This is topic Contractor's Licenses, who needs 'em? in forum Old Archives at The Letterville BullBoard.


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Posted by AdrienneMorgan (Member # 1046) on :
 
In California.........

1.Who needs one?

2.Do I need one just to paint windows and walls?

3, When are they required?

4. How do I find out if I have to have one?

5.Does everyone have to have one? Or just for certain jobs?

Adrienne

[ May 03, 2002, 01:05 PM: Message edited by: AdrienneMorgan ]
 
Posted by Rick Sacks (Member # 379) on :
 
I think that there is a dollar amount that determines when you need a license. Used to be $300, but that changes. Bidding a job above that amount is contracting without a license. You need one to protect yourself from our government.

A contractors license in California does not make anyone a better mechanic or business person, only a legal one. You get tested on your knowledge of laws; some pertaining to practices with employees and some with customers. You get trained about taxes and leins and witholdings, and a very little bit about the trade.

A sign contractor in this state has a specialty license that is bundled up with garage door installers and other such trades. The electrical license is a whole different category as is the big structural stuff.

Get as many of these as you can! They cost $300 each every few years, and you're also required to be bonded. Buying these licenses provides the state with the needed funds to go after those yet unlicensed.
 
Posted by VICTORGEORGIOU (Member # 474) on :
 
Hello Adrienne, I hope you are feeling better following your recent mishap.

Rick has it correct as best as I can tell. Perhaps he is being tongue in cheek about "getting all the licenses you can"?

The license isn't about you, its about the other guy. Think of it like a driver's license. Just imagine the lack of knowlege of someone who cannot pass a CA driver's test. It helps keep the worst of the worst off the road.

So the law is meant to protect the public from you.

At the same time,it can help you get work. You can go online to see if a license is current and valid. You can pull a building permit by yourself. When you bid a job to, say, Marine World, the license shows them that you meet some minimum level of knowlege, that you have a bond posted at the state for their protection,and so on. Big companies like licenses. It helps cover their rear ends if the balloon goes up.

There's way too much chicken blip in the license process.

I still have a valid CA contractors license. I think it is good for business, notwithstanding the chicken blip. Vic G
 
Posted by AdrienneMorgan (Member # 1046) on :
 
Bottom line here.....

What am I legally obligated to have?

I'm not running out and spending 300+ bucks just in case it might be neccessary to have one (remember, I'm off work till my foot heals)

I don't know of any other sign people (other than Rick and Victor) who have one, or have ever had one....I've been asking.

Adrienne:)
 
Posted by PKing (Member # 337) on :
 
My Alabama "Contractors License" cost $30.00 per
Year.
Individual City License about the same,needed in
4or5 cities I work in.
Cheaper than Yellow Page Ads,while avoiding FINES
Hope this helps
 
Posted by Randy Campbell (Member # 2675) on :
 
In Ontario Canada you need a permit and Liabillity insurance to do walls windows or anything where the public may be around.
 
Posted by VICTORGEORGIOU (Member # 474) on :
 
Every one of us is a lawbreaker - who really drives the speed limit, for instance.

So it is matter of how much you are breaking the law. Nobody cares if you paint a window because it is not part of the structure, and there are no safety issues. Nobody is going after you for digging an occasional posthole for a short sign that has no safety risk. It's about safety and integrity. The only way you might get in trouble is if you really honked someone off and they called the license board. The state won't even come out if a third party complains unless there is a serious infraction. They are too busy chasing the serious scumbag contractors, and there are some real bad guys out there.

On a risk scale of 100 your risk is about 0.5, in my estimation. Just don't start erecting 30 foot pole signs. (yuk yuk) Vic G
 
Posted by AdrienneMorgan (Member # 1046) on :
 
Dang, Victor!!! And just when I was about to start doing 30 footers too!!!
A;)
 
Posted by Shane French (Member # 2098) on :
 
Perhaps a safe way to handle this is to cut-out installs? Just sell a product (sign)?

Interesting topic.

-shane
 
Posted by Si Allen (Member # 420) on :
 
In California...technically...if you don't have a contractor's license, and do a job over $300...the customer can refuse to pay you!

How's them fer onions?

[Eek!]
 


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