JuneBug said:Damn - is there anything you could do to that basement to get it to pass, I mean is there anything that can be done on the cheap? Most houses down here don't have basements unless it's one with a side open, like on a hill. Maybe one of those companies that do this work could give you a break, maybe they're hurting for biz too. I don't know, just thinking out loud. I really feel for you, I hope that you get that house sold and move to a better place. NC was full of opportunity - but the word got out and we're experiencing some surplus of workers now. My company is so diversified that all we have is a hiring freeze and no raises this year, but I'm not complaining. I have 25+ years, but no degree -I had two years of general college and I quit to start working, and worked my way slowly up to a sales job. But, if i can make it 10 more, I'm out of here.
Take care Len. I wish you and your family the best.
JB
I'm looking into it. Sometime in the first quarter of the year, there are a couple Home & Builder shows, and I'm going to shop them for price like my customers (Big Three included) have done to me in the past. It's freaking highway robbery. I want a cheap solution that I can cover up with a simple, DIY basement finishing system. One neighbor just had cracks that showed dampness on either side of the cracks, so he got some carpeting and padding, and glued it down to cover up. Somehow, the city building inspector suspected, and on a pre-sale inspection, the S.O.B. from the city pried up one edge and found the cracks - sales was out on hold three months pending resolution.
The dumbest thing on this subdivision is that the city signed off on the development of this subdivision knowing, but not disclosing, that the site was ten to fifteen feet closer to the water table, when construction started, than the property was twenty-five years years ago. Seems the prior owner strip mined the top soil and sold it to the state - to landscape one of the local freeways. Bastards. After checking out some of he new home construction in Dallas three years ago, I've come to the conclusion that some home construction companies around here do some really stupid sh*t. My phase of the sub is the lowest point, and of thirty-three houses, twenty-eight have some degree of water seepage or damp concrete. All the "black mold" talk the past five years adds fuel to the fire. Average basement waterproofing job rounds $3500 to $6000, plus whatever you spend to finish the basement and cover it up. One neighbor epoxied the floor and the walls to cover up the repairs. The contractors that do that do this won't even bid until the dampness is resolved, so that idea to camouflage the problem is kind of out the window.
NC is joining a lot of company in getting surplus workers. Seems that the slow economy we've had in Michigan for the last eight years has spread to the rest of country. We were in Las Vegas in September, turning an interview my wife had with DOE into a mini vacation (she didn't get the job), and business in Vegas is off a whooping 15%. My brother's consulting business in Dallas is losing clients as lines of credit get frozen.
I wish you and your family the best as well. Have a great Thanksgiving.