Spring is springing
I’m sure everyone is not only sick of the weather, but actually sick of me talking about it in my blog too - and the last few days of ice, melt, ice was no fun at all.

We are inching ahead with our spring plans, ready to burst through the earth like a tulip or other like-minded spring plant. Within a week it may be soupy wet and muddy, but winter’s restrictions will be in the rear view mirror, even if it would dare to artic blast us again.
It’s pretty amazing how little chance the snow has versus the sun. Bright rays and some mid-30’s and you can literally watch the snow disappear.
I’ve been waiting for 2 years for electric to one of my homes. Two years is a bit of an exaggeration because that’s when I first applied for electric when we started the house, but 2+ years it has been, and now almost a year with a finished home just waiting on electric. It’s the type of thing you are happy didn’t happen earlier in my career when holding onto a house for the fun of it wouldn’t really fly too long.

Or, maybe the timing would have advantageous like if I was trying to get it up and sold in 2020, then Covid happened, then by the time I had electric house prices doubled but the increased cost of construction didn’t matter since the house was built prior - A guy can dream.
This year my goal is to fully price my homes. Meaning not sell too quick, or early in the marketing campaign. It’s hard to argue with the success of our sales strategy - take good offers everytime, but it’s also hard to argue I’ve left a lot of money on the table by doing so, specifically thinking about at the beginning of 2025, when I had my last two houses in Olivebridge to sell. I was worried about the market, so was (and still am) happy to have sold them, but it was a strong year for real estate in Ulster county so I probably walked away $200k lighter than I could have.

And since I’m picking up this long-awaited post after writing the above paragraphs, we are having a nice spring week with temps touching 70 and dry. I’m running around from job to job to make sure all is moving forward in as straight of a line as possible. Played pickleball on the home court yesterday, first match of the season. Heard some geese coming home high in the sky last night. Watched the water melt and run from all directions.
I have a 3 week trip to Sardinia, Corsica and points still undetermined coming up in May.

Pictures of the Ranch home in New Paltz we just are finishing up.
The long winter slog
The long-awaited blog post after an extended delay is mostly winter-related - plus my friend Eric from G5 Insurance must be too busy with his accomplished daughters to poke me about the lack of posting.
I’ve been busy, in a slow winter way. I guess I’m also a little tired of talking about the weather, which has been a daily slap in the face of cold, snow and what have you. Cold wet winters are very expensive and logistically complex for a construction company with jobs spread out over 4 counties and a wide region. What is true in one area is not true in another. Andrew, our project manager, has had his hands full keeping the job sites open with 3 or 4 different plowing companies which tend to be local in nature.

Trent, our in-house Revit (drafting software) has been busy navigating the various building departments, their changing personnel, requirements and expectations. Our favorite town to build in, Kerhonkson, has gone from business-friendly to anti-business in head-spinning one year time frame, after Catskill Farms building there for over 10 years, and literally dozens if not more homes.
The Town of Rochester would never agree they have now pivoted from a place to do business to a place to avoid, but that’s because the new leadership really doesn’t understand the impacts of their changes, be it personnel or process. But me, as someone who runs a business and has to navigate it, I understand it perfectly well.

It could be a planning board that is looking to obstruct, consciously or unconsciously. It would be a new building inspector who may be looking for 20 page plans of details rather than the 8 pages that has worked across the Hudson Valley for the past 25 years, because from a résume standpoint he looks great with solid experience in a busy town, but culturally bringing expectations that will be very hard for this rural area to achieve.

Savvy Town Supervisors understand a good cultural fit is as important as a good skillset fit. This isn’t Westchester, it’s rural Ulster County, and there are few overlaps in what is actually necessary to successfully build a home when one place is hyper-dense, and the other is hyper-sparse.
The problem with a winter severe enough to slow the construction process is that a lack of construction progress also means a lack of cash flow progress since construction progress is necessary to get financing advances or client payments. And a lot of our costs to run the business happen with or without a lot of construction progress such as payroll, insurance and everything needed to keep the lights on.

On the other hand, we have had the luxury of time to do a lot of office work for these projects that once the weather breaks, we will be not only off to the races, but positioned to pull our scull out in front of the pack.
One thing that is true is that the spring will be busy busy for a lot of subcontractors such as excavators and masons and framers, and that’s when relationships will come in handy so you are able to skip the queue, like buying the Fast Pass when skiing at Killington which allows you to skip the lines, for an extra $75 per day.

New homes going up in New Paltz, Yulan, Narrowsburg, and Kerhonkson.




Jared Covit's Friviolous cause of action #5 and 6 dismissed...
My password app is warning me with a required override that I've used 'similar passwords too much'. For now, I'm satisfied just making the step and over-riding it, but at some point I'll need to get in there and mix it up a bit.
Another day closer to selling 2 more homes. Great homes - an American Four-square, and an American Ranch, in Olivebridge. That'll be a $9m project - the numbers in the profit and loss terrain really aren't that impressive, but a percentage of a number gets bigger as the number gets bigger. Actually, the percentage stays the same but the number gets bigger on bigger projects. Ok, like duh. But anyways, especially since I was using all cash, the liquidity is new if nothing else the investment cycle begins to return on the investment - of time and money, and attention.
Listen, the word for my blog, in the world of google search, is authority. I'm an authority - using their dense and complex and ever-evolving algorithm, they believe this blog should be weighted heavily in the topics I cover. It's no small feat - being recognized by a world-domineering tech company as being relevant and an authority about which you speak.
There are lots of things we do daily that are pretty one-off, meaning I'm not seeing a lot of copycat hurdlers - developing, designing, building and then selling a home, for decades. That's pretty much non-existent.
The pension and profit sharing programs we offer are unheard of in small businesses.
The benefits, holidays, work environment, year round stability as an employer
Running 18 jobs across 3 counties with 3 people in the office.
There's a lot more we do that when you get a little distance from it, you see it shine and shine brightly.
I mention the google thing cause our current topic du jour, Jared Covit, is now the proud host - position 1 and 2 - of our posts about the meritless lawsuits he pursued.

