GTFO IAN đđđ
22Doing storm prep here in Tampa . Not SUPER-worried but things keep changing (and will for awhile).
Weâre not in a flood zone (& in the lowest Evacuation Zone âEâ) so thereâs that. I slept thru Irma in 2017 but that was mild compared to this.
We are stocked with supplies and dog food and people food. Boarding the windows later today before the rain starts. Right now itâs sunny and 90 with 101 heat index. Iâm going to miss that.
Hope all you fellow Fla meh-tizens stay safe!! Also those further inland that might be affected. â€
- 24 comments, 76 replies
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I was busy doing prep stuff and went outside around sunset. I honestly and legit stopped dead in my tracks after opening my front door and said âJesus Christ!â when I saw the sky tonight. Iâve been through blizzards, tornadoes, hurricanes, and pretty much all of it and never saw a sky that looked as creepy as what I saw tonight. It was wild and Iâm really not sure what to make of it. Everything was this weirld purple/yellow/pink color.
@Bingo
OMG! Itâs really kind of beautiful, except for what it portends.
@Bingo @Kyeh God: âIâve got thisâ
@Bingo This photo reminds me of the times my mom used to tell a story from her days as a Navy Nurse while stationed in Pensacola. The memories of that day stuck with her for decades.
She and her roommates attended a late afternoon showing of the movie âOn The Beach,â starring Ava Gardner & dreamboat Gregory Peck.
The basic gist of the movie isâŠâAfter World War III, Australia is the only remaining haven for mankind. However, wind currents carrying lingering radiation all but condemn those on the continent to the same fate suffered by the rest of the world.â
Knowing enough about radiation poisoning, the subject matter shook them up just a wee bit, so when they walked out of the theater just as the sun had dropped over the horizon, you can imagine how rattled they were to be met with a sky that looked like a scene out of the movieâabsolutely post-apocalyptic.
Everything was lit in unearthly shades of orange, pink, & red. When they looked at each other, it was like all the blues & greens in their world had simply vanished. Zero breeze, and deadly quiet. No birds singing, no sounds of traffic. Just silence. She said the sky was filled with the most unusual cloud formations they had ever seen. It was like the world had just stopped and they were the survivors of whatever had happened while they were watching the movie.
Thanks for bringing back a memory
My kids & husband are battening down the hatches down in the Jax area while Iâm 900 miles away keeping an eye on my dad while he does dad things that make me want to cover my eyes. All I can do is watch the tracking and hope when the worst of the winds hit theyâll be blowing the HUGE pines in our yard AWAY from our house.
@Bingo This scares the hell out of me. Iâve taken pictures of fire skies that look like this (Iâm in Southern California).
Never a good look. Just not normal at all.
@Bingo @LaVikinga The worst part about southern pines is their tendency to snap off halfway up, and land with even greater force than if theyâd been uprooted.
@Bingo @LaVikinga @werehatrack
I can well remember driving thru the area that Michael devastated in the Panhandle on the way to check on my SILâs beach house on St George Island and seeing mile of fields with pine trees snapped off about 20 ft up⊠and that was 100 miles from the coast!
Orlando here. Also have a 22 year old son named Ian. My husband and I have been using the term hurricane Ian for quite some time. Itâs nice that others are sharing in it now. Husband works at the cape. They sent everyone to work from home this week, after they battened down the hatches Monday at work. Hopefully it wonât be another Charlie. Stay safe mehtizens!
Iâve been wondering if youâve had to evacuate! There are a lot of Florida mehtizens, too. I hope you all stay safe!
Orlando here. At this point, weâve been through so many of the damn things that we really arenât fazed anymore. Sure, we fueled up and load tested the generator, but thatâs about it so far. Since my bedroom is the only room with a window A/C unit, everyone huddles in there with the inflatable animals for movies and snacks if the power goes out. The last truly worrying storm we got in our neighborhood was Charley in 2004. Damage was limited to a few downed trees and some soffit knocked off the back corner of the roof.
A photo of the approaching storm I took from the Super Target parking garage yesterday:
@PooltoyWolf what a great shot! I like youâre âhunkering downâ plans
@llangley Maybe I should take a picture of said room.
