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FYI Sumter County Building Permits and sinkhole remedation
For everyone's information all that you need in Sumter County to go online and get a copy of any building permit for work done or being done is the address of the property in question. If anyone has any trouble using the system just call the Sumter County Building department and the will be happy to help you. I would like to know if other people have used this system and if the have used this system to identify sinkhole remediation work. It is very simple to use.
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There's a fine line, I think, between staying personally informed on this and broadcasting a constant drumbeat of publicity that ruins the reputation of a neighborhood and its neighbors by pitting people against each other when they really need a unified, harmonious approach. |
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I'll Say!!!!!!!!!:BigApplause: |
Could it be the work of a malcontent troll - or (gasp) a Stonecrester?
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Or a lawyer from the law firm Dewey, Cheatum, and Howe trying to drum up some business.
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My line of thought completely. |
I thank the OP for posting the information.
What prospective buyer would not want to know about something like that? |
Please keep comments focused on the original topic.
Moderator |
Florida's Department of Environmental Protection
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/geology/feedback/faq.htm
Florida's Department of Environmental Protection Great website with commonly asked questions............many of which have been asked most recently with regard to the sinkhole problem. Many other subjects, not yet addressed..... Scroll down below the 26 hyperlinks/questions..... The answers are below, so you do not have to constantly click the hyperlinks...... Below that are yet more questions re Florida. All educational. Question 15: Is there a safe area of Florida in which to live with no chance of sinkholes? back to topTechnically, no. Since the entire state is underlain by carbonate rocks, sinkholes could theoretically form anywhere. However, there are definite regions where sinkhole risk is considerably higher. In general, areas of the state where limestone is close to surface, or areas with deeper limestone but with a conducive configuration of water table elevation, stratigraphy, and aquifer characteristics have increased sinkhole activity. The only way to ensure that you don’t purchase property that might be prone to sinkhole activity is to not buy property in a karst region. Karst refers to landforms that develop due to the dissolving away, over geologic time, of geologic materials near the surface. In most cases that material is limestone. Learn about the local geology in an area you are considering purchasing land in and find out if it is a karst region. |
As a prospective buyer in the next 6 months, this is information I'm definitely looking at. Yes things can happen anywhere, but if I can hedge my bets and stay in an area where there is not a lot of sinkhole activity, I don't think that's such a bad thing. Does anyone know if this is something that has to be divulged if you are buying one of these houses?
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Soooooooo. Getting all the information you can on a property before you spend hundreds of thousands of dollars is now a bad thing????? This is great access to information that is in place to protect us. I applaud the OP and by the way, I believe they live in Glenbrook.
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Naturally, any known or repaired sinkhole must be divulged by the seller. |
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I am posting this map again, in the hopes that people will see where reported sinkholes are and they are not. Hoping. They will SEE. http://www.securefsi.com/images/sink...e-near-map.jpg |
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I can't figure out what the gist, focus, reason and point is to the OPs post. Maybe someone can clarify it for me? By law any remediation activity to a sinkhole MUST be disclosed to a potential buyer. I am just tryin' to "hep". |
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My guess, based on this thread and others by the same OP, is that the OP is trying to gather data on repair costs for (non-catastrophic ground collapse) sinkhole damages in TV. And one possible reason for collecting that data would be to support his hypothesis that self-insurance for sinkhole damage would be worth consideration for Villagers. |
Sinkhole test before purchase
I can't argue with a sinkhole test done before purchasing a home at buyers expense. Tennessee requires seller to pay for Termite inspection before closing a home can happen.
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A test for a potential sink hole is done by an engineer and the cost is around $10,000. |
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The map above map is useless, the one of Sumter county is almost six years old.
http://fcit.usf.edu/florida/maps/pag...158/f11158.htm |
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I can't find any point on this map that I recognize. Don't understand the dots and what exactly they stand for. I kinda think this one isn't much help either. |
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