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Homeowners File Complaints Against Stucky |
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Faulty houses falling off foundations |
BELTON - Before last week, few knew that Pete Stucky, a former
builder indicted in Williamson County, had built faulty homes in Belton. Since News Channel 25's story
aired on May 21 [see below], homeowners in the Wright subdivision of Belton have
either filed or are planning to file complaints with the Police Department and with the Texas Residential
Construction Commission. If investigators find that the problems merit criminal charges, these will come
in addition to the 37 felony counts already against Stucky in Williamson County.
"Indictment 38 is what I
hope to see," said Terri Reid, a Belton homeowner. "I'm just going to keep going until I
get justice for my home. I'm not going to stop."
Reid and the neighbors to her
right and left have cracked tiles and walls, and houses shifting off their foundations. One neighbor said her dogs
had been madly pawing at strange places on the carpeted floor, which prompted her to pull up the carpeting.
Underneath, she found tobacco spit bottles, food wrappers and t-shirts left by workers.
Reid said that Stucky is not the
only one who should be accountable. "The city inspector was supposed to inspect my house all the way through
the process. And somewhere along the line, something wasn't inspected, because I wouldn't be having these problems
if they did," Reid said.
But Belton building official
Rex Robertson said that the entire building process was according to city code. Robertson said he
remembers when Stucky and his family met with him to plan out the construction. "He started out, he was telling
us he was going to do this, going to do that. And we stopped him and said no, you're going to build to the
code."
"When we first went out
there," Robertson said of the inspections, "one or two houses got a few red tags. After that, they started
building the way it should be, and all the houses were built to code to the best of our
inspections."
Stucky's attorney said that the
former builder is bankrupt and therefore did not fight the charges against him in Williamson County. Instead, he
accepted a lifetime ban from the Texas Residential Construction Commission, making it illegal for Stucky to
participate in any fixes to housing problems that may arise in Belton.
His attorney, Bruce
Burleson, also said that the commission, the TRCC, used Stucky as a trophy to show the Texas legislature
that they had been productive. "The Texas Residential Construction Commission, for whatever reason...tried to
use Mr. Stucky as an example, to try to get rid of him, to try to bring his business down."
The state legislature just
agreed last week to abolish the TRCC. The agency will cease to exist in about half a year.
In regard to what would unfold
if the Bell County District Attorney does press charges against Stucky, Burleson said, "We'll cross that bridge
when we get to it."
By Natasha Chen, KXXV, ABC News Channel 25, Waco, 05/27/2009 Source:
http://www.kxxv.com/Global/story.asp?s=10434169
Faulty Houses Falling Off Foundations
BELTON - Former homebuilder Pete Stucky was banned for life from
building homes in Texas by the Texas Residential Construction Commission and indicted on 37 counts, ranging
from fraud to deception and theft of service. That was in Williamson County, but now Belton homeowners are
discovering that their Stucky homes are also falling apart.
Terri Reid, who
bought her home just one year ago, said she quickly noticed that her walls are separating, rocks are being eaten
away, and the house is shifting off the foundation. In addition to the structural problems, she's left with
thousands of dollars in outstanding liens because Stucky did not pay his sub-contractors.
"I couldn't believe that -
oh my God - this is the guy that built my house and these are the problems that other people are having and I have
that same problem now," Reid said. "I'm upset. Disappointed...just overwhelmed. Really. Overwhelmed
because I'm thinking wow, I bought this house and didn't realize there would be all these
problems."
Reid said that her neighbor has
similar issues, and was told by engineering inspectors that they could not help fix her problems until they've
contacted the builder, Pete Stucky. The neighbor also has outstanding leans that prevent her from selling her
house.
Not everyone on the street seems
to blame Stucky, however. Lon Meeks lives across from Reid and used to work
for Stucky's company, Affiliates LLC.
"I felt bad for him, because
a lot of people are ganging up against him," Meeks said. There are no issues with his house: "Everything
works. There's minor cracks, but you know a house - it'll level. These houses were built fast. You know, you
ordered your house, three months later you were in it."
Bonded
Builders, the company handling their warranties, said that workmanship problems do require contacting the
builder. But at least for Reid's structural complaints, they will send an engineer to take a look.
By Natasha Chen, KXXV, ABC News Channel 25, Waco, 05/21/2009 Source:
http://www.kxxv.com/Global/story.asp?s=10406426
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