You could simply educate yourself and seek it while you’re Googling you latest lame gif, but it’s been obvious that unless it’s in The Guardian, it’s not real to you.
Daddy either will succeed in deporting 5% of the labor force or he won’t. Chrissey prefers to pretend it won’t matter either way. Personally, I think Daddy will chicken out. You should pray he does. Inflation is really hard on the poors—as you well know.
The permits cost lots of money, but it’s really the time involved in them that is the biggest suck. Money is tied up longer which increases risk and requires bigger profit margins.
Bingo. In California it's common practice to apply for permits just so you may have the option to build in the future. When it takes more than 2 years to be able to do permitting the market conditions can drastically change.
FTR we use all legal labor and have no shortages. Then again, we pay well. Somehow, we still manage to be profitable. There's a MASSIVE cost of quality issue in construction. Fuckup one pour or weld and it can be millions down the drain. Let alone the potential safety implications. That makes the day rate difference of $5/hr meaningless.
Comments
Lol imagine thinking the only option is ILLEGAL immigration.
If we don't let in terrorists, rapists, and murderers who will build the houses?!
I believe that the U of Utah is known as the Wharton of the Mountains.
I doubt NBC got it right.
Lots of tweets and editorializing about an NBC article without sharing the NBC article 🤔
It's very boring. Don't bother.
As you were.
why do libs always talk about the food that illegals bring? It’s always seemed like the most ignorant/kinda racist thing lol
how many illegals open up restaurants? I’d say about zero, since you can’t open a business as an illegal
You could simply educate yourself and seek it while you’re Googling you latest lame gif, but it’s been obvious that unless it’s in The Guardian, it’s not real to you.
Took me 5 seconds, you fucking idiot.
Nothing makes housing more expensive than government regulation and green energy bullshit codes
NOTHING
Paying citizens a good wage to perform good work on building houses and other shit is not the driver to the insane costs
H is an 1860's democrat
WHO WILL PICK THE COTTON IF WE FREE THE SLAVES?
Government involvement in manipulating the rental market is a big driver behind the scenes as well.
Utah is too low brow for the champions of the working class.
This should appeal to your elitism:
I see the meaning of the word “could” continues to baffle our resident brainiac.
NOC loser
Cry harder for murderers and rapists getting bounced
Per usual H too slow to make his own arguments.
I've been waiting a month for an "over the counter" permit to drill a 12" hole 6 feet in the ground in our own right of way in LA county.
"The free market THRIVES under regulation." ~H
Daddy either will succeed in deporting 5% of the labor force or he won’t. Chrissey prefers to pretend it won’t matter either way. Personally, I think Daddy will chicken out. You should pray he does. Inflation is really hard on the poors—as you well know.
Another solid contribution to a deportation discussion.
”Daddy”
Nice dodge on ignoring your continued lack of reading comprehension skills.
So you can't follow. Fuck, you are dense.
Excessively burdensome Permitting $ > marginal cost between legal and illegal labor $
I know you can't do basic maths either though so this could be a long slog.
The permits cost lots of money, but it’s really the time involved in them that is the biggest suck. Money is tied up longer which increases risk and requires bigger profit margins.
Bingo. In California it's common practice to apply for permits just so you may have the option to build in the future. When it takes more than 2 years to be able to do permitting the market conditions can drastically change.
FTR we use all legal labor and have no shortages. Then again, we pay well. Somehow, we still manage to be profitable. There's a MASSIVE cost of quality issue in construction. Fuckup one pour or weld and it can be millions down the drain. Let alone the potential safety implications. That makes the day rate difference of $5/hr meaningless.