@PooltoyWolf That picture is not very calming. Hope it all looks better today.
@phendrick Right now, itâs a bit breezy and drizzling. Expecting things to pick up considerably tomorrow.
BIL and ex-SIL (and nieces) are in FL. (Orlando and Tampa area). Both seem prett well prepared and neither is too close to the coast so water from the storm surge shouldnât be a (direct) impact on them. Hopefully power will be quickly restored, water systems wonât be drastically impacted, and everyone will be smart and stay safe when the winds start up for real.
Good luck and keep us posted.
@chienfou Looks wimdy!
Yeah. Iâm in St. Pete more or less (Pinellas Park for locals) and this one is gonna suck. No way around it. Hoping for the best, but prepping for the worst. At this point, itâs pretty much up to Mother Nature, God, Vishnu, Spaghetti Monster, or whomever that it stays a bit to the west of us so that we miss the worst of it. But no matter what, we are gonna have 24-48 hours of just absolute suck. Ugh. This sucks.
I sincerely hope any of you locals are okay.
@Bingo yeah, itâs that 24-hour slow crawl up the coast between Weds and Thurs
@Bingo Your personal best bet is that it either goes way to the west or far enough to the east; the north and east sides of a northbound hurricane are the areas with the highest winds and rain in nearly every case. If the eye runs along just on the coast, youâll get the full brunt. Much also depends upon the range of the gale-or-higher winds; when David missed Miami by a fairly narrow margin several decades back, we felt literally no effects at all at a point three miles inshore. That same distance from the center of Ike would have been full-on Cat2.
Made it - whew. Had a neighborâs tree branch fall on the shed but it doesnât look like it was damaged. We never lost power fullyâŠit kept shutting down but came right back on. Feeling truly blessed this morning and sending good thoughts and prayers to those down south that took the brunt that we were supposed to get. Also to those of you still in the thick of it⊠please update if you can.
@llangley Really happy to hear it!!!
Thanks for letting us know.
Hope everyone on the coast there stays safe. I have multiple family members in Tampa and a friend on the canal. As one said, âLet the games begin.â. Fingers crossed for all of you.
@Kidsandliz thanks. One of our local weathermen always says âdonât freak out unless Iâm freaking outâ and he isnât. Yet.
@Kidsandliz @llangley I donât want to alarm anyone, but Jim Cantore showed upâŠ
My parents (Oldsmar) are leaving town, which they rarely do. The teenager next door is a weather nerd and went door to door telling people to gtfo.
@kostia Thank that weather nerd, please.
@OldCatLady We have!
Good luck all.
I met my wife in Ybor City. I lived in St. Pete/Tampa for about seven years. We left North in 2002, but we saw a half dozen scary storms show up in that time. Thankfully they all did a hard left or right before hitting the coast and the worst we saw was flooding on Bay Shore. We were lucky. But Iâve filled my share of sand bags.
Be safe you guys.
Well its all downhill from here-said we were going to get 20-25 inches of rain-got 5 1/4. Our electricity provider is âPeace River Electric Coopâ. Have you ever heard of a name that inspired less confidence than that? Anyway during the height of the storm in Manatee county 34k out of 36k who had PRECO had lost power and out of their entire service area of 55k, over 75% had lost power.
Keeping my fingers crossed with the wind decreasing, we only lost power for 15 minutes so far today.
@Felton10 In southern Dade after Andrew, the power loss rate was almost exactly 100%. They had megavolt lines and even some long-distance transmission towers down. Huge reinforced concrete power poles littered the streets in pieces. For a while after the storm, you either had your own generator or you were out of luck. A Home Depot store near my parentsâ house was completely flattened; a hotel across the highway was an empty steel framework when the winds died down. Fortunately, they had told everyone to leave, and the structure was unoccupied when the storm hit.
@Felton10 Please update.
@OldCatLady We were really lucky like I said-only 15 minutes without electricity and no damage to our house. Some damage in our community. Live oak on the other side of tee box in back of our home blown over.
