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On Aug 9, 11:15 pm, GeorgeWashingtonAdmirer
wrote: What do you expect when quick-buck-artist contractors hire illegal aliens who typically use a dozen aliases, are drunk and/or high, and who not even the police know the true names of, right off the street or the parking lot of a Home Depot? As early as a few years ago I was posting links to a Consumer Reports article about this very issue, which even at that junture was emerging as a serious issue. It was OBVIOUS even then, to anyone with any sense, that down the road there was going to be a national epidemic of serious construction problems with the perhaps millions of new illegal-alien-bult homes that sprouted across the USA during the heady "to-hell-with-the-law" 1990s and into the new millennium. While understandably frustrated, the homeowners who bought such crappy illegal-alien-assembled houses should be thankful if the illegals who built their houses don't return to the scene of their labor to rape, rob or murder them (there are LOTS of news reports of ilegal alien "day laborers" raping, robbing and murdering those who hired them -- seewww.daylaborers.orgor perform your own online serach, for example). I'm reminded of a GREAT video at YouTube (and probably other websites) of a trained, experienced, skilled Mexican-American construction worker giving an OUTSTANDING speech -- on-site at a construction site which uses illegal aliens -- exactly on this whole issue. I hope someone can post a link to it, or remind me of the man's name, for in my opinion he's the salt of the earth, a GREAT American, and the kind of Mexican-AMERICAN I *thought* I was going to find in California, as opposed to the "For The Race Everything, for those outside The Race nothing" anti-American, ˇMexico First! illegal aliens who've flooded the region. ------------------------------------------------------ You Call This a Home? The next boom for builders may be complaints from angry homeowners By MARA DER HOVANESIAN BusinessWeek Online Residents of a new housing development in South Carolina fear that fumes from contaminated soil have caused dizziness and blackouts. In Colorado, homeowners say they were led to believe they'd enjoy a recreational lake that never materialized, causing property values to slip. As the housing slump worsens, U.S. homebuilders increasingly find themselves fending off complaints of shoddy construction, unsavory sales tactics, and use of unsafe land. There's no definitive gauge of consumer sentiment toward builders, but several signs point to growing unease. The annual new-home satisfaction surveys done by J.D. Power & Associates, which like BusinessWeek is a unit of The McGraw-Hill Companies, showed customer attitudes improving from 2001 to 2004 and then leveling off. But last year's survey, released in September, showed a 7 percent increase in the number of construction-defect complaints per home. Criterium Engineers, a Portland, Maine building-inspection service active in 35 states, found that from 2003 to 2006 the number of new homes with "significant problems" rose more than 13 percent. A public fund in Nevada created to settle builder complaints paid claims of nearly $1.2 million in 2006, up from $234,000 in 2003. This is only the beginning, says Ronald T. Kozlowski, a property casualty actuary with the consulting firm Towers Perrin in San Francisco. "Right now you're seeing the construction claims start to come in," he says, "but it'll take five to seven years" to get a full measure of the angry fallout. Anti-builder Web sites are proliferating, and two consumer groups, HomeOwners for Better Building and Homeowners Against Deficient Dwellings, are compiling online lists of beefs against developers. Whenever there's a rush of building as there has been over the last five years, complaints are sure to follow. Some can be written off to unrealistic expectations. The National Association of Home Builders says 55 percent of customer grievances concern caulking, paint, and other nitpicky issues. This time the grumbling may be exacerbated by frustration over developers' lending practices. And in areas where home values are dropping, every chipped tile is infuriating. [GWA note: Notice how the pro-corporate Business Week article tries to minimize the American home buyers' complaints, even suggesting that homeowners stuck with expensive but crappy, shoddily-built homes are "nitpicking" out of spite! Yet NO MENTION WHATSOEVER of the proverbial "elephant in the living room": connecting the construction problems to *those* *who* *did* *the* *constructing*!] Builders have inoculated themselves effectively against customers taking their objections to court. Homeowners generally don't have the right to sue; their only legal recourse is arbitration, as required in most sales contracts. [GWA note: So in the "America" of 2007 the ILLEGAL ALIENS who built the shoddily-constructed houses can sue entire U.S. cities (does the name "Hazleton, Pennsylvania" ring a