BERT HOWE
  • Nationwide: (800) 482-1822    
    office building expert witness Turkey Texas retail construction expert witness Turkey Texas tract home expert witness Turkey Texas low-income housing expert witness Turkey Texas multi family housing expert witness Turkey Texas housing expert witness Turkey Texas hospital construction expert witness Turkey Texas townhome construction expert witness Turkey Texas landscaping construction expert witness Turkey Texas casino resort expert witness Turkey Texas concrete tilt-up expert witness Turkey Texas Medical building expert witness Turkey Texas structural steel construction expert witness Turkey Texas custom homes expert witness Turkey Texas institutional building expert witness Turkey Texas production housing expert witness Turkey Texas condominiums expert witness Turkey Texas condominium expert witness Turkey Texas parking structure expert witness Turkey Texas mid-rise construction expert witness Turkey Texas high-rise construction expert witness Turkey Texas Subterranean parking expert witness Turkey Texas
    Arrange No Cost Consultation
    Construction Expert Witness Builders Information
    Turkey, Texas

    Texas Builders Right To Repair Current Law Summary:

    Current Law Summary: HB 730 amended the Texas Property Code by adding Title 16 and amending chapter 27. Overseen by the Texas Residential Construction Commission (TRCC) the code asserts that a contractor is not liable for any percentage of damages caused by failure to take reasonable action to mitigate damages or take reasonable action to maintain the residence. It also limits damages, requires written notification and response for right of repair and defines warranty periods. Additionally, SB 754 states“(5-10 Sec. 27.107) a contractor may assert as an affirmative defense to an allegation of a defect made in a complaint filed under this subchapter that the defect is the result of abuse, neglect, or unauthorized modifications or alterations of the home.”


    Construction Expert Witness Contractors Licensing
    Guidelines Turkey Texas

    No state license is required, however, general contractors must get permits at the local level. Separate boards license HVAC, and plumbing trades.


    Construction Expert Witness Contractors Building Industry
    Association Directory
    North Texas Home Builders Association
    Local # 4578
    4410 Fairway Blvd
    Wichita Falls, TX 76308
    http://www.nthba.com

    Texas Panhandle Builders Association
    Local # 4509
    5601 Enterprise Cir
    Amarillo, TX 79106
    http://www.tpba.org

    Home Builders Association of Grayson - Fannin and Cooke Counties
    Local # 4563
    PO Box 1421
    Sherman, TX 75091
    http://www.hbagfc.org

    Home Builders Association of West Texas
    Local # 4545
    4223 85th St
    Lubbock, TX 79423
    http://www.wthba.com

    Home Builders Association of Texarkana
    Local # 4566
    PO Box 7048
    Texarkana, TX 75505
    http://www.texarkanahomebuilders.com

    Home Builders Association of Greater Dallas
    Local # 4524
    5816 West Plano Pkwy
    Plano, TX 75093
    http://www.dallasbuilders.com

    Builders Association of Greater Fort Worth
    Local # 4530
    70001 Blvd 26 Ste 323
    Fort Worth, TX 76180
    http://www.fortworthbuilders.org


    Construction Expert Witness News and Information
    For Turkey Texas

    Real Estate & Construction News Roundup (1/10/24) – New Type of Nuclear Reactor, Big Money Surrounding Sports Stadiums, and Positivity from Fannie Mae’s Monthly Consumer Survey

    Focusing on Design Elements of the 2014 World Cup Stadiums

    County Sovereign Immunity Invokes Change-Order Ordinance

    You Can Pay Me Now, or . . .

