Please don't be annoyed at my written comments. My failing memory exhibited itself this morning when it took me an hour to reconstruct the forgotten protocol for obtaining Nantucket video images, a procedure with which I had regularly exercised for many years until two and a half months ago, September 29, 2017, the date of the last break-in. What I don't now commit to writing, I will have forgotten before tomorrow morning. I'm not advising you as to what you should do with respect to Nantucket, but perhaps a statement of what I would be thinking about, if I were in your position, will be helpful to you. 1) I would wonder if the most recent break-in should not be reported to the Nantucket Police to enable them to take such action as they consider appropriate. One never knows what the future holds. If and when the house is finally destroyed by the vandals, it may be important to be able to show that the Nantucket Police as an agency of the Town were complicit in this destruction, not only before, but also after the crime. There are various Federal criminal statutes in compliance with which, if the political winds were blowing in a certain direction, the FBI might be interested in investigating these crimes. 2) For the foreseeable present, I see several options: a) to try to sell the property, b) to hire a contractor to hire the subcontractors to complete the construction, c) to function oneself as a contractor hiring various subcontractors and save 25% of construction costs. d) to perform oneself one or more of the following: i) installing insulation, ii) installing interior wooden and tile floors, iii) installing interior doors and spiral stairs, iv) installing bathroom and kitchen cabinets, v) installing electrical switches, outlets and fixtures, vi installing plumbing fixtures and outlets. 3) The focal issue, if one does all this oneself is whether or not one sleeps in the house, uses a shower, a sink and water supplied i) either through the installed plumbing, or b) directly from the well. None of this is conventonal and everything which is non-conventional is vulnerable to challenge by the Town and its Building Department. 4) The plumber is the focus of the issues concerning the plumbing. Conventionally, if the plumber approves, he can present one's installation for inspection. If he doesn't approve, he can repair or replace ones work to meet his criteria.