bell?) but AMERICANS themselves CAN'T use the same legal system to sue!] Contracts also typically prohibit customers from disclosing problems to the media or prospective buyers. Better Business Bureaus aren't always helpful, because builders can simply drop out. Four big builders voluntarily left Houston's BBB in 2004 and 2005, for example. And builders are only lightly regulated, primarily by state and local authorities. Even so, consumers are becoming increasingly vocal in their complaints. Clyde M. and Tracy D. Singleton, a couple in their 50s from Shepherdstown, W.Va., say that one month after they moved into their new $409,000 house last October, the basement filled with sewage a foot deep. Tracy says the couple spent three months in a hotel before their developer, Reston, Va.-based NVR Inc., got the place cleaned up. The Singletons have resisted arbitration. Instead they have alleged in a suit pending in federal court in Martinsburg, W.Va., that NVR failed to put in an underground shut-off valve to prevent sewage from backing up into their house. The plaintiffs claim that since the valve should have been installed outside of their home, the dispute isn't covered by the arbitration clause in their contract. NVR counters in a motion to dismiss the suit that the action lacks any merit. The Singletons have "failed to allege any facts" indicating that the company "unreasonably used its property" to harm the plaintiffs, NVR argues. Lennar Corp. another large builder, has drawn scrutiny in South Carolina. Residents of its new Pebble Creek development in North Charleston, such as Bill and Holly Hurley, say they have suffered from light-headedness, lethargy, and depression. Home inspections they commissioned showed unsafe levels of methane gas, which the Hurleys and others fear may be linked to possible soil contamination by a previous land owner. Miami-based Lennar says in a written statement that it "hired a consulting firm before the land was developed and found no evidence of recognized environmental conditions" at that time. Playing down health concerns, Lennar acknowledges that methane has seeped out of "broken sewer pipes and improperly seated toilets," which it says it has now repaired. The ultimate source of the gas hasn't been determined, however. The company has bought back one house as a result of the controversy. Lennar perceives another cause for anxiety in Pebble Creek. Its general counsel, Mark Sustana, says in an interview that buyers are aggravated over seeing their investments depreciate as the housing boom has given way to a bust. http://realestate.aol.com/article/_a...me/20070806142... ************************************************** *********************** PLEASE EMAIL THESE LINKS TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW: "The Illegal-Alien Crime Wave" by Heather MacDonaldwww.City-Journal.org/html/14_1_the_illegal_alien.html http://www.PredatoryAliens.comwww.Im...a lAliens.org See the COLOSSAL costs of illegal aliens to the American taxpayer:www.ImmigrationCounters.com --------------------------------------------- "Por La Raza todo. Fuera de La Raza nada" ("For The Race everything, for those outside The Race nothing") -- Motto of MEChA, one of the nation's largest publically-funded organizations with cells on high school and college campuses across the USA (Note: Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez says he "used to be" a member) --------------------------------------------- "How Eisenhower solved illegal border crossings from Mexico" By John Dillinhttp://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0706/p09s01-coop.html Excerpt: "General Eisenhower ... quoted a report in The New York Times, highlighting one paragraph that said: 'The rise in illegal border-crossing by Mexican 'wetbacks' to a current rate of more than 1,000,000 cases a year has been accompanied by a curious relaxation in ethical standards extending all the way from the farmer-exploiters of this contraband labor to the highest levels of the Federal Government ..." "Herbert Brownell Jr., Eisenhower's first attorney general, said the president had a sense of urgency about illegal immigration when he took office. "America 'was faced with a breakdown in law enforcement on a very large scale,' Mr. Brownell said. 'When I say large scale, I mean hundreds of thousands were coming in from Mexico [every year] without restraint.'" -------------------------------------------------- Just two of MANY American cops murdered by illegals:www.DeputyDavidMarch.comwww.KrisEggle.org "Unfortunately, the majority of illegal aliens who are here are engaged in criminal activity. Identity theft, use of fraudulent Social Security numbers and green cards, tax evasion, driving without licenses represent some of the crimes that are engaged in by the ... read more » Everything these mestizoes touch turns to crap. And never deal with an employer of illegal aliens. ted http://www.newnation.org/ New Nation News |
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