    Construction Attorneys Tell DBR that Business is on the Rise

    Automated Weather Insurance Could Offer Help in an Increasingly Hot World

    Shane Singh Named One of Los Angeles Business Journal's 'Top 100 Lawyers of Los Angeles' for 2026

    Want a Fair Chance at a Government Contract? Think Again

    Karen Campbell, Kristen Perkins to Speak at CLM 2020 Annual Conference in Dallas

    Happenings in and around the 2015 West Coast Casualty Seminar

    Edinburg School Inspections Uncovered Structural Construction Defects

    No Damages for Delay May Not Be Enforceable in Virginia

    No Coverage For Construction Defects Under Alabama Law

    New Jersey Courts Speed Up Sandy Litigation

    HOA Group Speaking Out Against Draft of Colorado’s Construction Defects Bill

    Contract Disputes Act and Jurisdictional Requirements

    Think Twice About Depreciating Repair Costs in Our State, says the Tennessee Supreme Court

    4 Breakthrough Panama Canal Engineering Innovations

    The Rise Of The Improper P2P Tactic

    Construction Defects could become Issue in Governor’s Race

    Watchdog Opens Cartel Probe Into Eight British Homebuilders

    Congratulations to BWB&O’s Newport Beach Team on Obtaining a Defense Verdict in Favor of their Subcontractor Client!

    Congratulations to Haight’s 2021 Super Lawyers San Diego Rising Stars

    CA Supreme Court Finds “Consent-to-Assignment” Clauses Unenforceable After Loss Occurs During the Policy Period

    Kiewit Seeks Millions in Added Connecticut Pier Renovation Costs

    Measure Of Damages for Breach of Construction Contract

    Consumer Product Safety Commission Recalls

    OSHA Announces Expansion of “Severe Violator Enforcement Program”

    South Carolina Clarifies the Accrual Date for Its Statute of Repose

    Moving in Before Substantial Completion? The Risks of Early Owner Occupancy

    Preserving your Rights to Secure Payment on Construction Projects (with Examples)

    Snell & Wilmer Recognized With Top Honor in Ranking Arizona: Top Law Firms for 2026

    Toolbox Talk Series Recap – Arbitration Motion Practice

    Breaking News: Connecticut Supreme Court Decides Significant Coverage Issues in R.T. Vanderbilt

    A Permitting Base Checklist for Data Centers and Power Plants

    Subprime Bonds Are Back With Different Name Seven Years After U.S. Crisis

    Arizona Court of Appeals Clarifies Homeowners Association Open Meeting Requirements

    What I Learned at My First NAWIC National Conference

    Colorado homebuilders target low-income buyers with bogus "affordable housing" bill

    Georgia Update: Automatic Renewals in Consumer Service Contracts

    Pennsylvania Superior Court Tightens Requirements for Co-Worker Affidavits in Asbestos Cases

    Construction Litigation Group Listed in U.S. News Top Tier

    Contractor Definition Central to Coverage Dispute

    New York Appellate Team Obtains Affirmance of Dismissal of Would-Be Labor Law Action Against Municipal Entities

    Duty to Defend Sorted Between Two Insurers Based Upon Lease and Policies

    Florida Continues Enacting Tort Reforms, This Time Shortening the Statute of Repose

    You Have Choices (Litigation Versus Mediation)

    Up in Smoke - 5th Circuit Finds No Coverage for Hydrochloric Acid Spill Based on Pollution Exclusion

    Court of Appeal: Privette Doctrine Does Not Apply to Landlord-Tenant Relationships

    No Signature, No Problem: Texas Court Holds Contractual Subrogation Waiver Still Enforceable
    Corporate Profile

    TURKEY TEXAS CONSTRUCTION EXPERT WITNESS
    DIRECTORY AND CAPABILITIES

    Drawing from more than 4500 construction claims related expert witness designations, the Turkey, Texas Construction Expert Directory provides a wide spectrum of trial support and consulting services to construction claims professionals concerned with construction defect, scheduling, and delay claims. BHA provides building related litigation support and expert witness services to the construction industry's leading builders and developers, legal professionals, and owners, as well as a variety of state and local government agencies. Employing in house resources which comprise building envelope experts, forensic architects, professional engineers, credentialed construction standard of care consultants, the firm brings a wealth of experience and local capabilities to Turkey and the surrounding areas.

