Boss keeps asking when the requirements will be done, and the current answer is "never". Because they keep changing, and there are a shitload of unanswered questions.
God, that sounds familiar. I'm trying to juggle the environmental planning on a project with the engineering design, and it's killing me, because they have to be interwoven--we want the contract firm to decide how to do it, but they need to know the environmental constraints, but we can't define the environmental constraints unless we know how the contractor wants to do it. Argh.
Project Management: all the SAME, no matter what industry you're in.
Project Management: all the SAME, no matter what industry you're in.
"How much should we ask for?" "How much can we get?" "How much do you need?" "What's the total budget?" "The budget depends on what we can get." "How much should we ask for?"
I'm just trying to draw up the data capture screens, never mind the larger picture with the business process re-engineering and all that. And every day, LITERALLY*, I need to go back and edit something I've done before. And it's usually not because of a misunderstanding or lack of knowledge on my part.
I don't know if anyone understands this regulation. For sure, no one on our project team knows its full ramifications, and with all the pushback we seem to be able to successfully give to legal, their word isn't the be all and end all either. So who is it? Someone should be out there making the big bucks interpreting this new legislation. And we should be paying them.
*: except weekends. Sorry.
Are you saying they don't need a lawyer and a notary?
Yes, that is what I'm trying to say.
I have looked it up and found this helpful information. It seems many states accept them, but the exact requirements differ. If I decided to handwrite a will, I would make sure I'd met all the requirements in my state. It might actually be less stressful to just go to LegalZoom and download a form.
That solar system quiz is wonky--I got 9 out of 10 right (one off on the last question, darnit!), but it kept on telling me I was wrong on all of them.
Interesting that that law says they must be handwritten. I have no idea why that has anything to do with anything. Less chance of forgery? My hand aches thinking of it.
"How much should we ask for?" "How much can we get?" "How much do you need?" "What's the total budget?" "The budget depends on what we can get." "How much should we ask for?"
Yup.
I just got off the phone with one of the construction contractors who wants to bid on the project--god knows how he got my name--and if I were him, I wouldn't be bidding. Too many imponderables at the moment.
It could be that the handwritten will would reduce the chances of forgery, but also indicate that the person writing it was alert enough to write it out.
I don't have a will, but I also don't have any dependents or pets. My parents are already named as beneficiaries of my retirement plan and Mom's name is on my savings account, so about 95% of my net worth would default to them without need for a will. I suppose if I outlive both of them (not a sure thing, given the longevity of women on Mom's side of the family) I'll have to make arrangements for funeral costs and division of assets among my closest cousins.