B_P_G

B_P_G t1_j8lq7iu wrote

That ratio's been pretty flat since the 1950s. Brexit hasn't deepened anything. Also, Brexit was in 2016. They may not have fully implemented it until years later but its effects were baked into the cake the second it was passed. What the graph is showing with 2020 is the effects of the pandemic and pandemic-era policies.

6

B_P_G t1_j7eoqhy wrote

For newer developments there's usually a plat map that gives dimensions along the edges of the lot. I think they store those at city hall somewhere. So one stake being out of place or lost wouldn't be a huge problem. And for larger plots all the states not on the east coast follow a fairly standard system. So if your land boundary is on the range line or town line or some quarter section line then that's a known thing and stake position isn't going to matter as much.

With that said, what really matters is whether it's the kind of thing that's worth going to court over or bringing in a surveyor. But even if it isn't right now it could still be a problem in the future. Stuff does get errantly built outside the bounds of peoples' property and that's a legal mess when somebody discovers it.

10

B_P_G t1_ixznvuh wrote

What do humans want to pay for? The issue is that the internet (over the span of a few years) changed the newspaper business from one of local monopolies or duopolies to a hypercompetitive market on a product with no marginal cost. Some of the former monopolies took that harder than others. But from a consumer perspective the internet has given you access to more news than ever.

3