Slats in back fence destroyed like they were pick up sticks
But Walter and I took it all in stride
@Felton10 @OldCatLady
AND you even got an IRK, right?
@Kyeh @OldCatLady Yes-last night on the first one offered so everything is normal.
We got very, VERY lucky here in the Tampa/St. Pete area. About 24 hours before landfall, it was still coming right at us and we would have been in the same situation Ft. Meyers is. Itâs such a weird thing to be so grateful something utterly devestated someone else instead of you. Iâm heading back to my house in the AM, but neighbors have told me all looks well. Unless something inside went sideways, weâve come out of it with nothing more than a downed fence and a tree. This one scared the hell out of me and Iâm immensely grateful for being spared.
@Bingo
@Bingo Being grateful you were spared is not the same thing as being happy someone else wasnât (but I get why it makes you think that way - been there myself). Think of it this way, you being spared means there are more resources available for those who really need them. With a storm like this, weâll take all the good news we can get! Glad to hear one was you.
One thing yâall can do in Florida is to get rid of DeSantis and his cronies in November after the human trafficking stunt he pulled last week.
Especially if heâs going to be begging for taxpayer dollars from my state after Ian does to Florida what Fiona did to Puerto Rico.
Unity has to work both ways, Florida.
@mike808 Oh, for a storm guidance system to focus weather where it should be. Mar-a-Lardo needs attention.
@mike808 Iâve been trying and will continue to do so! MoRon DickSantis must go!
@OldCatLady Agreed
@llangley @OldCatLady
The forecast is ⊠moist weather ahead.
@llangley @mike808 Looks pretty moist to me.
@llangley @OldCatLady @mike808 Is it too much to ask for Ian to take out both of those useless turds & leave the rest of yâall alone? But seriously, i hope you guys donât get hit too hard. Stay safe!
@mike808 Please donât read this in an antagonistic tone, and please donât let this devolve into a political debate. This isnât the place, and I probably donât have the political views youâll think I do, anyway.
DeSantis didnât summon the storm to Florida. This thread isnât a ârant about politicians you donât like who preside in a state you donât live inâ thread, itâs a ârant about weather you canât control and seek unity and comfort together thread.â
If you care about unity, why are you saying divisive things, bordering on slander, about a politician over 50% of people in Florida voted for, and who has policies about 50% of the country generally agree with? Iâm not a DeSantis apologist and I donât agree with the stunt he pulled at Marthaâs Vineyard, but I can understand why he did it (partly to pander to his base, sure). That said, itâs not even close to the same thing as human trafficking. Itâs divisive to say it is.
Unity goes both ways. I hope you gets whatever federal funding you need from my state whenever an unfortunate natural disaster affects you. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
@Weboh Please post more often. You are a breath of fresh air here.
@Weboh âUnityâ isnât a rationalization for tolerating abuse. It is an excuse an abuser uses to continue perpetrating the abuse.
@mike808 @Weboh And âunityâ that only goes one way is enabling the abuse.
@mike808 DeDumbass has been on TV non stop touting what he is doing for the people of Florida during Ian. Not once did that piece of shit mention what FEMA and Biden promised to do for the state. He is so obsessed with winning over the MAGA retards, he refuses to acknowledge anything that is inconsistent with their brainwashed thoughts.
@mike808 @Weboh I donât quite get your point, since i donât think anyone is saying that just because some Floridians have poor taste in politicians, they shouldnât get help after a natural disaster, i think it was more an effort to point out the hypocrisy of the situation. But since you brought it up, i think it might help to clarify the facts. Just because Ronny DeDumbass didnât send those poor people to other states at gunpoint, it doesnât mean it wasnât human trafficking, which is defined by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (unodc.org) as the following (which, from all reports Iâve heard so far, EXACTLY fits the description of what he did):
Human trafficking is the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of people through force, fraud or deception, with the aim of exploiting them for profit. Men, women and children of all ages and from all backgrounds can become victims of this crime, which occurs in every region of the world. The traffickers often use violence or fraudulent employment agencies and fake promises of education and job opportunities to trick and coerce their victims.
