here ,and ive worked for and with a LOT of inspectors over the years,They absolutly can make you tear it down. IF of course your within a city or town limit that issues building permits. Theres lots of misconceptions about permits/inspections. The largest and most circulated one is that its simply a way of the town making money. in FACT the permit /inspection process is to protect others and not you! your house burns,its likely to burn your neighbors also. your bad sewage feild is likely to pollute your neighbors well etc. heres the thing to remember, ALL BUILDING REGARDLESS of where its located is supposed to be built to code!!! there is none of this farm exempt nonsense thats 100% B$. any thing built anywhere is supposed to be built according to state codes (and it is the STATE that sets building codes). cities and towns issue building permits,and inspections to ensure those codes are followed within their limits. they can add to codes,but the state codes HAVE to be followed. IF you dont do this,and someone is injured because of your actions,YOUR LIABLE plain and simple. no amount of insurance,no amount of lawyers can change that. you can exceed those codes,they are minimum requirements, but every single thing you do should legally be up to your states code. on farm ,off farm.in town out of town makes not one iota's difference. ANYONE who tells you otherwise is scamming you. In your case, you might not have any problem at all for 60 years. but go to sell that house and you will bring it up to code.or take a huge hit. there is no statute of limitations on this, been there done it a thousand times. the fellow who claims his dad ran off the inspector ,will most likely have to tear that building down before selling that place, if it wasnt built up to code. ive seen that happen a hundred times also. ever notice that most lending institutions require a building inspection before they will lend money?theres a very simple way of avoiding all this, simply build it right to start with. best way to get along with a inspector? let him do his job. if somethings not right its a whole lot easier to fix when its exposed,than to go back in later. the ONLY time youll have a problem with any inspector is when you argue with them. sometimes you dont like what they tell you, in which case you get a second opinion or a waiver from the state or town,and that should go in with your deed papers for future problems that arise.
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Today's Featured Article - A Lifetime of Farm Machinery - by Joe Michaels. I am a mechanical engineer by profession, specializing in powerplant work. I worked as a machinist and engine erector, with time spent overseas. I have always had a love for machinery, and an appreciation for farming and farm machinery. I was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. Not a place one would associate with farms or farm machinery. I credit my parents for instilling a lot of good values, a respect for learning, a knowledge of various skills and a little knowledge of farming in me, amo
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