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A
Good
morning,
ladies
and
gentlemen,
my
name
is
mark
Marianna
I'm,
the
assistant
director
of
operations
for
the
department
of
permits,
licensing
and
inspections.
Thank
you
all
for
coming
this
morning,
I
was
speaking
with
my
colleagues
earlier
this
week,
and
we
only
have
an
hour
here
and
I
could
stand
up
here
and
talk
about
demolition
for
like
eight
hours
and
not
repeat
myself.
A
So
my
thoughts
were
is
I
will
give
you
a
kind
of
a
basic
structure
of
how
things
operate,
where
to
find
information,
kind
of
essential,
essential
things
that
you
need
to
kind
of
navigate
this
you've
needed
to
the
operations
unit
of
the
department
handles
all
of
the
maintenance.
So
we
have
the
construction
side.
We
have
the
operation
side,
we
have
the
business
licensing
side.
The
operation
side
handles
all
the
maintenance,
so
it
includes
demolition.
It
includes
property,
maintenance,
fire
maintenance
and
acute
occupancy
inspections,
occupancy
maintenance.
A
For
the
purposes
of
this
conversation,
we
are
going
to
talk
about
city
sponsored
demolition,
so
there's
a
big
difference
between
private
demolitions
and
city
sponsored
demolicious
and
when
I
say
city
sponsored
demolitions,
I
mean
demolitions
that
are
funded
by
the
city.
They're
paid
for
by
the
city,
these
are
different
in
that
we
don't
have
a
essentially
a
plan
review
process
like
they
do
in
the
private
side
like
if
you
want
to
knock
down
your
garage,
you
come
in.
You
file
an
application.
A
You
set
up
a
plan,
it
goes
through
plan,
review,
there's
a
15-day
waiting
period
and
then
the
demolition
is
handled
by
whoever
you
hire
to
do
it.
On
the
cases
of
public
demolitions
or
city
sponsored
demolitions.
The
entire
process
goes
through
the
department
it's
handled
by
myself
and
by
colleague
Corey
Jericho.
We
are
acquiring
a
couple
of
new
individuals
to
help
us
with
this,
and
Corey
is
the
latest
addition.
So
he's
the
one
that's
going
to
be
working
directly
with
all
of
the
accounts
for
the
city.
A
We
have
over
the
past
three
years,
taken
the
actual
demolition
process
and
changed
the
renovated.
The
entire
thing,
the
pre-qualified
contract
that
demolition
contractors
had
been
on
for
the
past
two
decades
was
old.
There
were
processes
in
there
that
didn't
exist
anymore.
There
were
processes
that
didn't
make
any
sense
anymore.
So
our
first,
our
first
duty
we
were
kind
of
charged
with-
was
to
update
the
pre-qualified
contract
that
these
demolition
contractors
apply
for
and
work
through.
A
So
it
took
us
myself
more,
the
ruffed
department,
other
cities,
we've
got
other
demolition
contracts
and
individuals
come
in
and
we
put
a
new
contract
together.
This
is
contemporary
set
of
rules
and
regulations
for
individuals
to
follow
that
are
going
to
work
for
us.
Individuals
that
do
demolitions
for
the
city
have
to
be
on
the
pre-qualified
contract.
Somebody
can't
just
walk
off
the
street
and
say
I'm
going
to
go.
Do
demolitions
from
the
city.
They
have
to
go
through
the
proof
qualify
contract.
That
is
an
application
process
through
procurement
they
fill
out.
A
They
have
insurance
requirements,
they
have
different
requirements
when
it
comes
to
how
they
conduct
business,
where
they
conduct
business
course.
It's
in
the
city
and
then
reference
requirements,
procurement
does
a
review
of
the
application
for
each
demolition
contractor.
Then
the
applications
come
to
our
department
and
I
do
reference
reviews
on
each
one
of
them.
I
do
municipal
reference
reviews,
I,
do
EPA
reviews
and
I
do
Health
Department
reviews
and
when
I
go
to
them
and
everything
comes
back.
The
application
is
then
sent
back
to
procurement,
the
individuals
that
are
on
the
pre-qualified
contract.
A
We
have
gone
through
a
great
amount
of
change
to
get
to
the
point
where
we're
at
right.
Now
we
are
running
it
much
more
efficiently
than
it
has
been
run
in
the
past.
We
have
quite
a
few
less
individuals
overseeing
this
before
this
used
to
be
a
whole
separate
unit,
just
demolition
with
the
department.
It
has
now
been
absorbed
into
operations
and
because
we
have
amended
processes
and
got
more
efficient
with
it,
we
need
fewer
people
to
do
it
and,
like
I,
said
Cory
Jericho.
A
He
also
runs
he's
the
fire
inspection
supervisor
he's
going
to
be
overseeing
the
demolition
for
us.
So
with
that
said,
like
I
said,
I
can
see
on
up
here
and
talk
forever.
If
you
do
have
a
question,
you
can
jump
in,
but
I'm
going
to
start
describing
a
little
bit
more
of
the
structure
and
how
this
operates
and
how
we
end
up
getting
to
this
point
in
getting
a
building
from
condemnation
to
raised.
So
some
of
the
some
of
the
confusion
about
this
entire
process
is
when
a
structure
is
condemned.
A
I
want
to
put
a
lot
of
emphasis
on
this
when
a
structure
is
condemned.