@ircon96
The point of my previous comment wasnât to argue semantics with mike808, it was an attempt to keep this from spiraling into a partisan debate. Thatâs the point of this comment, too.
Itâs not hypocritical to ask for aid. The whole point of that stuntâwhich, again, I donât endorseâwas to ask for aid (with the illegal immigrant issue). Thereâs no conflict between those two goals; I would argue there was no reason to even bring it up in a thread about a hurricane.
What ishypocritical is to call for unity and say divisive, inflammatory things in same breath. Regardless of whether it technically fits the definition of human trafficking, the term is usually used as a euphemism for (sex) slavery. Thatâs why the media used that term: to evoke a strong reaction.
I donât expect to change your mind o on this issue. In fact, I kind of agree with you! Iâm just trying to keep this as civil as possible and reduce rancorous, partisan debate. I think we can all agree using people as political pawns is a wrong thing to do. Itâs easier to find unity if we can talk about it in those terms (and if we use politiciansâ real names instead of resorting to name-calling).
@Felton10 I think every governor of every state ever is on TV nonstop during a crisis to say how much theyâll help. Using a tragedy to get political points is par for the course in any party, unfortunately.
No matter what governor Florida had, and no matter what president the US had, the state would get basically the same amount of money from FEMA. Rightwing, leftwing, centerâdoesnât matter. Can we focus on the positive, instead? We have funding to help people that need it. Not every country has that during a crisis.
Modern politics always focuses on the negative because that gets more engagement. Letâs beat the system and be more meh about it, finding middle ground.
@Weboh While i agree that civil discourse is (almost) always preferable, some especially egregious, craven specimens of humanity just beg for an epithetic nickname! But seriously, if Ronny were truly interested in getting help with the understandably overwhelming situation, heâd get together with the other governors & federal agencies & work out a solution, not play childish games in an attempt to âown the libsâ at the expense of exhausted, desperate, often traumatized migrants who are following the procedures currently in place to seek asylum, rather than so-called âillegalâ immigrants (another loaded phrase used to rile up the masses). Whether or not they meet the criteria is a matter for the courts to adjudicate, and in the meantime, yes, all states should be helping to ease the burden at the borders, but they canât have the resources in place if these MAGA disciples insist on pulling cruel, cynical stunts instead of acting like rational human beings.
@Weboh Ps- i almost forgot, i wanted to reassure you that we here in the New England states, including Massachusetts, are sending lots of crews down there to help, so thereâs no pettiness being sent down that way from us, just good will in your time of need. Stay safe!
@ircon96 @Weboh And because DeSantis did engage in trafficking, he just qualified all of those asylum seekers for a fast track U-Visa (reserved for victims of a crime, which is what they are now). Thanks, DeSantis!
@ircon96 I agree with almost everything you said. I would only add that civil discourse is always preferable and name-calling is never helpful.
If itâs okay for you to insult a select group of people on one side of the aisle, then itâs okay for them to insult a select group of people on your side of the aisle, which antagonizes them to do more extreme things which makes more of them worthy of insult, which makes them insult more of the people on the other side⊠and thatâs how we wound up in the current political state.
If you treat everyone with respect, you make them more likely to respect youâand hopefully your opinion, too. If you start out a conversation with epithetic nicknames, you put people on the defense and make them less receptive to your ideas, even if you make good points.
@ircon96 @mike808. Nice Double Standards there!
@Weboh - excellent points.
You do realize that those flown to MV had already been âtraffickedâ by Biden? Middle of the night flights into Florida. And BTW, Biden encouraged those illegal immigrants in the first place!
But hey, letâs inject politics where it doesnât belong.
Liberals ⊠always empathetic to others, except when it comes to Conservatives. Defiant L nails the hypocrisy!
@ircon96 @MarkDaSpark @Weboh
You do realize that âBidenâ didnât issue a Presidential Order to the DHS (Rule 42) forcing them to implement the âwhack-a-moleâ hide-and-seek practices used by ICE to create this clusterfuck in the first place. That trophy, of course, goes to TFG.
So can you try to stay at least fact-adjacent, 'mkay?
I have no empathy for chronic serially abusive sociopaths. And I wonât feel guilty about it.
