
15 October 2013 | 6 replies
Hill Air Force Base is one of the largest employers here.....my husband works there and is a Air Force Reservist.

2 November 2013 | 22 replies
We did quite a bit of work on the property:- Every light fixture replaced including new ceiling fans- Took everything out of the kitchen and bathrooms and redid them including new cabinets, new flooring, and new granite counter tops, plus added a stainless steel dishwasher and over the range microwave- Landscaping- New garage doors (3.5 car garage) and new garage roof- New central air- Plumbing and electrical repairsA couple "before and after" pictures of the kitchen:Total cost in was $87,332.40.

31 January 2014 | 4 replies
They itself remove it and done air quality test after removing pipes to check the presence of asbestos in air.

7 December 2013 | 6 replies
I aired out some of my own dirty laundry ...The Midas Touch . . . or maybe not.

16 July 2014 | 33 replies
Even if two of the big items are done, you still have 7 air conditioners, 7 stoves, 7 fridges, etc.

21 October 2013 | 7 replies
We will start airing the entire event (sans classical guitarist Zane Forshee) starting this weekend.
13 November 2013 | 22 replies
A few months ago I just logged my first few hours of turbine time in a King Air 200 ... only 497 more hours until I can be insured in one!

10 September 2014 | 24 replies
I write the whole process in an earlier post in this thread, when I initially had a contract, it had no mold, and when they had to re-foreclose due to their closing attorney waiting till the last minute to correct a technical error, then didn't pay the electric bill for six months while they wait for the process to get sorted out, no air conditioning indirectly caused the mold to multiply.

24 October 2013 | 5 replies
(Georgia summers wreak havoc on forced air systems.)

29 October 2013 | 7 replies
This puts you around $1,200 additional dollars.A 1,200 square foot house, exterior paint and interior paint, should run about $2,000.This brings your initial cash outlay to $20,000 (on the conservative side; not including Air Conditioners) This brings your ROI to 6.2%.2) You definitely want to pay for what the investment is bringing in, not on its potential.