When Martin Shell, Esq and I guess proprietor of Martin Shell Law Firm- a firm so advanced it doesn’t seem to have a website - writes my attorney in the Jared Covit and Lauren Rich case that I should remove the picture of Jared Covit I found on that thing called the internet and copy and pasted it to my blog, that I was to remove it immediately because it was an unauthorized use of his image, and that I should be ‘advised accordingly’, I’m wondering if he got that legal threat from the same playbook that resulted in 5 of his 6 bullshit causes of actions against me and Catskill Farms - claims so frivolous it seemed like the judge was trying to conserve ink while dismissing them, and playing a game of how few words the Honor could use while disposing of the weak arguments offered up as serious legal doctrine.
I’m no Oliver Wendell Holmes, but you got to understand, that to have 5 causes of actions dismissed, a Court not allowing them to move forward at all, those causes of actions must be so meritless, and so lacking in legal basis and precedent, that the Court decides they don’t have to hear more, without hearing much at all.
Only in the insular footsie world of the law would you be allowed to file a bunch of bullshit lawsuits and have no fear of repercussions. Wouldn’t it be more fair, that if your claims can’t even pass the most liberal interpretation of the statute, that given all the benefits of the legal doubts, the claims still don’t hold up, wouldn’t we all agree that there should be some consequence to that - say the lawyer being brought up on ethics charges, or the failed plaintiff having to pay the legal fees of the wronged party? Doesn’t that make sense, to us non-lawyers? Sure, that would reduce the income of many a lawyer, as they had to be more careful and thoughtful, and I guess maybe that’s what they are talking about when you hear about trial lawyer reform, and how their lobbying body always blocks efforts to make wrongfully suing people harder.
So I asked my attorney to forward me some information on this legal doctrine of Martin Shell, this doctrine of unauthorized use of an internet photograph. I’m actually very interested in learning more about this legal theory from this grand legal mind, and I'm not being sarcastic - .
The Court seemed weary by the end of the ruling and clumps cause of Action 5 and 6 together, dismissing them both with a rationed use of words. We, for the benefit of our google relevancy testing (though Jared Covit's internet irrelevance plays a part too), will tease them apart and review them independently.
Getting right to the point, the Court opens with ...
"The Defendants' motion to dismiss the Plaintiffs' 5th and 6th causes of action based in the application of General Business Laut 349 is granted." One could wonder if the court was sensing a general trend in the legal merits of the lawsuit as it picked up dismissal momentum.
“The Plaintiffs' complaint, viewed as a whole, principally alleges that the Defendants breached a contract entered into by the parties that called for the Defendants to erect and complete a home according to the layout and specifications set forth in the parties' contract, and for the Plaintiffs, in tum, to purchase the home and the property. Consequently, the instant action is a private contract action, unique to the parties, that accordingly falls outside the ambit of GBL 349. As such, the Plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that the Defendants' conduct was consumer-oriented, as opposed to a private conduct, or that the Defendants engaged in a deceptive practice, as opposed to allegedly breaching the terms of the parties' contact. As such,the Defendants' motion to dismiss as to the Plaintiffs' 5th and 6th causes of action is granted pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a)(1) and (7).”
Basically, it seems the theory behind all of this is because Jared Covit feels wronged, the entire world has been wronged - that because he feels my dealings with him (that has netted him $300k+ in paper profit) were mean, that the whole world feels that way - that somehow our dispute between two parties somehow reflects my dealings, period, and that I’m engaged on some sort of day to day fraudulent behavior.
Now, you have to walk a mile in my shoes over the last 25 years and $300m in community investment and untold tens of millions in profits made from reselling my homes to understand the scale of the insult to accuse me of being a fraud, and perpetrating a scheme to harm people I have spent half my life housing and bringing joy to their families, over a cumulative spans 150 years of families living safely in my homes. I'm ok with an honest business dispute. This ain't that. This is a temper tantrum, with defaming characteristics at the heart.
Jared Covit's Frivolous cause of action #3 dismissed...
"The Plaintiffs' third cause of action for unjust enrichment is also dismissed pursuant to CPLR32ll (a)(1)," rules the Court.
An action for unjust enrichment requires the proof "that (l) the other party was enriched, (2) at the plaintiff's expense, and (3) that it is against equity and good conscience to permit the other party to retain what is sought to be recovered."
In one paragraph, the Court dismisses and discards the idea that Jared Covit and Lauren Rich were a victim. The brevity of the dismissal goes to the root of how malicious and frivolous the claim was in the first place. To be the recipient of an asset that grows in value by 50% in 24 months that you were somehow victimized can only be the conclusion of worst type of inward-looking millennial stereotype.
Choose a public venue like the courts to address your problems with a goal to embarrass your building partner, be prepared for a public response. Or as Kathy said, play around, find out.

For discovery and production on the one remaining lame cause of action, we produced all the documents related to building Jared Covit's home. As I was searching and printing, it became self-evident how accommodating we are.
The pile on the right is all the times we said 'yes'. The pile on the left is when we had to audacity to say 'no'.

Impressively, we are now the first result in Jared Covit's online profile, after 36 hours. I don't easily impress myself much anymore, but this one raised my eyebrows.







