beat that in court every time...One nail (or in IG case), one stone in 180 days is activity and not "suspended or abandoned"....Not likely to get to court and if you refund their fee to the "unused" portion, there are no actual damages, but anyway....