That
does
not
mean
it's
going
to
be
raised
raised
is
the
technical
term
for
demolishing
a
structure
so
I'm
going
to
work
that
in
and
out
each
time.
So
when
I
say
it's
raised,
that
means
the
building
has
been
raised,
or
it's
going
to
be
raised.
When
a
property
is
condemned,
it
can
be
condemned
for
a
various
amount
of
reasons
it
can
be
unfit
for
human
occupants
to
be
human
occupancy.
It
can
be
an
unsafe
structure.
It
can
be
a
hazard.
A
I
can
condemn
a
piece
of
equipment
inside
of
a
structure
making
it
condemnable.
I'll
give
you
an
example:
if
they,
if
the
gas
company
goes
in
and
they
red-tagged
a
house
that
there's
a
gas
leak
in
there,
I
can
condemn
that
house
based
on
that
gas
leak,
I'm,
actually
condemning
a
piece
of
equipment
made
the
forced
air
furnace
or
that
system
in
the
house,
so
the
entire
structure
is
condemned,
but
it's
not
going
to
be
raised,
but
it
also
under
condemnation.
A
Structures
are
not
inhabitable,
so
once
it's
condemned,
individuals
are
not
allowed
to
inhabit
a
structure.
Another
simple
one
is:
if
the
water
service
is
shut
off
on
a
structure,
level
say,
will
stick
with
houses.
If
it's
a
10
million
dollar
home
and
the
water
service
to
shut
off
it
is
condemned.
Individuals
are
not
allowed
to
live
in
a
house
without
water
service
that
creates
a
sanitary
situation.
The
water
is
the
vehicle
to
remove
sanitary
content
from
the
house.
If
it's
not
there,
you
can't
inhabit
the
house,
it's
a
very
simple
process.
A
A
Property
or
structure
can
be
condemned.
Based
on.
If
it's
going
to
be
taken
through
powers
of
eminent
domain,
the
city
wants
to
put
up
a
school.
We
need
to
take
down
these
three
houses.
The
houses
are
condemned.
They
can
no
longer
be
inhabited
we're
going
to
absorb
them
in
we're
going
to
raise
the
structures.
Another
thing
you
may
have
also
seen
on
the
news,
and
it
is
commonplace
in
this
area,
a
structure
or
a
home
being
in
condemned
because
of
a
landslide.
A
Now
we
have
multiple
landslides
going
on
right
now.
Beach
beach,
rebuild
Boulevard
has
been
on
the
news
for
quite
some
time.
We
condemned
six
single-family
homes
over
there
that
they're
not
allowed
to
inhabit
those
homes,
because
the
landslide
is
directly
behind
them.
We
can't
say
with
100%
certainty
that
those
structures
are
safe
or
they're
not
going
to
go
over
the
hill,
so
under
that
condemnation
status
nobody's
allowed
to
inhabit
them.
Do
they
have
everything
to
inhabit
them?
Yes,
but
we
can't
be
100%
sure
that
they're
not
going
to
fall
over
the
hill.
A
So
with
that
said,
the
condemnation
status
does
not
dictate
that
the
house
or
structure
is
going
to
be
demolished.
It
could
be
condemned.
It
could
be
on
the
condemnation
list
for
30
years
if
it's
structurally
sound
people
abandon
homes,
water
services
get
shut
off
any
type
of
things,
so
the
condemnation
is
one
of
the
things.
I
wanted
to
be
perfectly
clear,
because
people
will
see
a
house
being
condemned.
They'll
say:
oh,
it's
going
to
be
torn
down
here
shortly
and
that's
not
the
case.
A
Over
the
past
three
years,
when
we've
had
been
changing
and
renovating
this
system,
inventory
management
with
these
structures
is
one
of
the
most
important
aspects
of
this
entire
thing.
What
do
we
have?
What
do
we
have
to
deal
with?
What
are
the
derelict
homes?
What
are
the
abandoned
homes
would
have
the
structurally
unsound
homes.
What
what
is
their
inventory?
What
are
we
dealing
with,
so
this
is
kind
of
a
segue
that
I
was
going
to
talk
about
we're
going
to
get
to
the
website
right
here.
All
everything
with
city
sponsored
demolition
is
on
the
website.
A
You
never
have
to
call
and
ask
you,
don't
have
to
track
anybody
down.
I
publish
every
single
thing,
every
single
aspect
of
City
demolition
on
our
city
webpage
right
here
we
have
under
city
demolition,
information
on
the
right-hand
side,
I
publish
these
three
charts
right
here,
raised
under
contract
and
condemned.
That
is,
quite
literally
all
of
the
information.
When
it
comes
to
city
sponsored
demolition
Julie.
A
Can
you
open
up
the
condemned
sheet,
so
this
condemned
sheet
is
everything
that
is
condemned
currently
that
the
way
I
understand
it
in
the
way
our
inspectors
in
the
fields
understand
it
in
the
way
the
rest
of
our
staff
understand
it.
I
was
preparing
somebody
say
well,
this
house
next
to
me
is
a
dump,
and
it's
not
on
that
list.
So
I've
spent
about
two
and
a
half
years.
I
inherited
this
list.
It
had
about
1,600
structures
on
it
after
I
went
through
and
confirmed
it.
We
ended
up
with
about
900.
A
So
that's
how
many
mistakes
were
on
this
when
I
inherited
it.
So
this
is
a
content.
Every
day
inventory
that
I
go
over
to
make
sure
that
it's
correct.
