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if you have an occupancy permit and any required construction permits,
he usualy has the right to tag anything he sees in his area (electrical in this case) that he is concerned with. Most inspectors are cool about home improvements unless you are in the Oxford MI area, then he is a complete and total...well lets just say more precise than usual. Empressess #124457 The best Games a href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Multiplayer Online Games/a a href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Unification Wars/a - a href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Massive Multiplayer Online Games/abra href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Galactic Conquest/a - a href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra href=http://www.stephenyong.com/runescape.htmRunescape/abra href=http://www.stephenyong.com/kingsofchaos.htmKings of chaos/abr Eigenvector wrote: I have an inspector coming over to sign off on the grounding job that I'm having done. One question, when the inspector is present, is it his duty or job to also spot other non-code or hazardous within the structure - outside of what is being worked on? My house undoubtedly contains numerous out of code conditions, all of which are work in progress for me. So when he/she/it shows up can I expect him to reserve his comments for the job at hand or will he walk about pointing out things that need to be fixed elsewhere? |