Construction Contracts Oregon Forestry In Maricopa

State:
Multi-State
County:
Maricopa
Control #:
US-00462
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

The Construction Contract for Oregon Forestry in Maricopa is a formal agreement detailing the responsibilities and expectations of both the contractor and the owner. It specifies the scope of work required to construct a residence, including labor, materials, and adherence to local regulations. Key features include provisions for site conditions, insurance requirements, and the process for modifying the scope of work through written change orders. The contract outlines payment structures, either on a cost-plus or fixed fee basis, and stipulates penalties for late payments. The contract includes a one-year warranty for workmanship and assigns manufacturer warranties for materials. Filling instructions emphasize detailing the specific scope of work, payment terms, and the work site information. This contract is particularly valuable for attorneys, partners, owners, associates, paralegals, and legal assistants involved in real estate development, ensuring legal compliance and protecting stakeholder interests throughout the construction process.
Free preview
  • Preview Construction Contract for Home - Fixed Fee or Cost Plus
  • Preview Construction Contract for Home - Fixed Fee or Cost Plus

Form popularity

FAQ

The Oregon Forest Practices Act (FPA) sets standards for all commercial activities involving the establishment, management, or harvesting of trees on Oregon's non-federal forestlands. Oregon law gives the Board of Forestry primary responsibility to interpret the FPA and set rules for forest practices.

Oregon's neighbor tree law clarifies property boundaries: a tree on one owner's land, even spanning the property line, belongs to them. For a tree solely on your property, the decisions are yours. Joint ownership arises when a tree's trunk straddles a boundary line, sharing upkeep decisions and costs.

Clearcutting is limited by state law Oregon rules limit the size of clearcuts (when a forestland owner removes most of the trees in a given area) to 120 acres. Clearcuts must be no closer than 300 feet to another clearcut.

Its forests are diverse and provide important habitat for fish and wildlife. Oregon's Forest Action Plan maps three types of high priority forests: those facing landscape wildfire risk, those vulnerable to conversion out of forest use, and those with important fish and wildlife habitats.

The general public owns most of Oregon's forests, which are held by the federal government or the state of Oregon. Private landowners of both large and small tracts of forestland own 34 percent of Oregon's forests. The remaining 2 percent of forests is in tribal ownership.

About 33,000 acres of the Oregon land owned by Chinese billionaire Tianqiao Chen and his investment firm is west of Bend, near the Deschutes National Forest. A Chinese billionaire and a California timber family have become among the largest private landowners in the U.S. following major purchases of Oregon forests.

The Oregon Forest Practices Act (FPA) sets standards for all commercial activities involving the establishment, management, or harvesting of trees on Oregon's non-federal forestlands. Oregon law gives the Board of Forestry primary responsibility to interpret the FPA and set rules for forest practices.

Associated Oregon Loggers, Inc.

Associated Oregon Loggers, Inc.

Trusted and secure by over 3 million people of the world’s leading companies

Construction Contracts Oregon Forestry In Maricopa