Around here
>>$24K is a lot<<
Around here you couldn't draw the permits for $24K. First you would have to hire an engineering firm to do an environmental impact study for trenching near the "heritage" tree, with particular attention to the butterfly migration pattern. Then you need a lawyer to depose professional arborists to keep the neighbor's lawsuit under control. Next comes the public hearing about your contractor's dust and noise abatement plan. Of course you will lose on all those points, so you have to appeal and negotiate a compromise with a mediator for a new landscape architect's plan to reroute the wires under the roadway, and then you have to repeat all the above for the new paving project. Meanwhile the Air Pollution Control Board is mad at you because all your tenants have been running generators since the electricity cut out. When all that is finally settled, you go to the state Coastal Commission. After another series of reports and hearings and appeals they will agree as long as the electricity is not used for lighting (which detracts from the natural beauty of the mobile home site). But by now the original county permit has expired....
>>$24K is a lot<<
Around here you couldn't draw the permits for $24K. First you would have to hire an engineering firm to do an environmental impact study for trenching near the "heritage" tree, with particular attention to the butterfly migration pattern. Then you need a lawyer to depose professional arborists to keep the neighbor's lawsuit under control. Next comes the public hearing about your contractor's dust and noise abatement plan. Of course you will lose on all those points, so you have to appeal and negotiate a compromise with a mediator for a new landscape architect's plan to reroute the wires under the roadway, and then you have to repeat all the above for the new paving project. Meanwhile the Air Pollution Control Board is mad at you because all your tenants have been running generators since the electricity cut out. When all that is finally settled, you go to the state Coastal Commission. After another series of reports and hearings and appeals they will agree as long as the electricity is not used for lighting (which detracts from the natural beauty of the mobile home site). But by now the original county permit has expired....
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