
17 August 2007 | 5 replies
Again, follow the state laws for what your state requires on this.Any items left have to be stored for a period.

29 August 2007 | 17 replies
If a guy (contractor) gives you a job cleaning Wal-Mart's parking lot, and you went to the store on your day-off and said that you'd do it for $10 less, I'd think that was pretty unethical.

30 December 2008 | 32 replies
I have no experience in construction :oops: (will def. be reading and attending store DIY classes to learn more about tiling/ flooring/ etc.).

3 October 2007 | 5 replies
Not too sure who wrote the book but you can find it at all most any local book store that you walk into!

10 January 2009 | 21 replies
In most areas, you'll need to evict them and then store their stuff for some period of time (or the court may store it for a fee).As for cleaning up the mess, I wouldn't get too carried away.

8 September 2007 | 0 replies
(I’d have to go find a building since I live in Florida and there isn’t much here taller than the WalMart store!)

25 September 2007 | 2 replies
Interesting.So far, every file I looked at here in WPB, was 3 months like klokwork, and perhaps not surprisingly, about 5 or 6 law firms doing almost all the cases, and of those, 3 or 4 doing most of that work.What I did was to build a data entry interface so that all the data I collected from the files could be stored in a MySQL database.

24 September 2007 | 5 replies
A new Costco and shopping mall with major dept stores has just been built within a mile of the location.

9 October 2007 | 9 replies
But, as you seasoned investors already probably know, the amount of information on the internet and in book stores is overwhelming!

12 December 2007 | 10 replies
I work in retail and office property, but there are others that focus just on apartment complexs, medical office buildings, drug stores, etc.