@MarkDaSpark
@mike808 LOL
I just wish youâd be anywhere in a suburb close to fact-adjacent! Your TDS is showing.
Anyway, time to get back to the natural disaster and not the unnatural one in DC!
@MarkDaSpark
When Ron DeSantis was a newly elected congressman representing Jacksonville, FL, he voted against a 9.7 billion dollar aid package for victims of hurricane Sandy in 2013.
Source: Congresional record.
@MarkDaSpark
The vote was on Jan 4, 2013 - the day after he was sworn in.
âThis âput it on the credit card mentalityâ is part of the reason we find ourselves nearly $17 trillion in debt,â DeSantis said, explaining his vote.
@MarkDaSpark Thanks, but I think you missed my main point. If you agree we shouldnât talk politics in this thread, why bring it up again after political discussion had died down?
You also resorted to name-calling and made your point in a way that wouldnât be likely to change someoneâs mind. All it did was evoke a reaction from mike808 and make both of you feel justified about the positions you already held.
Letâs try to keep Meh free from the kind of political cockfighting thatâs too common elsewhere. You can make political arguments, (on appropriate threads) but do it in a civil way that encourages discussion.
Example: At first, it looked like @ircon96 and I totally disagreed. A rational discussion revealed we actually agreed on all the basic points of the discussion. Not completely, not on semantics or specifics, sure. If I had started out the way you did, saying âyou liberals alwaysâŠâ he would have countered with âyou conservatives alwaysâŠâ and then we would have come out of the conversation thinking âthe other side of the aisle is alwaysâŠââfinding no middle ground but remaining firm in our belief that all the people on the other side of the aisle are worthy of disrespect because they all hold the same incorrect view.
Letâs do better.
Thanks to all of you living through this for keeping us up to date on your safety and conditions. Lots of positive meh generated energy headed your wayâŠ
I just wish Ian would hurry up and hit Cuba so we can get a better idea of where he is going. I am hoping I donât have to move my cactus. I have way to many for this shit now.
@yakkoTDI I know what you mean! For whatever reason I have most of my plants in containers so Iâve spent most of the day moving most of them to the lanai. Itâs not âhurricane-proofâ but at least they wonât be hurtling around the neighborhood. I hope. Will finish up tomorrowâŠ
What area are you in?
@llangley I am just south of Tampa.
OK-so far. Probably 65 mph winds to max of 80 somewhere around late this afternoon or this evening. Still have power so that is a good thing. Walter knows something is up. Thanks for asking.
Looks like itâs going to hit just north of the Punta Gorda - Port Charlotte area as a category 4. Thatâs going to push a shitload of storm surge into that bay. And this is a big one, if the radar imaging can be believed. We may very well be looking at another Charlie.
@werehatrack Not to make light of the seriousness, and Iâm sure you didnât mean it that way, but when I saw âif the radar imaging can be believedâ I wonder how many people will still call this just part of âthe global warming hoax.â Apparently about 38% of the country still thinks that, and ironically, even more in Florida.
@werehatrack thatâs what our local weatherman says tooâŠjust like Charlie. Up through the middle through Orlando again. Weâre still in for some heavy winds here but it sounds like it wonât be as bad as was expected. Sure hope you guys down south are okay. Anyone hear from @Felton10? I thought he lived around Lakewood RanchâŠ
@pmarin The problem is that radar is based on cloud cover, and precipitation, and without the animation to show what the rate of rotation looks like, itâs hard to judge the actual severity of the storm. Size, yes. Severity - not so much. A lot of really nasty hurricanes have not looked terribly bad on the radar, and some with a huge radar footprint have been relatively weak in the wind area, but by golly they delivered too much water.
@Felton10 @llangley
He said this yesterday in the blame thread: https://meh.com/forum/topics/what-goats-with-white-wine-september-2022-scapegoat-blame-thread#6332571ace1e1b45da3a9864
Felton, are you guys okay?
llangley, Iâm relieved to hear that itâs probably not going to be too bad for you!
@Kyeh thanksâŠ
I donât do the blame thing (nothing against it) so I forget to check that thread .
