Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Owner Builder potential nightmare ?
#11
Thanks for the replies from the gypsy gallery, I am willing to pay for your haircuts ..Smile

The gentleman is currently working with other HPM owner- builders. Has a regular crew, he supplies 1099's to his guys,with the exception being electrician and plumber.

He states that we can purchase liability insurance, if we feel we need it. He evidently skirts workers comp. somehow.. ??

Has been building in the islands since the 70's.

Well connected with county individuals, Leilani president ( where we are building ) told me who to call to get things done.

Is this a situation of "its all in who you know", and you can find ways around having a contractors license ?

If owner-builders can hire anyone they wish, with the exception of a licensed electrician /plumber, and the owner-builder is willing to risk the chance that something may go wrong, has not this man found a way around having a license and having insurance for his crew??

Reply
#12
After all that has been said here, you still sound determined to find a way to hire this guy. I think that by definition, one hires a GC to avoid many of the very issues you mention! If you want to proceed, I would highly suggest that you go see a good construction savvy lawyer here and talk to him and see if you can hire this guy without being the fallguy if you hire this guy and (God forbid), the mustard hits the fan.



Edited by - toucano on 04/18/2007 19:06:31
Reply
#13
"If owner-builders can hire anyone they wish, with the exception of a licensed electrician /plumber, and the owner-builder is willing to risk the chance that something may go wrong, has not this man found a way around having a license and having insurance for his crew??"

Yes, you can hire anyone you want but if they are not licensed they can't charge you more than $1,000 for the job done.

Aloha,
John S. Rabi, ABR,CM,CRB,FHS,PB
http://www.JohnRabi.com
Typically Tropical Properties
This is what I think of the Kona Board of Realtors: http://www.nsm88.org/aboutus.html

Reply
#14
quote:
....if they are not licensed they can't charge you more than $1,000 for the job done....




When are we getting that changed to $5000?

-Cat

Please note new email address in profile! (Hard drive crash and HT is lame in regards to their web based mail!
Reply
#15
Great !! $1000 for the entire job. Smile

Toucano, really not dead set on hiring this guy, just find it interesting the way he is approaching his situtation- checking on this guy myself- and reporting to the Punatics.

The liability issue exists whether it is an unlicensed contractor or your cousins friend .

I find it highly doubtful that there is a Hawaii Co. $1000 cop out there that checks the $1000 rule.

I am anxious to see , and I will, if how he is operating is through a loophole.

If not, how on earth is he building for everyone ?



Reply
#16
I used to build for home owners and a couple of apartment owners too in LA with out a contractors license, and hire workers and subs. It was legal and no liabilities.

The projects were 'owner builder', and I charged an hourly wage. For the crew I had a liability release form designed by an attorney, which relieved the owner and myself from any blame or responsibly According to California law, were there an accident.

When we'd need a sub contractor, I'd interview every contractor in the book, once I found a suitable person I'd present them to the owner and have them sign contracts, including liability release or subs insurance proves.

For materials, once I made a list, Ifd submit it too all available lumber companies, etc., and owner would pay directly to supplier upon delivery or demand. Owner received any discounts I could acquire with no kickbacks or tack on. This was great for the owners because after Ifd finished a few projects, I began to get special rates from suppliers and or suppliers would really compete to get the sale. 20-30-50k and more, thousands of dollars is a good sale for a lumber company!.


The 1099's were the owners responsibility to file or not.

This was back in the early 1980's. In a very short time I became acquainted with most of the inspectors in Los Angeles, and they had a good amount of respect for me. I never once failed an inspection, not even close. Most especially, the inspectors admired my ability to save owners so much cash.

I am not sure this is possible in L.A. anymore, and here in Hawaii the major drawback is owners not being able to do their own plumbing or electrical. At the time, in L.A., owners were allowed to do these.

The liability release is very important. Your crew members might seem like your best friends while they are building and you are paying them, but if there's a chance they think they'll get an extra buck from suing you, 90 percent will do it.

The keys to making this work were, no contracts between owners and myself, but simple payroll. Problem for most owner builders is finding someone who will get the job done, KNOWS WHAT THEY ARE DOING, can supervise the crew, fire no shows and find able workers, not screw around when your back is turned, and charge you for actual work performed verses sitting on the can. Nobody got paid for sitting on the can on my jobs.


But, not to be bias or pat myself on the back, finding somebody who is honest, reliable, diligent, KNOWS WHAT THEY ARE DOING (need I reiterate?) and works Cheap in comparison to the prevailing contractors rate, ain't no easy task.

Personally, for whatever fallacies i had, plumbing, electrical, or whatever came up, nobody can know it all, and there's always something slightly different, I kept updated code books for reference. Never relied on word of mouth for applying current codes and practices to a job, never skimp on materials as well. No hack jobs is why I never failed an inspection and gained the respect of L.A.'s strict inspectors.

Currently not available for work. Can't handle the 15 hour days, plus. Ha.. Besides, I am in the process of building my own house.





Edited by - Jeffhale on 04/22/2007 11:23:09
Reply
#17
Hey Jeff, (totally off topic...but) are you guys back on island? We are still putzing on our place...There was aome info on the Gardening Forum on Monstera (SP?) or something that causes rashes & histamine reations. While I was reading it, I thought of you guys...


Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 5 Guest(s)