It's
inherently
important
that
we
understand
the
inventory.
If
we
don't
have
a
grasp
or
hold
on
what
we
have
it's
going
to
be
impossible
to
conduct
the
business.
The
way
we
need
to
so
when
you
look
at
this,
this
is
the
street
address
the
ward,
it's
in
Lawton
block
and
the
data
was
condemned.
A
Now,
like
I
said
somebody
can
have
their
water
service
shut
off
the
property's
condemned.
It
ends
up
on
this.
They
have
their
water
service
turn
back
on
a
month
later,
it's
off
the
list,
and
you
can
also
see
on
this
list,
there's
stuff
that
goes
back
to
1999
on
here.
1991
those
homes
or
structures
may
be
structurally
sound,
but
they're
abandoned
or
they're
waiting
for
renovation
or
anything
to
that
effect.
A
So
when
you
look
at
this
list,
it
is
not
necessarily
that
these
structures
are
going
to
be
razed
and
that's
not
the
goal
of
this
program
either.
The
goal
of
the
program
is
to
find
individuals
that
are
responsible
or
find
individuals
that
can
be
responsible
to
renovate
these.
The
city
doesn't
need
more
vacant,
lots.
A
Demolishing
structures
and
then
not
improving
that
property
afterwards
is
a
gross
misuse
of
money.
I
may
have
said
that
a
little
bit
wrong,
but
if
you're
taking
something
down
and
you're
not
putting
something
back
and
we're
spending
tax
dollars
to
do
it,
what
did
you
end
up
with
so
the
goal
is
not
to
go
out
and
demolish
homes
or
go
raise
neighborhoods
or
anything
to
that
effect.
We
take
things
and
put
them
under
contract
at
our
imminently,
dangerous
of
collapse,
so
they
can
stay
on
the
condemned
sheet
for
quite
some
time.
A
Like
I
said
they
could
be
on
there
for
20
years.
The
I'll
give
you
an
example:
the
home
that
I
purchased
was
condemned
by
the
county
like
six
or
seven
years
ago,
but
it
was
never
condemned
by
the
city.
It
never
appeared
on
the
sheet
and
by
happenchance
I
ran
into
the
lady
that
owned
it
and
she
had
abandoned
it
five
years
before,
but
it
was
never
on
here.
It
should
have
been
condemned,
but
it
was
never
condemned
by
us.
So
this
inventory
is
incredibly
important
about
how
it
works
and
how
what
what?
A
What
gets
on
that
list.
So
talking
a
little
bit
more
about
the
list
and
staffing
we
brought
on
quarry
to
work
directly
with
directly
with
the
inspectors.
Now
I'm
saying
inspectors,
plural,
but
we
don't
have
inspectors
plural.
Currently,
we
have
one
individual
that
goes
out
and
is
working
with
me
to
handle
this
inventory
track.
The
inventory
posted
we
do
have
two
spots
open:
we're
going
to
bring
two
more
individuals
on
and
hopefully,
within
about
six
nine
months.
I
will
have
a
great
control
over
the
in
the
inventory
I'm
very
confident
in
this
inventory.
A
The
way
it
stands
right
now,
but
I
need
a
couple
more
boots
on
the
ground
and
I
have
them
coming.
So
that's
going
to
help
greatly
so
with
this
I
don't
want
to
get
too
far
down
the
line
without
explaining
what
you
see
over
to
my
left
over
here.
So
the
condemnation
list
is
posted
on
city
website.
You
can
go
there,
see
it
anytime,
look
at
it!
A
It
changes
every
Friday
now
I'm
going
to
be
out
of
the
office
tomorrow,
so
I'm
going
to
send
the
updates
today,
so
I
go
through
and
I
constantly
update
this
sheet
and
then
I
send
it
over
and
then
it
gets
posted
up,
but
it's
every
Friday
with
new
information,
and
you
may
look
at
that
sheet.
Up-And-Down
to
not
see
anything.
Different
I
may
have
only
changed
one
property
I
get
almost
as
many
properties
being
renovated
and
taken
off
of
this
list
as
I
do
putting
on
it.
A
Yesterday,
I
had
the
inspector
bought
me
four
properties
that
were
recently
renovated
now
occupied.
They
came
off
the
list
they
handed
me.
The
next
stack
was
five
that
one
on
it.
So
that's
how
fast
it
can
happen.
So
this
list
constantly
changes.
It's
constantly
updated,
but
your
first
point
of
reference
would
be
this
if
you're
wondering,
if
something's
condemned
it's
condemned
here,
we
do
take
one
other
spot.
I
take
these
and
I
go
into
our
permitting
software
and
they
do
get
tagged
in
the
permitting
software.
A
So
if
somebody
comes
in
and
owns
one
of
these
properties
and
they
want
to
file
a
building
permit
to
renovate
they
have
to
file
a
building
permit
to
abate
condemnation,
so
whatever
the
condition
was
that
put
that
structure
in
that
in
that
that
status,
then
they
have
to
file
a
permit
to
pull
it
out
of
that
status
specifically,
and
then
the
building
inspectors
then
monitor
that.
So
with
that
said
Julie,
could
you
move
to
the
the
under
contract
yeah?
A
So
this
is
the
other
limit
sheet
on
here
when
a.
Let
me
back
up
a
little
bit,
I
think
I'm
going
to
incorporate
this.