@Felton10 Good to hear. Hoping everyone in the path stays safe. This oneâs a bitch
@Kyeh @llangley Worst in 20 years we have been in Florida.
@Felton10 For your area, yeah. I was at ground zero for Andrew in '92. And we got the eye of Cleo three decades earlier.
Southern Hillsborough County here. Lots of blowing but not as much rain as I was expecting. We will probably get a lot more rain tomorrow. I got family up in the Altamonte Springs area and they are getting a lot of rain.
If the track forecast is correct (rarely the case), the folks around Port Charlotte and Punta Gorda have a lot to worry about from storm surge. But if the track shifts north (as my instincts tell me is probable) then Bradenton and Sarasota could get the worst. OTOH, itâs only forecast to be Cat2 when it makes landfall, which isnât all that bad. (Says the person whoâs been through five direct hits and a few near misses, including a Cat5.)
OMG - Iâm looking at footage from Naples that shows waist-deep water flooding a fire station.
@Kyeh The storm surge was aimed pretty much directly at that part of the coast, and on up through the Port Charlotte area. Anything low-lying (which is pretty much everything, that far south) within a mile of the shoreline was likely to get some of it, and thatâs a big chunk of the city.
NOLA sends thoughts and prayers.
@mike808 ThanksâŠIt feels like Tampa is becoming a pro at escaping these but (as with Hurricane Charlie) we were So. Fucking. Lucky. Those surges that went through Fort Myers would have devastated downtown Tampa. Iâm dreading the A.M. damage reports
forty years ago, I knew a roofer in Miami whose crew would have put those in the right place, and attached them with deck screws instead of nails. His roofs survived Andrew.
âLicensed and bondedâ means less than it used to in this age of regulatory capture and fast-cycle business dissolution.
@werehatrack Exactly. Union means trained, demonstrated skills, and experienced. The difference in the union pay scale is you pay more for more of those abilities.
And to pay for the freeloaders and ârecipientsâ (as Republicans like to demonize them) within the union in right-to-work-for-less states.
@werehatrack I think modern hurricane code requirements are to use deck/wood screws and/or hurricane straps. The high winds actually create a significant lifting force on the leeward side of the roof, depending on the orientation to the wind.
Something they learned in Andrew. Apparently everywhere else along the Gulf Coast learned those lessons long before Andrew. Then again, Florida has always been a bit slow on the uptake. Somebody gotta make Alabama and Mississippi not feel so bad about themselves, you know.
@mike808 @werehatrack Hey Mike, I thought we agreed politics donât belong on this thread. Itâs certainly not the place to dump on Florida (Ike already did that ). Itâs a place to support Floridians.
Besides, youâve already made it clear you donât have a full understanding of Floridaâs politics or policy (or that of other southern states). And why would you? You arenât from Florida. These comparisons youâre making might be welcome if they were informed and you made them with a different tone. As is, it just clutters up the thread with the back and forth between you and @chienfou.
Alabama and Mississippi deserve more respect, too. Even if they are backwaters ruined by bad political views, as you seem to imply, theyâre also states full of people who generally agree with those policies. None of these statesâ policies even affect you.
If you truly care about unity, give people the benefit of the doubt and consider there may be a good reason they do what they do. An argument like the one youâve made wonât change anyoneâs mind.
@Weboh
And Germany was full of fascist racists in the last century. Doesnât make states full of racists now any more âokayâ just because a minority of vocal extremists like it that way. Or that I have to think it is okay because you donât have a problem with it being popular.
Itâs fine. You are all in for race-to-the bottom wages that donât support living wages, against healthcare as a human right, and against investing in a trained, skilled, and educated workforce. Agree to disagree.
I do support Floridians in the same way they support gun violence and womenâs bodily autonomy. Thoughts and prayers.
@mike808
/giphy thatâs bait
How is this in any way conducive to good discussion? What was the endgame here?
@Weboh If you were truly interested in a âgood discussionâ, then you shouldnât use bad faith fallacies in making your case about having one. I guess the Godwin reference was too subtle for you.