    Turkey Texas structural concrete expertTurkey Texas slope failure expert witnessTurkey Texas architectural engineering expert witnessTurkey Texas construction scheduling expert witnessTurkey Texas consulting architect expert witnessTurkey Texas expert witnesses fenestrationTurkey Texas fenestration expert witness
    Construction Expert Witness News & Info
    Turkey, Texas

    2026 Construction Outlook: Dampening Outlook With Some Potential Bright Spots

    February 17, 2026 —
    According to Dodge Construction Network’s Outlook 2026 Ebook, “the construction industry came roaring into 2025” – with large government investments through the Infrastructure Bill and the CHIPS Act (promoting investment in the domestic semiconductor industry), as well as outsized spending on data centers to support cloud and AI technology – but “throttled back significantly” due to “rapid changes to economic and fiscal policies.” These changes include short-term cost impacts due to tariffs and labor impacts due to the federal government’s immigration crackdown and long-term concerns following enactment of the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBBA) which is anticipated to add $3.4 trillion to the federal deficit over ten years. Read the full story...
    Reprinted courtesy of Garret Murai, Nomos
    Mr. Murai may be contacted at gmurai@nomosllp.com

    Don’t Hire Me! (Principle Is Expensive, and Lawsuits Based on Principle Are Even More Expensive)

    February 10, 2026 —
    I spend a lot of time trying to convince my clients to NOT hire me. I’m not crazy—let me explain. Litigation is costly. Very costly. And it is time consuming. Don’t get me wrong—I will go to Court and fight just as hard as you want me to, but I want you to know what you are facing before you go down that road. Now, obviously, if you are the one that is being sued, you have no choice but to defend yourself and your Firm. But if you are considering suing someone else, think long and hard about it before you pull the trigger. There are ways to reduce cost, time, and risk: for example, pre-suit or early mediation, or agreeing to arbitration in lieu of trial. But I always want my clients to know that real law is not like Law & Order. Things take time. A trial is often a year or more away from when you first file the lawsuit. Make your decisions on not just your heart, but your economic brain as well. Read the full story...
    Reprinted courtesy of Melissa Dewey Brumback, Ragsdale Liggett PLLC
    Ms. Brumback may be contacted at mbrumback@rl-law.com

    The AI Knows Too Much: When Employees Feed Trade Secrets into Generative AI Tools

    April 14, 2026 —
    Every time an employee pastes proprietary source code, a customer list, or a confidential business strategy into ChatGPT, Claude, or Google Gemini, they may be quietly dismantling the legal protections that make those secrets worth protecting. Courts and regulators are only beginning to grapple with this problem, and right now, the burden of preventing it falls squarely on employers. The Legal Stakes Under the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act (“DTSA”) and the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (“UTSA”) as adopted across most states, a trade secret plaintiff must show that the information at issue was subject to reasonable measures to maintain its secrecy. Courts have historically credited measures like confidentiality agreements, physical access controls, and employee training—but those safeguards were designed for a world of thumb drives and disgruntled employees. They were not built for a world where a well-meaning engineer can, in seconds, transmit an entire corpus of proprietary data to a third-party AI platform operating under terms of service that may permit the provider to use inputs for model training. Reprinted courtesy of Kazim A. Naqvi, Sheppard and John V. Mysliwiec, Sheppard Mr. Naqvi may be contacted at knaqvi@sheppard.com Mr. Mysliwiec may be contacted at jmysliwiec@sheppard.com Read the full story...

    Virginia Multi-Employer Site Safety Issues–and How to Deal with Them

    February 02, 2026 —
    The world of the Owner, Contractor, Subcontractor “straight line” project model is long gone. Increasingly complex construction needs for commercial owners require the services of numerous trades, and even multiple “prime” contractors at times, to perform the various stages of construction. Because of the complex and multi-employer nature of the modern commercial worksite, as a contractor, you may no longer be responsible only for the safety of your own employees. Depending on the state in which your project is being built, you, as a general contractor, may be responsible for hazards at your worksite that you did not create. On federal job sites (or in states that have merely adopted the federal OSHA standard), one rule applies. In some states that have their own safety regulations, another rule applies. Under the Federal OSHA guidelines, the state regulations must be at least as stringent as those of the Federal safety regulations. This flexibility allows states to impose stricter (though not more lenient) rules upon construction site contractors. While this flexibility allows state safety officials to better tailor their policies, it has caused confusion in the multi-employer realm. Read the full story...
    Reprinted courtesy of The Office of Christopher G. Hill
    Mr. Hill may be contacted at chrisghill@constructionlawva.com