At
the
same
time
when
a
structure
is
condemned,
the
inspector
goes
into
the
field,
and
this
is
a
placard
in
system
that
we
use
for
these
properties.
When
a
structure
is
condemned,
this
placard
gets
put
on
it
blue.
You
now
know
we
see
it
from
the
street
the
property's
condemned
it
can
be
condemned
for
any
one
of
the
different
Code
sections
that
are
on
here.
A
It
goes
all
the
way
from
unsafe
structure,
unsafe
equipment
unfit
for
human
occupancy,
unlawful
structure,
imminent
danger
or
vacant
structures.
So
when
you
see
this
placard
go
up,
it's
going
to
appear
on
the
condemned
sheet
shortly
thereafter,
usually
within
about
two
weeks,
it
will
be
on
the
list,
so
our
inspector
goes
out
puts
up.
This
placard
comes
back
in
next
day,
two
days
later,
three
days
later
and
then
I
work
to
get
that
inventory,
put
onto
the
contempt
sheet,
so
I
jumped
ahead
a
little
bit
here.
A
So
so,
when
you
see
this,
this
means
that
the
property's
condemned
it
does
not
mean
that
right,
it's
going
to
be
demolished
doesn't
mean
it's
going
to
be
demolished.
It
doesn't
mean
that
it's
condemned
so
moving
on
to
this
next
placard,
this
next
sheet
that
we're
going
to
go
to,
which
is
under
contract,
the
process
for
raising
structure
it
gets
condemned.
It
goes
to
imminent
danger
and
then
moves
on
to
the
final
one.
This
sheet
that
you
see
here
under
contract.
A
These
are
properties
that
we
were
in
the
condemned
status,
got
asbestos
surveys
done
on
them
and
then
we're
put
out
to
bid.
So
this
very
first
one
at
the
top
where's
our
address
on
there
I
think
the
address
down
there
anyway.
So
if
you
go
across
here,
you
can
see
19.
Oh
that's
a
good
one,
1929
Brighton,
Road
1929
Brighton
Road
was
a
city
structure
purchased
back
in
the
day.
It's
also
part
of
a
larger
parcel
that
is
encompassed
by
the
Pittsburgh
school
system.
A
That
structure
was
a
party
wall
structure
that
was
condemned
when
was
that
condemned
2014,
so
it's
sat
until
three
weeks
ago
to
be
demolished.
Five-Star
is
the
company
that
was
awarded
that
contract.
We
had
about
eight
contract
contractors
submit
bids
for
this
property.
Five
star
was
the
lowest
they
came
in
at
$75,000.
Now
this
is
a
single-family
home
that
is
a
party
wall.
It's
connected.
It
shares
one
wall
with
another
house.
A
It
wouldn't
have
come
in
at
this
price
if
it
wasn't
for
topographical
issues,
big
Hills,
being
attached
to
another
property
and
having
to
be
taken
apart
by
hand,
so
that
the
remaining
property
stays
that
existing
property
remains.
This
also
now
with
a
change
in
the
system
and
processes,
we
now
finish
remaining
party
walls.
It's
part
of
the
contract.
In
the
past
we
demolish
a
party
wall
and
then
the
remaining
structure.
A
It's
that
owners
responsibility
to
fix
their
wall
and
that's
the
way
it's
always
been,
but
we're
getting
a
tremendous
amount
of
blowback
from
properties
migrating
into
bad
weather.
These
walls
not
being
finished
existing
property
owners
not
having
the
resources
to
finish
these
walls.
So
we
took
a
step
forward
and
we're
going
to
encompass
into
the
contract
the
wall
being
finished
by
the
contractor,
so
the
demolition
contractors
took
down
1929
and
India.
A
$75,000
is
also
the
cost
to
rebuild
that
wall
for
the
remaining
structure,
and
this
just
by
chance
happened
to
be
an
anomaly
that
we
got
into
where
there
were
foundation
issues
underground
stuff
that
couldn't
be
foreseen
to
put
into
the
contract.
So
this
contractor
bid
this
based
on
repairing
the
wall,
and
now
we
found
foundation
issues
and
everything
with
the
existing
home.
So
that
opens
up
another
avenue
where
we
have
to
do
a
change
order
in
the
field
not
to
get
down
into
that.
A
It's
it's
just
with
a
specific
account,
but
most
most
of
the
party
wall
structures
do
come
out.
We've
had
several
of
them
now
that
we've
done
that
we're
done
with
the
contract.
Money
done
correctly
done
right
and
the
remaining
structures
are
finished,
and
that
is
to
the
delight
of
the
individuals
that
do
own
those
properties.
A
So
with
that
said,
this
right
now
is
currently
what
we
have
under
contract
to
be
raised.
You'll
start
seeing
this
this
go
down.
This
will
go
down
relatively
quick.
Now
with
the
change
of
policies
and
processes.
Over
the
past
year,
we
used
to
write
contracts
or
bid
agreements.
If
you
have
bid
agreement
for
60
days,
if
the
building
didn't
require
an
asbestos
abatement
or
asbestos
application
on
it,
anything
that
had
asbestos
got
a
90
day
contract,
so
you'll
see
everything
up.
A
There
now
has
a
90
day
contract
on
it
and,
from
this
point
forward
we're
going
to
have
asbestos
surveys
done
on
every
single
property.
So
everything,
regardless
of
it's
an
outhouse
dog
house,
single-family
home
it
doesn't
make
any
difference.
