Don't listen to all the R700 haters... Their compalints are mostly second-hand shit they saw on the internet about why Remingtons suck by some basement-dwelling troll, or some moron (the average hunter) that buys factory ammo and thinks their "ought-six is the best deer cartridge ever made", and doesn't even know what twist rates are.
Like was mentioned above, buy it. It will do everything you're wanting it to do, and more. Especially with handloads. If it doesn't, there are TONS of little tips and tricks you can do to get it to shoot good. Worst case scenario, you might end up swapping stocks, and having a gunsmith true the action and putting an aftermarket barrel on it. In the end, you're still $600+ ahead of the game, because that's what a stripped Remington 700 short action costs now. Which is stupid, but it is what it is.
If you buy it, before you ever shoot it (even if the rifle is brand new), bring it home, scrub the barrel till the patches come out clean. Then run a wet patch of RemOil through the barrel and let that soak into the bore. Then, remove it from the stock and clean everything underneath. Then swap in a TriggerTech Diamond trigger, and put it back in the stock. And if the Hogue stock has an aluminum bed block (which I think it does), torque the action screws (starting with the one nearest the barrel at 20 inch-pounds, then the one by the trigger at 20 inch-pounds, alternating back and forth, in 10 inch-pound incriminates, all the way up to 65 inch-pounds.
Then, mount your scope, level everything, torque it all down. Boresight, and go to the range and zero it.