You aint whistling Dixie. I have never run into more frustrating then understanding building code. At least with taxes you have the IRC which applies to your Federal taxes. Even if you don't know the tax code Turbo Tax does, you can plug info in the little boxes and come out reasonably sane. State taxes are the same, here in Md they are based 100% on your Federal. All you do is punch in the little numbers from your Federal and whammo, your state taxes are done. Building code is an entire different ballgame, all the time, and a different ballgame in the next county and in the next one etc. There are very few things that are universal among districts and even then their not. Like if your putting up a deck. How deep do you put the footers? Theres a code for that. This county is 24", this county is 30", the state code is below frostline which is 30" (give or take) for Md. So, even though this county says a number less then state, you still have to do state. But you still have to know the code. Some places you can use 4"x4" for footers, some you have to use 6"x6'. And then theres the ones that say you can use 4"x4" for certain heights and then have to switch to 6"x6". (The funny thing is I always use 6"x6", much safer. Most of the other people I know do also. But when you take the test you have to know what actual code is.) I could keep going and going about this and thats only decks and the carpentry work. Then you start getting into the electrical, which wires you can run, which you cant, how many feet between junction boxes you can and cannot do and, again, the next county is different. In Md only a master electrician can touch a breaker panel (wink wink), in other states people with my license can do it and have it signed off. If you have a commercial license you cant do residential. If you have a residential license you can do commercial. I have a general construction contractors license which means I can build a house, do any type of commercial work, yet I cant do "home improvement", which is an entirely different license. I can put in new wiring, plumbing, walls, whatever, but I can't rip off a sheet of drywall and replace it, I have to have someone else do it for me. I can put in a new sink, but not a new cabinet. I can put everything in brand new while building but cant replace it after its built. Only someone with a MHIC license can do that, but they cant do commercial work at all. Yet in a commercial environment I can do everything.LPC wrote:Not long ago, I attended a building permit hearing at which I had to listen to architects and engineers argue about the interpretation and application of the international building code (which had been adopted locally). After I left, I told several people that I was looking forward to going back to my office and returning to the clarity and simplicity of the Internal Revenue Code.Famspear wrote:Just wait until you hear me start singing about the elegance and charm of the Internal Revenue Code......
And I meant it sincerely.
And we start with getting permits and what permits you need. In Anne Arundel county, where I live and mostly work, basically if you do anything to a house, you need a permit (another wink wink), even if the homeowner does it. Repainting your living room? Need a permit. Redoing a flower bed and putting in a new one? Permit. It used to be a rule of thumb that if it was visible and cost more then $150 you needed a permit. Now basically any modification of the house or grounds you are supposed to apply for a permit. Again, something you need to know for the test. Other counties you could come close to building a house before you need a permit, and even then they probably wouldn't bother you. Honestly I dont know how people like my uncle can do it. He's a certified contractor in 3 different states and has his MHIC as well as WV and VA licenses and keeps them current. Then again hes done it for more years then Ive been alive and he also knows all the (wink winks) so that helps him out.