We're
going
to
do
surveys
on
it.
This
all
came
about
through
a
slightly
different
interpretation
of
the
rule.
So
in
the
past
we
did.
We
just
did
it
strictly
on
commercial
buildings,
and
then
we
did
large
group
of
residential,
but
now
we're
going
to
do
it
on
all
of
them.
A
If
the
survey
comes
back-
and
it
is
hot-
meaning
that
there's
asbestos
in
it
abatement
has
to
happen,
then
so
that
contractor
has
to
put
into
their
bid
agreement
they're
going
to
bring
in
a
service
to
do
all
the
asbestos
abatement,
that's
going
to
make
the
cost
rise.
That
makes
the
cost
rised
on
everything.
Dumping
fees
of
a
ton
of
demolition
is
about
twenty
bucks,
but
when
it's
asbestos
Laden
it's
like
ninety
dollars,
so
when
they
go
to
the
dump
for
every
ton
of
stuff
they
take,
it
makes
the
price
rise
dramatically.
A
So,
with
with
this,
the
these
were
all
at
one
point
condemned.
They
all
got
the
blue
condemnation,
placard
put
on
it
and
then,
after
they
went
under
contract
in
the
short
term
under
contract,
they
get
put
the
imminent
danger.
Placard
gets
put
on
these
and
it's
a
short
distance
between
here
to
here
to
this,
so
the
imminent
danger
placard
you'll
see
the
leased
stuff
because
it's
up
for
the
shortest
amount
of
time.
It's
saying
that
this
is
going
to
happen.
A
This
is
going
to
go,
and
that
is
the
progression
through
that
now
to
get
to
this
point
to
being
under
contract
once
I
get
all
the
bids
back,
they
go
to
the
director.
The
director
then
signs
and
makes
it
official
that
we've
accepted
that
bid.
Then
the
inspector
goes
back
out
and
he
puts
up
the
city
demolition
placard.
When
you
see
this
red
one.
That
means
it
is
now
under
contract.
That
structure
is
going
to
be
raised
so
put
a
date
on.
It
will
say
any
point
past
this
date.
A
This
structure
is
going
to
be
taken
down,
so
we
have
condemnation
which
can
happen
everywhere.
This
can
happen
when
it
is
imminently
dangerous
or
it's
part
of
the
process
being
raised.
And
then,
when
you
see
the
city
demolition
placard,
that
means
it's
under
contract
to
be
raised.
The
structure
is
going
to
come
down
now.
One
side
note
with
the
red
placard
once
we
have
it
under
contract,
and
this
has
happened-
property
owners
all
of
a
sudden
show
up.
A
They
didn't
show
up
three
four
years:
five
years
twenty
years
now
we're
going
to
raise
the
structure
and
they
show
up-
and
they
say:
hey,
hey,
hey,
timeout,
stop
I
want
to
file
a
building.
Permit
I
want
to
fix
this
now.
Well,
that's
not
the
case
anymore.
In
the
past,
an
individual
could
show
up
here,
file
a
building,
permit
and
say
I'm
going
to
do
this.
Well,
we
found
that
that
created
some
confusion.
A
It
created
extending
problems
and
it
kept
it
in
the
inventory
of
condemnation
and
under
the
process
where
we
had
to
monitor
it
and
nothing
ever
happened
under
the
building
permit.
So
when
it
gets
the
city
placard
for
demolition
and
it
is
under
contract
and
that
property
owns
up
the
only
way
that
they
can
stop
it
at
that
point
is
to
file
an
injunction
in
court
get
in
attorney
going
from
the
judge,
the
judge.
A
B
A
Only
when
it's
under
contract,
once
we've
collected
the
bids
we
find
them.
We
have
a
sealed
deal
with
one
of
the
pre
qualified
contractors.
Then
the
property
share
on
the
property
owner
shows
up,
they
have
to
go
to
court,
they
have
to
file
an
injunction
and-
and
it
can
also
be
work-
experiences
right
now-
there's
an
individual
living
in
the
property.
A
So
the
question
was
what
contractor
ends
up
with
the
job,
so
when
I
put
it
out
to
bid
the
pre
qualified
contractors
submit
bids
to
raise
the
structure
under
the
specifications
I
put
in
the
bid
agreement
and
whatever
comes
in
the
lowest,
that's
the
one
I
take
by
virtue
of
the
pre-qualified
contract,
they're
all
qualified
to
do
the
work.
So
whoever
comes
in
at
the
lowest
price
gets
the
job.
A
So,
for
instance,
this
one
five
star
came
in
at
seventy
five
thousand
and
specifically
with
this
I
do
remember:
the
bids
went
up
to
about
a
hundred
and
thirty
thousand
dollars,
and
this
is
to
raise
a
single
family
home
that
was
a
party
wall
to
separate
them,
so
five
star
being
a
pre-qualified,
there
was
lowest
bid
and
responsible.
They
got
the
they
got
the
contract
so.
B
A
B
That's
how
much
good
that's
how
much
it
cost
to
do
the
work,
so
we
accept
the
lowest
bidder,
okay
and
then
that
the
value
of
that
work
we
get
on
it
is
please
the
lien
on
the
property.
How.
B
If
the
bull
behind
that
is
not
to
make
it
more
difficult
for
people,
you
want
every
help
speed.
You
know,
that's
that's
about
your
goal,
we'd
love
to
be
every
house.
