plowhog
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2015
- Messages
- 3,394
- Location
- North. NV, North. CA
- Tractor
- Massey 1710 / 1758, Ventrac 4500Y / TD9
Thank you Buppies and hope things improve for you and your wife.Prayers for all our Country
Thank you Buppies and hope things improve for you and your wife.Prayers for all our Country
BEF, what do you do with pictures after you scan and sort them?Yesterday was more picture work, organizing and labeling the 5 I did so far.
Ugh....37F going to a rainy 43F here in Formerly-Great California.
Have a dilemma.
A contractor has been doing repair work on my CA property for 3 months. He does quality work at a fair price. I like him. Out of the blue-- he left a VM last night saying he "really needs to talk to me." I think he is going to confess he does not have the General Contractor license he told me (several times) he has. The upcoming insurance work at our ski cabin required me to get his license number, which he has not yet provided.
He is mid-way through a project on my property and there are other projects I would like to use him for. And I do not have any backup worker or 2nd choice-- labor here in CA is very difficult to find. But .... if he lied????
If I terminate him, the project he is in the middle of lands back in my lap. And I don't know how the other work would get done. But, in previous circumstances that were similar, when I offered a "second chance," it has never ended well. And later I regretted providing the "second chance."
Since you're happy with his work, I'd keep him working for the projects you're paying for. You'll need a licensed guy for the insurance work.If I terminate him, the project he is in the middle of lands back in my lap. And I don't know how the other work would get done. But, in previous circumstances that were similar, when I offered a "second chance," it has never ended well. And later I regretted providing the "second chance."
A slippery slope to tread. License and Insurances on contractors. It does seem like many contractors don't have or maintain insurance especially those that work by themselves or with just one helper.37F going to a rainy 43F here in Formerly-Great California.
Have a dilemma.
A contractor has been doing repair work on my CA property for 3 months. He does quality work at a fair price. I like him. Out of the blue-- he left a VM last night saying he "really needs to talk to me." I think he is going to confess he does not have the General Contractor license he told me (several times) he has. The upcoming insurance work at our ski cabin required me to get his license number, which he has not yet provided.
He is mid-way through a project on my property and there are other projects I would like to use him for. And I do not have any backup worker or 2nd choice-- labor here in CA is very difficult to find. But .... if he lied????
If I terminate him, the project he is in the middle of lands back in my lap. And I don't know how the other work would get done. But, in previous circumstances that were similar, when I offered a "second chance," it has never ended well. And later I regretted providing the "second chance."