    Federal Court Highlights the Strategic Value of Additional Insured Coverage

    June 22, 2026 —
    A recent decision from the District of Maryland underscores a recurring—but often underutilized—opportunity for policyholders: securing and enforcing additional insured coverage under another party’s liability policy. In Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co. v. Builders Premier Insurance Co., the court held that an equipment lessor qualified as an additional insured under the lessee’s policy and was entitled to a primary defense. The decision is a useful reminder that additional insured coverage can fundamentally shift defense obligations and materially reduce a policyholder’s exposure. We build on the decision to highlight the practical steps policyholders should take to ensure that all potentially available insurance is identified and pursued. Read the full story...
    Reprinted courtesy of Michael S. Levine, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP
    Mr. Levine may be contacted at mlevine@hunton.com

    ACEC Supports BUILD America 250 Act as Important First Step on Surface Reauthorization

    May 26, 2026 —
    WASHINGTON -- The American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC), the business voice of America’s engineering and design services industry released the following statement on the BUILD America 250 Act: "Chairman Graves and Ranking Member Larsen have taken an important bipartisan step toward reauthorizing the federal surface transportation programs that are critical to economic growth in every state. The BUILD America 250 Act provides five years of stability in funding road and transit projects, raises new revenues to address the solvency of the Highway Trust Fund, and includes meaningful provisions to strengthen project delivery, advance digital infrastructure, and improve the contracting framework that engineering firms rely on every day. ACEC will continue to advocate for investment levels that keep pace with the country's growing infrastructure needs, and we urge the Committee to keep this process moving forward." The American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC) is the business association of America’s engineering industry, representing more than 5,500 independent engineering firms and more than 650,000 professionals throughout the United States engaged in the development of America’s transportation, water, and energy infrastructure, along with environmental, industrial, and other public and private facilities. Founded in 1906 and headquartered in Washington, D.C., ACEC is a national federation of 51 state and regional organizations.

    Applying Jury Verdict Method in Quantifying Damages Due to Defective Specifications

    March 31, 2026 —
    An older case deals with three important considerations: (1) defective specifications; (2) whether the defective specifications were misleading or misrepresentative; and (3) applying the jury verdict method in quantifying damages. In Metric Construction Co., Inc. v. U.S., 80 Fed. Cl. 178 (Fed. Cl. 2008), a contractor was contracted by the federal government to construct a warehouse. There were defects in the structural steel design specifications underlying the standing seam metal roof installed by the contractor and, as a result, the roof system leaked causing damage. The contractor incurred significant costs in repairing the damage, and pursued recovery of these costs against the government. The contractor claimed the structural steel design serving as the framework for the metal roof was defective and misleading and caused the leaks. Read the full story...
    Reprinted courtesy of David Adelstein, Kirwin Norris
    Mr. Adelstein may be contacted at dma@kirwinnorris.com

    Snell & Wilmer Recognized Among the Top 10 Largest Law Firms in Orange County by the Orange County Business Journal for the Ninth Consecutive Year

    April 27, 2026 —
    ORANGE COUNTY – Snell & Wilmer is pleased to announce that its Orange County office has been named the eighth largest law firm in Orange County on the Orange County Business Journal’s 2026 List of Law Firms. The office has been ranked among the top 10 largest law firms in the region by the Orange County Business Journal for nine consecutive years. “We are proud to once again be recognized among the top law firms in Orange County,” said Jonathan E. Frank, managing partner of the firm’s Orange County office. “This recognition is a testament to the outstanding attorneys and professionals in our Orange County office and the clients who trust us with their most important matters. Being ranked among the top 10 largest firms in the region for nine consecutive years reflects both the strength of our team and our deep commitment to serving the Orange County business community.” Read the full story...
    Reprinted courtesy of Snell & Wilmer