Bearskinner
Well-known member
Seems like everyone so far lives in a rural environment.
Is there really any other place for quality living. The only problem with where I live is unless you are a school teacher or work in Walmart, it isnt much else to do to make a decent living. Lots of low paid service jobs is about it. So lots of retired folks live around me.Seems like everyone so far lives in a rural environment.
Between the size of most city and suburb lots, and HHA's that dominate most suburban developments over the last 30yrs,Seems like everyone so far lives in a rural environment.
That and you can build whatever you like without asking for permission. That has some good and bad qualities if you happen to live by a low life that puts up junk, stores junk cars, boats, tractors etc like a guy a few miles from me. Another bought some land and started building a structure over a camper but never finished it, just a bunch of scrap wood nailed together and rotting in the rain.I will never move back to the 'burbs' or city. On my must list for a property is I need to be able to pee outside without being whistled at or arrested.
It is all about the Benjamins. The gov'ment cant let one dollar stay in the pockets of it's citizens, they have to take it all. We could fire 9 out of 10 government employees and never see any change in services. That is because 9 out of 10 dont do any work anyway, it is the one doing the work. Just look at any city worker doing any job. There will be 10 people at a jobsite and only one will be working, the rest will be standing around doing nothing.
An HOA in my area is highly unlikely to ever happen. Everything around me is large acreage that I suppose could be turned into a subdivision but is highly unlikely due to the topography. The hills and low areas in all the property limit the number of houses that could be built in most sites. There are a few good areas that have been developed into housing developments but no HOA to contend with and minimum of 3 acres per site. NO PERMITS from the county other than a PERK TEST for sewer to determine if soil is ok for septic system and if so, how many feet of field line is required. Other than that, no permits for design, etc is required.Gary, You are right. Here the HOA has to approve your plans ,before you can go to the county for a permit. Glad I am not a part of that. They can have their subdivisions, I will keep living my rural life style.
I wouldnt think you needed permits or any other "permissions" to replace in kind any electric panel. If you intend to upgrade to more amps then yes as example replacing a 100 amp panel with 200 amp even if you only use 100 amps of the capacity. The box would be capable of adding circuits to fill up the 200 amp capacity which is why they want a new service line. 10K for a service line inside a city seems a bit much even by California standards. You couldnt be running that far in a city. Rural areas I could see when you might have to run 1/4 mile or more.I grew up on a 55 acre hobby farm in a town of 1,200.
Today, I live three miles from the beach in San Diego... recently got a place with almost a quarter acre corner lot in a neighborhood with no HOA. My last place was a block from the beach in an HOA so I know the struggles with that.
I too feel your pain with the permitting requirements to do just about anything. I'm currently debating with the electric company about why I need to dig a $10k trench and run a new service line just to replace my aging electric panel.
Most things I just avoid permits by keeping projects indoors or small enough to slide under the radar. That's what most people around here do... only things I want to permit are major renovations, additions, or something like a new electric panel so my insurance doesn't come back to bite me if anything ever happens.
I wanted to do a 6 foot high freestanding wall in sections but I will need plans and permits for that. Maybe if I can figure out how to put the plans together and get somebody to show me how they need the rebar tied together I'll do it myself.