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| 904-737-5009 Jacksonville, Florida |
How to research a contractor
In many cases your home will be the largest investment or biggest piece of your net worth as a family, the last thing you want to do is gamble your future retirement nest egg away by hiring the wrong contractor. Home improvement projects can cost tens of thousands of dollars, we at Martin Home Exteriors want you to have all the information you need at your finger tips to make the decision you need on which contractor you will use to do your project. You owe it to yourself and your family’s future to make sure you hire a qualified honest contractor, who works within the laws our state and city have set before us for our protection to help keep your investment the apple of your eye, not the rotten apple of the bushel. Please, use the 15 minutes it will take to research any contractors you may be considering for your project, by following the instructions below and find out the truth about them and their business, and maybe save yourself from future embarrassment, loss of money, stress, and maybe a law suit.We hope that with a few minutes of your time your project will be the envy of the neighborhood, and a satisfying experience you will want to tell your friends about.You are trying to answer the question- can you trust the contractor to do the job he said he will? Ask him how many jobs he has completed, if he pulls permits, has any complaints, and make sure to verify his record. “Better Business Bureau”, click on the BBB link below, and it will re-direct you to their web site. These are the things you want to look for.
Search in the Business & Professional Regulation (DBPR) database. You will need to search for the company you are considering hiring, as well as the contractor that represents the business. Here you will find how long he has held a license, and about any complaints.
City of Jacksonville Building Inspection Division. Here’s where it gets fun. You are looking to make sure the contractor can pull a permit, and has built the jobs as he claims. Go to http://205.173.35.56/permitstatus/ under permit inquiries click on By State Lic. #, then enter the license number from above (not a Qualified Business Number) and click on active. This indicates all the active jobs the contractor has. Go back a page and click on final. This is an important source; did the contractor claim to do 100 jobs a year? Confirm it here, you may find he has only 3 jobs in the last year. Workers
Compensation Insurance. Go to the Proof
of Coverage Query Page at http://www.fldfs.com/WCAPPS/Compliance_POC/wPages/query.asp Enter
the contractors name, or other information that
you have, you will find if the contractor has workers
compensation is in force. Is the contractor WC
exempt? Call me at Case study. A customer I gave a proposal called me and told me this story, then hired me to build it right. She hired a contractor that was about $3000 less than my price ($13,000). The contractor started the work and was about 2/3 of the way finished when a building inspector stopped by and issued a stop work order because of no permit. The contractor then pulled a permit and finished the job. On the final inspection (required with all permits) the Inspector failed the job- it did not meet building code because no sheeting (plywood) was present under the siding at the front of the house. The contractor (paid in full by now) could not be found to correct the code violation. She then hired me to come in and fix the problem which involved replacing all of the siding on the entire front of the house at a cost of $6500.00 The end result – she paid $3500 more in the long run, if she had only researched the contractor using these four steps she would find the following:
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