It
occupies
the
reason
why
we
support
junctions,
because
people
work
full
and
building
permits
beyond
costs
that
we
develop
the
connector,
pull
the
limits
and
doing
nothing
which
is
extenuate
the
dangerous
position,
the
way
it
gets
to
where
it
becomes
so
dangerous,
the
city
action
testing,
step
in
and
expend
our
city
resources
on
someone's
private
property.
B
That
means
it's
incredibly
dangerous
and
we
can't
it's
a
lot
of
tradition.
So
we
need
someone
who's,
you
know
if
they
want
to
come
in
and
get
cheated,
that's
great.
That
shows
that
you're
serious
take
us.
Of
course
it
was
abducted.
You
know
the
court
can
order
you
to
do
certain
actions
within
30
days.
Typically,
you
know
when
Marx
was
insane,
they
win
an
injunction
or
will
say.
B
Okay,
you
know
start
showing
here
support
for
two
hours,
pool
building
permit
and
make
it
safe
within
the
next
week,
and
then
we
have
so
the
the
person
is
finally
jump.
You
have
to
jump
through
those
tests
to
make
it
safe
and
then
they
can
do
the
longer
process
to
do
at
the
department.
So
again
we
can't
just
allow
a
property
that
might
fall
down
and
hurt
someone
2%
like
that.
Just
one
other
note,
you
know
in
part
was
talking
about
the
nonlinear
structure
of
demolition.
B
So
you
know,
as
that
could
be
on
the
list
for
20
years.
You
know
maybe
it's
unoccupied,
but
it
could
just
go
straight
to
a
major
purchase
to
demolition
say
for
the
fire.
That's
that
might
be
a
dockside
home.
That
then
becomes
infinitely
dangerous
or
you
know
we
have
out
number
of
cars
that
crash
to
the
appearance.
Another.
B
A
So
like
I
was,
you
know,
there's
going
to
get
into
a
little
bit
more
of
that,
so
with
the
placard
Inge
system,
yes,
the
imminent
imminently
dangerous-
does
fall
into
the
course
of
action
to
raise
it.
But,
like
director
Kennedy
said
we
do
use
that
and
the
fire
is
a
good
example.
We
do
have
a
system
that,
when
it
happens
after
hours
or
whatever
the
case
may
be,
if
there
is
a
fire
inspectors
go
there
were
an
on-call
individual
goes
there.
The
imminent
danger
placard
will
go
up
there
and
a
lot.
A
A
lot
of
the
structures
in
the
past
year
that
were,
fires
were
taken
down,
probably
within
about
thirty
or
six
days
of
the
event,
the
actual
fire
event,
some
of
them
being
gutted
or
no
longer
viable
options
to
be
fixed
or
I
became
I.
Don't
know
if
any
of
you
saw
the
one
that
was
up
on
Mount
Washington.
There
was
a
4
for
unit
commercial
building
up
there
that
burned
and
it
had
to
go
within
seven
days.
A
Yellow
pocket,
we
can
also
use
that
in
other
situations
with
along
with,
like
the
equipment
and
stuff
like
that,
so
anything
that
produces
that
amount
of
concern
it
can
be
used.
But
these
are
the
system.
The
departing
systems
that
we
use
and
I
did
want
you
to
understand
that,
like
I
said,
the
condemnation
placard
does
not
mean
that
the
structure
is
going
to
be
raised
and
it
can
be
fixed.
A
Till
they
go
to
the
raised
sheet,
so
after
we
go
through
the
actual
process
of
raising
a
structure,
there
is
a
considerable
amount
of
time
after
the
structure
is
gone
before
it
will
appear
on
the
raise
sheet
when
it
says
raised,
those
are
structures
that
are
gone
and
part
of
this
three-year
long
maintenance.
This
only
goes
back
to
about
2012
I,
think,
and
these
were
records
that
I
could
pull
or
2010
records.
That
I
can
pull
that
I'm,
100%
sure
of
what
had
happened
there.
A
When
you
see
this
up
there,
you
could
see
a
property
being
raised
structure
being
raised
and
it
not
appearing
on
this
sheet
for
a
considerable
amount
of
time
until,
if
you
go
all
the
way
to
the
right
right
there,
where
it
says
submitted
for
payment,
that's
a
kind
of
an
internal
date,
so
the
contractor
will
go
out,
raise
the
structure,
submit
the
paperwork
to
me
and
then
I
have
to
verify
things.
I
have
to
verify.
A
Dump
slips
I
have
to
verify
you
know,
was
the
property
exterminated
before
they
demolished
it
and
make
sure
that
all
their
paperwork
is
in
line
and
once
I
make
sure
it's
all
paperwork
is
in
line.
That
date
is
when
that
actual
invoice
leaves
my
desk.
It
goes
to
our
finance
administrator
in
the
department
they
put
it
through.
The
accounting
system
get
it
assigned
an
account
number.
Then
it
moves
on
to
the
controller's
office.
The
controller's
office
mint
also
has
an
inspector,
so
the
controller's
office
inspects
every
now,
I
think
it's
almost
every
single
invoice.
A
So
every
single
invoice
that
goes
to
the
controller's
office
to
be
paid.
The
inspector
now
with
line,
goes
into
the
field
and
goes
to
that
demolition
site
to
make
sure
that
the
structure
is
gone.
We
just
had
I
just
have.
Does
the
controller's
office,
the
inspector
call
the
other
day
we
had
two
houses
on
a
piece
of
property.
