Real Estate Addicts

#137 - Are Most Subcontractors Breaking Labor Laws?

17 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio #137 - Are Most Subcontractors Breaking Labor Laws?

Descripción

Fresh off a crash course with his labor law attorney, Marc pulls back the curtain on Massachusetts non-competes, non-solicitations, and the brutal world of employee misclassification including a real pest control case where workers walked away with a seven-figure judgment. The guys dig into the three-part test the AG uses to decide if someone is truly an independent contractor, why the "nuts and bolts" rule trips up nearly every GC and subcontractor, and how wage-theft damages stack up fast with double pay and attorney's fees baked in.

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139 episodios

Portada del episodio #138 - The Multifamily Minute

#138 - The Multifamily Minute

The guys open on the frozen capital markets for multifamily development. Banks are eager to deploy senior debt at reasonable terms, but equity, mezzanine, and pref capital have gone into hiding, leaving big approved projects unbuilt while smaller deals still pencil. From there, Ray launches a new "Multifamily Minute" news segment covering three timely items: the Darby Development v. United States case, in which the federal government may owe roughly $1 billion to settle landlord claims over the CDC's COVID eviction moratorium; a stealth 3% rent-increase cap on Massachusetts MRVP voucher holders that functions as backdoor rent control despite no legislative process; and the first real softening of Boston-area rents in years, down an estimated 4–7%.

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Portada del episodio #136 - Operational Excellence and How to Keep Jobs Moving Forward

#136 - Operational Excellence and How to Keep Jobs Moving Forward

The guys break down what operational excellence actually looks like on a construction site — from how to build a 13,000 sq ft, five-townhouse project in just 9.5 months to the hidden advantages of self-performing as the GC. They get into the mechanics that actually move jobs forward: pre-construction meetings, three-week look-aheads, cash as "the lubricant," and why trust with subs matters more than any schedule on paper. Along the way they tackle the death-by-a-thousand-cuts problem of buyer changes, share a controversial take on why full-time superintendents are overrated on smaller projects, and kick things off with a wild story about San Francisco landlords intentionally leaving units vacant under rent control.

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Portada del episodio #135 - The 'All-Electric Trap' That's Quietly Wrecking Multifamily Deals w/ Charles de Jager

#135 - The 'All-Electric Trap' That's Quietly Wrecking Multifamily Deals w/ Charles de Jager

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