My experience with Oasis (specifically, Tommy Harper, the owner) has been the most frustrating ordeal I've ever endured in working with a home service provider. I can't overemphasize how disappointed I am in the way Tommy abandoned this project and disappeared. The facts and chronology are laid out below as a warning to all Angie's List members to stay away from this company. I signed a contract with Oasis on 8/15/13, and got an estimated start date of 8/26 and an estimated project completion date of 9/9 from Tommy. On 8/22, I received an email from Tommy confirming that the start date was still as planned. On 8/25, I received an email from Tommy asking to push back the start date to 8/29. I agreed. On 8/28, he emailed to push back the start date again to 9/3. I agreed. The construction crew arrived on 9/3 and the early part of the project went more or less smoothly. The foundations were dug, the footings poured, and the frame was constructed as planned, and the inspections passed. During this time, I didn't hear anything from Tommy, and assumed that since work was being done, we were still on schedule. On 9/8, I emailed Tommy to ask for a status update on the expected completion date. On 9/12, Tommy finally emailed me back saying there was a delay in getting the ipe shipment from his supplier, but it would arrive by 9/17 or 9/18 at the latest. On 9/19, having not heard anything from Tommy and having not received the shipment of wood, I emailed him again asking for an update. He wrote back saying there was another delay and the wood should arrive by 9/23, which it finally did. On 9/24, I received an email from Tommy saying the final phase of the project ("all decking, railing and lighting") to be complete by 9/29. On 10/1, Tommy emailed me saying he was nearly complete with the work, but had not yet ordered the bricks needed for the trim around the base of the support posts, even though I had emailed him the color specifications on 8/24, and followed up again on 9/25. Apparently he had done nothing to prepare during that time period. On 10/2, I emailed Tommy saying the ipe cap that was supposed to be installed on top of the railings was not there. The next day he wrote me back to tell me he would not be able to install the ipe railing cap because the fasteners he normally uses for this purpose do not adequately anchor the deck board to the top rail. This was the first I'd heard of this problem, and it took me completely by surprise. I was very disappointed, as that was a nice finishing touch that was part of our design, and he had agreed to it from the beginning. His solution was for us to just forego it and he would do some other odds & ends work in exchange for the money he had already charged us for the materials and labor. In reality, he had simply not ordered enough wood for this purpose, and the fastener issue was just an excuse. I know this because the pile of boards on my property grew smaller and smaller as the project progressed, and by the time the crew had assembled the planter, there was nothing left to do the rail cap. Not having any other options, I agreed to just forego the cap, and asked him for 3 simple things in exchange: 1) Fix the planter that his crew had built in the most idiotic way possible. They had simply built a frame with no bottom, which was obviously never going to hold any soil. I asked him to put a false bottom on the planter so I could actually use it. 2) Reinstall a light fixture that he had to move in order to attach the ledgerboard to the house. 3) Hang a pendant light onto a nearby tree and run low-voltage wiring to it in a buried conduit. Tommy agreed to these concessions, and promised the bricks would be procured by 10/6. On 10/9, having not heard from Tommy in 5 days, I emailed him again asking about the status on the bricks. The next day he responded saying his mason was held up on another job for "a couple of weeks," and admitted fault for not having the materials ready when the mason was available. I wrote back to him the same day expressing my frustration and disappointment at yet another delay due to his poor planning, and asked him to call me to discuss options. I heard nothing from him for 4 days. He emailed me back on 10/15 apologizing, but saying there would be no way he could get the work done sooner. I agreed, and asked him for a firm start and finish date on the remainder of the work. I did not hear back anything for 7 days. On 10/22, Tommy emailed me saying he wanted to meet because his mason had concerns about the installation and he wanted to go over options with me. We met the following day, at which point he explained that he would not be able to do the brick wraps after all, due to a sloping grade in the yard. His suggestion was that we should pay him another $3500 to build a patio under the deck in order for him to finish the work that was in his contract. At this point, I was incredibly frustrated and had no intention of giving him any more business. I told him I would have another contractor pour a stamped concrete patio, and he could finish his part of the deal and we would be on our separate ways. Meanwhile, on 10/24, he emailed saying he would be coming by the following day to install the tree light and fix the planter. He never showed up. On 10/30, I emailed him to ask what had happened and why he had failed to come by as promised. No response came. On 11/1, I emailed again to ask, at which point he replied that he had sent me an email about it the previous week asking to postpone the tree light wiring. When I told him I never received any such email from him and asked that he forward me the email as proof, I didn't hear anything back. On 11/6, while I was at work, someone must have shown up to hang the light from the tree, but it was installed completely incorrectly. Instead of hanging down (like a pendant), it had been strapped to a branch pointing upward. It was, of course, not actually wired up. I ended up having to fix it myself and attach it the correct way. Meanwhile, finding another contractor to pour a patio meant I had to research and find qualified masons, get and compare quotes, put together a plan and submit it to my HOA for approval before the patio could be poured. This process took about 6 weeks, during which time all work was halted. On 12/6, shortly before the concrete patio work was to be finished, I asked Tommy to come by so we could discuss the remaining part of his obligations. I made it easier for him by agreeing to forego the brick work entirely if he would just put some decorative PVC trim around the base of the supports instead. I reduced the scope even further and told him to not bother with the wiring of the tree light and the fixes to the useless planter. I just wanted him to finish the decorative trim and we would be done. At this point, I re-examined my contract and came to realize 2 other problems. 1) The brick work was estimated at $1500, but he had requested full payment for the deal at his last milestone, minus a $1000 holdback, meaning I had overpaid by $500 for the bricks that I never got. This was my own fault for not being vigilant, but it speaks to Tommy's integrity in general. I told him I would even forego this money if he would just finish his work and be done. 2) His proposal called for 8"x8" finished dimensions on the support posts (per our HOA requirements), but I measured them and found they were 6.75"x6.75" instead. I brought this up with Tommy and he agreed that when he would do the remaining trim work, he would build out the bottom 3 feet of each post to 8x8 dimensions. I didn't hear anything back from him after our meeting on 12/6. The holidays came up and I was busy, and had more or less written him off as never coming back. On 1/8, I decided to give him another chance and emailed him asking if he was planning on coming to finish up the trim work. He wrote back on 1/9 enthusiastically saying he would do so the following day. We then hit a string of bad weather, and in a series of texts over the ensuing couple of weeks mutually agreed to push it off until a break in the weather. On 2/16, I emailed Tommy to see if he w