We
raised
one
house
and
the
other
house
was
there
and
he
got
the
phone
as
I.
Can
this
out
still
here
we're
not
paying
his
invoice?
A
I
said
there
was
two
houses
on
the
property,
so
it's
something
that
simple,
but
he
stopped
it
or
if
the
contractor
raises
the
structure
and
leaves
his
equipment
sitting
there,
it
costs
a
lot
of
money
to
move
those
big
heavy
machines
everywhere.
So
if
a
demolition
contractors
demolishing
one
year
and
he's
got
one
three
blocks
away:
he'll,
let
the
Machine
sit
there.
Some
other
municipalities
like,
for
instance,
Baltimore
Baltimore,
has
a
demolition
budget
of
about
seven
million
dollars,
but
they
also
have
12,000
structures
that
needed
to
be
demolished
yesterday.
A
We
are
nowhere
near
that
we
I
had
an
opportunity
to
go
down
south
the
Memphis
Tennessee
to
a
conference
that
was
kind
of
an
overall
look
at
cities
with
their
like
properties.
How
to
pull
out
of
this
in
that
type
of
thing,
and
some
of
the
stories
that
I
was
hearing
from
these
other
municipalities.
We
don't
have
here.
A
Some
of
these
places
are
in
dire
straits
from
New
Orleans
after
the
floods
and
that
type
of
thing
the
amount
of
derelict
buildings
that
they
have
they're
really
struggling
I
feel
that
we
have
a
great
grasp
on
what
we're
doing.
We
have
a
great
vision
to
move
forward
with
it,
we're
not
struggling
with
funds
and
we've
partnered
with
a
lot
of
the
community
groups
to
ask
them.
You
know
what
do
you
want
to
have
done
as
long
as
it's
not
reached
the
imminently
dangerous
status?
A
I
do
have
to
be
perfectly
clear
about
that
when
it
gets
to
that
point,
the
public
or
the
communities
don't
dictate
back
to
us.
What
they'd
like
to
have
kept.
If
something
has
to
go,
it
has
to
go,
but
we
have
started
a
lot
more
working
with
community
development
groups
to
see
how
they
wanted
to
approach
their
neighborhoods.
I,
don't
live
in
every
single
neighborhood
I,
don't
know
how
people
want
to
view
their
neighborhoods
or
how
they
want
things
to
develop
in
their
neighborhoods,
it's
their
neighborhood.
A
So
getting
that
input
has
been
an
integral
part
of
managing
the
inventory,
but,
like
I
said,
if
it
does
reach
the
actual
point
where
it
has
to
come
down,
it
has
to
come
down.
Every
single
structure
has
a
separate
bid
agreement
warehouse
specifications
on
it
specific
to
that
structure,
but
the
pre-qualified
contract
that
40-page
document
has
specifications
in
it.
That
are
true
in
every
case.
A
So
when
a
home
is
raised,
they
got
to
have
four
inches
of
topsoil,
and
one
thing
in
the
new
contract
is:
is
we
put
Nomo
grass
in
there,
so
they
have
to
plant
Nomo
grass
seed
so
that
we
don't
end
up
having
waist-high
weeds
there,
so
it
helps
on
the
resource
end
for
the
city.
Now,
that's
going
to
end
up
having
to
maintain
these
properties
that
the
grass
grows
up,
six
eight
inches
and
breaks
off
instead
of
going
to
full
boat.
A
So
what
we
did
was
we
moved
from
having
specific
demolition
inspectors
to
the
demolition
permits
being
oversaw
by
the
construction
inspectors,
so
every
single
property,
every
single
structure
now
has
a
demolition
permit
on
it.
Where
the
city
is
the
principal,
the
owners
on
there
and
the
demolition
contractor
is
on
there
and
then
that
permit
is
carried
out
by
the
construction
inspectors
and
they
follow
it.
They
go
through
when
they
remove
the
structure
the
void.
They
do
avoid
inspection
that
concrete
floor
in
the
bottom.
A
A
B
Experiences
it's
after
experiences,
and
one
of
the
big
things
we
did
was
actually
rewrite
it
to
make
sure
that
we
were
abating
long
term
impacts
of
demolition
as
well.
Yes,
the
previous
contract
was
written
in
1992
and
really
only
address
the
immediate,
imminent
danger
concerns
of
that
property.
It
didn't
do
a
good
job
present
by
how
we
leave
the
site
to
make
sure
that
it
was.
It
was
an
actually
announcement,
so
we
require
that
equal
to
clean
bill
reviews.
There's
no
special
requirements
may
be
required.
B
We
now
require
forward
to
the
topsoil,
so
plantation
we
put
back
to
take
root.
That's
why
the
type
of
feeding
we
specified
for
a
specification,
especially
a
lot
of
these
RS
equal
plots.
We
don't
want
to
create
issues
for
neighbors
in
terms
of
drainage.
We
now
at
times
require
different
types
of
barony
needs
to
be
filled
again
with
elevation
issues.
Sometimes
we
can
create
issues
where
your
web
structure-
that's
actually
acting
as
retaining
walls
were
built
in
the
retaining
walls
with
some
properties
and
also
requirements.
Editor
texting
and
the
construction.
Well.