And apparently, so was the irony of the original image posted as a fucking joke about tips to avoid shitty reconstruction after a hurricane.
Have a nice day, Karen.
For those rebuilding:
Union carpenters matter.
@mike808
Nope⊠Competent carpenters matterâŠ
@chienfou As opposed to a couple of dudes hanging out in the parking lot of Loweâs or Home Depot?
@mike808
Is that were the union hall is now?
@chienfou No, but maybe you can learn some gooder English there.
@mike808
Iâll work on it⊠Meanwhile, consider using a licensed/bonded contractor next time.
@chienfou You do realize that the only thing a âlicensed contractorâ guarantees is that the company checked the box on the form claiming they have workmanâs compensation insurance and paid the $25 license fee. There is zero qualifications for the company. There are zero customer protections and zero requirements for any employee or subcontractor to have any carpentry skills or abilities whatsoever. The subcontractors your âlicensedâ contractor have zero benefits or job protections, and are likely 1099 so your âcontractorâ can pretend theyâre not actually hiring âillegalsâ as folks want to demonize them while taking advantage of them and participating in trafficking, and screw taxpayers by looking the other way while their subcontractors get paid substandard or even below living wages. So yeah, thanks for participating in modernized legal slavery.
So tell me again how that is magically âbetterâ than a union signatory contractor, where membership requires training, skill, and experience. Do not equate âcheapâ with âqualityâ.
@mike808
While I appreciate your passion in this matter, pulling âfactsâ out of your ass doesnât make them true.
Thereâs virtually nothing in your first paragraph that is accurate in relation to licensed general contractors in Alabama. A quick Google search of the requirements will demonstrate that fact to you.
My argument is not that no one should use Union contractors. My point is that being a union member is not the only way you can get those skills.
BTW can you provide any details on that picture, such as where and when it was taken. I would hope that the building inspector had a few things to say about thatâŠ
@chienfou I looked up the requirements for a âcontractor licenseâ in my state, and the results were - surprise - there arenât any, other than assuring there is workerâs compensation insurance in place. Thatâs it. No requirement for skilled workers, trained workers, workers being paid fair, liveable wages, ⊠nothing.
I didnât say you were against hiring union workers. I was pointing out that there is no evidence to suggest that the mere posession of a âcontractorâs licenseâ supports the your claim that they are equivalent or superior to a union carpenter (or a contractor that uses union carpenters, called a signatory contractor, btw).
If you have sources that Alabama licensed contractors are required to use union carpenters or in the alternative, have formal training, qualification, and experience requirements, then I will certainly be surpised. My hunch is you canât reference anybsuch sources because they donât exist. So as much as you would like your claims to be true, that doesnât make them so.
So I stand behind my claim that union carpenters are going to deliver a superior work product in hanging joists properly than your vague, unproven claims of false equivalence to a general âlicensed contractorâ.
@mike808
Wow. Where to start
The post is about Florida⊠is that where you live now?
(from the FLORIDA statutes):
ââCertified contractorâ means any contractor who possesses a certificate of competency issued by the department and who shall be allowed to contract in any jurisdiction in the state without being required to fulfill the competency requirements of that jurisdiction.
Again⊠Alabama, not Florida, but:
If the application is satisfactory to the board, then the applicant is entitled to an
examination to determine the applicantâs qualifications.
The application process includes financial and reference requirements
(quote): Applicant must attach a total of THREE reference forms (pages 12 â 14) from
ANY COMBINATION of the following:
(1) Licensed General Contractor
(2) Registered Architect
(3) Registered Professional Engineer
(4) Qualified person as declared by the Board
All work referenced must be commercial/industrial work completed in prior years in the
classification(s) requested within this application.
References must be completed by individuals who have supervised commercial/industrial work completed by the applicant.*
Iâm not sure where I claimed that. I merely suggested that using COMPETENT people would also work. Not having a union card is NOT a guarantee that work will be done that is sub-par, any more than having one is a âguaranteeâ that work will be done properly. Thatâs why they still have building inspectors inspect jobs that use signatory contractors.
Oh BTW, Iâm still waiting for the details on the pic you postedâŠ