Sentences with phrase «just hired a contractor»

We are doing some home improvements right now (just hired a contractor) to add a basement bathroom and bedroom to our home.
If it comes to more than that, then yes — you'll need to just hire a contractor (which, at that amount, would be a wise thing to do anyways.)

Not exact matches

The cloud now encompasses just about everything: Hiring contractors to develop apps remotely, real - time collaboration, and storing anything you have in a digital, distributed format.
Homeowners are «connected to» contractors that they've hired and were happy with, «just like being connected to someone on LinkedIn,» says Ehrlichmann.
However, many of the on - demand companies who have recently re-classified their independent contractors as employees — or who began doing business by only hiring so - called W2 employees — say blaming legal reasons is just a sideshow.
You'll provide the public with ongoing, verified information regarding hiring, wages and provision of community benefits throughout the life of the project, not just for your direct employees, but for contractors, sub-contractors and temp agencies.
Maintaining a rental property may just require you calling the plumber or carpenter, but sometimes it may require you to get your hands dirty and pull the wallet from your pocket in order to hire a contractor to replace a floor or repair a bathroom shower.
Just cut their hours or hire them as contractors.
Deciding between hiring employees or contractors is an important decision that defines not just working relationships, but also taxation.
Remember, if you're being hired as a independent contractor, its because the solo practitioner doesn't want to share fees with another attorney / have to pay a full time associate or he just may not have the workload for it.
With contractors, I always suggest just put your budget out there, «Hey, I'm looking to hire a virtual assistant for no more than $ 500 a month», whatever it is.
Whether that's a contractor or that's an employee it doesn't matter, you just need to figure out what do I need to get off my plate the most that either it's a task I don't like, it's a task that takes me way too much time to do and I know I could hire somebody to do it better or faster, or it's a task that I do love doing, but it still takes a lot of my time.
The economic rescue package signed into law last week also figures to provide work for lawyers, says John «Jack» Horan, a government contracts partner with McKenna Long & Aldridge in Washington, D.C. Unfortunately the newly - minted Office for Financial Stability does not have plans for a governmental hiring spree of in - house lawyers just yet — it will operate under the guise of the Treasury Department and hire outside contractors.
Most drivers for these services aren't trained professionals like taxi drivers; they're just people with cars, hired as independent contractors by Lyft.
If an agency or contractor is using a generic description for hiring purposes, they may have solved a short - term problem, but they have just created another one when that position becomes a revolving door fueled by turnover,» he told the E-Commerce Times.
Or do I just make sure I hire licensed contractors?
NOW, he is doing the work (hiring contractors, finding a house, supervising the work, etc) We have talked about 2 options: forming an LLC or just an agreement.
My question is how do you go about confirming your GCs bids, aside from the obvious getting multiple bids, and do some of you just hire out sub contractors yourself to save some money?
Really, perhaps rather than hiring a home inspector, one should hire an HVAC specialist, an electrical contractor (not just an electrician), a plumber who has specific residential dwelling expertise, a roofer, an expert insulation person, and a few other «individuals» such as a land surveyor to guarantee the work previously done... and on and on we could go.
If you need to hire a contractor to work on one room in your house and only the one room, and pay for only that room, but that contractor says, «I can't work on just that room; I have to work on the two adjoining rooms as well and I have to charge you for them.»
It just might be that hiring an architect, kitchen designer, or general contractor will help you get more kitchen for your money.
Sounds like your husband doesn't mind doing one or two of the projects you bring him — that makes him a keeper:) Just tell your him that by reading blogs and getting so many DIY project ideas that you are actually saving lots of money — no need to hire a contractor or buy super expensive materials.
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