B
B
So
there
were
programs
which
the
advantage
of,
but
it
was
expensive
and
timely,
and
sometimes
it
was
happen
cards
winter
crime
so
really
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
again
were
feeding
the
totality
of
the
problem,
both
in
terms
of
the
imminent
danger
structure
and
leaving
the
entire
site
and
the
attached
properties
and
better
better
shape.
So
that
is
a
goal,
so
you
can
actually
see
the
provide
specifications
on
the
procurement
website.
You
can
check
out
what
made
a
single
huge
document
to
you.
The
report,
each
one
and.
A
B
Really
good:
oh
yeah,
we
really,
you
know
again
forgetting
that
practices
review,
how
other
cities
develop
practices,
that's
hard
for
the
process
and
that's
healthy,
explore
exhibition
so
again,
we're
looking
to
not
only
be
immediate
dangers
matters,
but
also
leave
the
property
in
better
condition.
So.
A
The
sewer
line
has
to
be
capped
and
part
of
the
invoicing
when
they
turn
it
in
I
have
to
have
a
slip
from
Allegheny
County
Health
Department
that
they
sent
their
inspector
over
that
the
water
and
sewer
lines
were
capped.
As
far
as
the
foundation
walls,
they
have
to
be
taken
down
below
grade
and
the
floor
has
to
be
fractured
to
a
certain
size.
It's
got
to
be
under
24
square
inches,
so
they
take
the
machine.
They
sit.
There
punch
holes
all
through
it
so
that
water
drains
down
through
it
correct
the
basement
floor
yeah.
A
So
they
don't
take
out
the
basement
floors,
but
they
fracture
them
so
that
water
migrates
through
them.
So
there's
there's
a
couple
different
characteristics
when
it
comes
to
clean
fill
and
what
you
think
of
clean
fill
clean
fill
is
dictated
by
the
EPA.
What
they
consider
clean,
fill,
throwing
bricks
back
into
the
hole
is
considered
clean.
Fill
it's
not
going
and
getting
topsoil
filling
this
giant
hole
up
with
topsoil.
It's
not
like
that.
So
anything
that
would
be
considered
toxic
does
not
go
back
in
the
hole
or
anything
considered
organic
that
would
break
down.
A
So
all
the
wood
has
to
come
out,
no
wood
could
ever
go
back
in
because
it
will
rot,
it
will
create
voids
and
it'll
collapse,
no
plastics,
no
petroleum
products.
You
can't
bury
tires
in
the
hole
or
anything
to
that
effect.
One
thing
that
I
was
a
little
shocked
about
is
the
EPA
did
change
their
mind
on
putting
asphalt
back
into
the
holes.
A
So
if
you
have
like
an
asphalt
driveway
that
can
be
used
as
fill
to
put
into
the
hole
which
it
never
was
before,
because
ultimately
asphalt
is
a
petroleum
product,
so
a
it's
their
rule,
but
the
guys
the
people
that
are
doing
these
jobs
are
generally
using
fill
right
off
of
a
lot
to
fill
them
back
in.
But
that
also
is
monitored.
A
The
EPA
I've
had
extended
conversations
with
them.
They
do
not
go
out
and
check
voids
or
what's
going
in
them,
I
can
put
in
a
request
to
them.
They'll
come
out
and
they'll
do
like
a
core
sample
to
pull
it
out
of
it,
but
they
were
very
adamant
that
they
are
not
going
to
be
checking
that
they
don't
have
the
staff
to
do
it,
but
we
do
monitor
that
pretty
close,
and
that
is
also
part
of
the
pre-qualified
contract.
There
are
fill
stipulations
and
specifications
in
there
that
they
have
to
use.
We.
B
Avoid
volunteer,
your
technicians
still
is
clean,
which
makes
desolate
topsoil
to
grade
a
check
to
make
sure
you
know
ex
parte,
while
all
the
pockets
are
filled,
reverently
and
the
wall
is
built
correctly
hood
to
code
in
its
watertight,
so
the
katakana
nation
process,
the
county
importance,
the
health
codes,
energy
building
code,
so
very
combinations
are
more
typically
for
ones.
They
call
it
once
it
is
the
legal
definition
so
we're
a
church
with
tub
water.
Let's
like
for
Marcus
talking
about.
A
B
Of
condemnation,
don't
usually
like
graduate
to
imminent
danger
that
if
some
entities
are
excessively
those
that
are
honestly
a
lot
too
much
at
school
cases
and
it's
hard
to
predict
generalities
about
those,
because
those
are
lies,
fruits
lingering
side
pieces,
we're
really
we're
looking
at
connector
warrant
social
services-
and
maybe
some
utilities
assistance
to
do
that.
So
it's
harder
to
sort
of
make
generalities
about
those
types
of
visual
features.
What
we
do
up
to
that
amount,
the
majority
of
these
properties
or
dangerous
traffic.
You
love
our
structure
somewhere
unoccupied.
A
B
A
B
B
A
Might
condemn
on
the
condemned
list
there's
any
music
bounces
between
anywhere
from
950
to
like
875,
somewhere
right
around
there,
but
I'm
very
confident
about
this
inventory
and
what
we
have
on
it,
just
the
amount
of
sheer
hours
and
work
that
we
put
into
getting
this
inventory
under
control.
It
is
a
constant,
constant
work
and
maintenance
on
this,
but
it
is
an
incredible
resource.
Like
I
said
this,
this
these
properties
are
also
in
our
permitting
software,
so
somebody
can't
just
come
right
in
and
file
a
building
permit.
They
have.