- D1 Neutral Feature - Robbie MacPherson
- View from the Field Part 5 - Field Labor Disruption
- Jurisdiction - Employee Training, Alone, May Subject You to a Foreign State’s Jurisdiction
- Pennsylvania Superior Court Places Time Limit on Good Faith Withholding Under Prompt Pay Act
- Contractual Claims Protection: A Checklist for Owners
- D1 Neutral Feature - John Bulman
- Twists and Turbines - A New York Case Highlights an Owner’s Risk When Not Using Full-Wrap EPC Delivery
Articles on Construction Litigation & Dispute Resolution by Division 1 of the ABA Forum on Construction Law
Thursday, December 22, 2022
What's Up With Division 1 (No. 18) -- Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!
Monday, December 19, 2022
COURTHOUSE REPORTER SERIES: Twists And Turbines: A New York Case Highlights an Owner's Risk When Not Using Full-Wrap EPC Delivery
New York State Thruway Auth. v. CHA Consulting, Inc., 165 N.Y.S.3d 832 (Albany Co., Sup. Ct. 2022).
This case involved a dispute over a wind turbine project. The root cause of the dispute was a bust between the “wind turbulence” at the site, and the wind turbulence that the turbines installed could withstand. Once the project was completed and commissioned, the overworked turbines prematurely failed.
The New York State Thruway Authority (the owner) sued CHA Consulting, Inc. (the designer), the Kadney Company (the general contractor), Vergnet (the turbine supplier), and two different site engineers: Prudent Engineering, and Ravi Engineering and Land Surveying (the engineers). The New York Supreme Court (New York’s trial court) dispatched all of the owner’s claims on summary judgment.
The designer, which had specified the wrong type of turbine, invoked New York’s three-year statute of limitations to defeat the owner’s professional negligence claim. The owner argued that the statute should run from the date of its acceptance of the work and issuance of a final certificate. But the statute makes clear that it runs from the professional’s “completion of performance under the contract.” With the designer out of the picture based on the timing of its work, the owner’s creative attempts to hold others responsible fell flat.
The general contractor defeated the owner’s claims because the designer specified the exact make and model of turbine, and the general contractor procured and installed those exact turbines. It was not the general contractor’s responsibility to verify that the turbines were suitable for the site, therefore the general contractor could not be held responsible. Even if the general contractor was somehow responsible for the verification, the owner accepted the general contractor’s work during inspection, and found it in general conformance with the contract plans and specifications.
The turbine supplier defeated the owner’s warranty claim because its warranty contained an exclusion when the site conditions were the cause of the issue. The owner argued that the turbine supplier should be estopped from taking advantage of the exclusion because it did not verify that the turbines were suitable for the site conditions. The Court disagreed, finding that the warranty did not create any duty for the turbine supplier to independently verify suitability. The various disclaimers in its contract were a further backstop against this argument.
The engineers defeated the owner’s claims because the Court found that their obligations were limited to confirming that the turbines supplied were the same as the turbines specified. The Court made this ruling primarily because the specification at issue was a “closed proprietary specification, with no substitutions allowed.” Had a less-detailed and more traditional performance specification been used, the engineers would have had greater responsibility to verify conformance.
In conclusion — it is not uncommon for an owner to
separately contract with the major players on a construction project, as
opposed to entering a full-wrap EPC agreement, but such an arrangement presents
certain risks. Two of the most notable risks are scope gaps, and as
demonstrated in this case, liability gaps. The designer in this dispute was
able to avoid liability because its work was complete long enough before the
problem was discovered that the statute of limitations had run, which left the owner
without a party to pursue. A full-wrap EPC agreement would likely have allowed
the owner to avoid this situation.
*This blog article was previously posted on the Troutman Pepper website.
Author Todd Heffner is an Associate with Troutman Pepper in its Atlanta office. His practice covers construction matters, including in federal court and arbitration.
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Meet D1’s Neutrals Series: JOHN E. BULMAN
Company: Pierce Atwood LLP
Location: Providence, Rhodes Island
Email: jbulman@pierceatwood.com
Webpage: https://www.pierceatwood.com
Law School: Georgetown University Law Center, J.D., cum laude;Editor, Law and Policy in International Business (1984)
Types of ADR services offered: Mediation, Arbitration, Dispute Review Boards, Online Dispute Resolution (ODR)
Areas served: NationwideAffiliated ADR Organizations: American Arbitration Association (AAA) International Institute for Conflict Prevention & Resolution (CPR) International Centre for Dispute Resolution (ICDR) College of Commercial Arbitrators (CCA) Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (CiArb) Rhode Island Superior Court Rhode Island Federal District Court International Chamber of Commerce (ICC)
Location: Providence, Rhodes Island
Email: jbulman@pierceatwood.com
Webpage: https://www.pierceatwood.com
Types of ADR services offered: Mediation, Arbitration, Dispute Review Boards, Online Dispute Resolution (ODR)
Areas served: Nationwide
Q: Describe the path you took to becoming an ADR neutral.
A: Early in my career, I was an advocate in several AAA construction-related arbitrations. The AAA saw fit to add me to its Panel of arbitrators around 1990. Since then, I have served as an arbitrator or mediator in approximately twenty states.
Q: What percentage of your current legal practice is spent on ADR work?
A: 90% or more of my time is spent as a neutral.
Q: Describe your background and experience mediating and arbitrating construction cases.
A: I have served as a mediator in over 100 construction cases since 1990. I have served as an arbitrator and rendered awards in at least fifty arbitrations, ranging from $500,000 to $220,000,000 in controversy. Most of the larger cases have been three-arbitrator panels; I have served as chair in the majority of those cases.
Q: Mediators are oftentimes described as “facilitative,” “evaluative,” or “transformative.” Do you have a style?
A: Each case calls for a specific emphasis and/or technique but I certainly lean toward facilitative negotiation.
Q: Do you have any practices that you find make you particularly effective as a mediator?
A: Asking open-ended questions to prompt each party to fully articulate not only the merits of the case but also how counsel expects to meet the other side’s defenses or counterclaim.
Q: Do you recommend individual preparatory meetings with the parties and counsel prior to the joint session?
A: Yes. Gaining a better understanding of the dispute background and prior settlement discussions saves time and energy at the mediation session itself. It also preempts “going down the wrong road” at the mediation.
Q: What should attorneys and their clients take into consideration when vetting and/or selecting an arbitrator?
A: The arbitrator’s subject matter expertise and ability to manage the process efficiently.
Q: What advice do you have for parties when considering whether to choose a single arbitrator or a panel?
A: Cases with a large amount in controversy or where the technical expertise of a particular arbitrator is important are cases where a three-member panel is effective and appropriate. Cases with several parties are also situations where a three-member panel is appropriate.
Q: Do you think limits should be placed on discovery in the arbitration context?
A: There should be limits since arbitration is not supposed to be a mirror image of litigation.
Q: What role should traditional rules of evidence play in the arbitration hearing?
A: By the time hearings take place, there should be a limited number of exhibits that are in controversy. This is the only time when the “rules of evidence” have a bearing, and they have a limited bearing.
Q: What are some of your interests or hobbies outside of your ADR Neutral practice?
A: Furniture making and fly-fishing.
Monday, November 28, 2022
Contractual Claims Protection: A Checklist for Owners
More and more public owners have come to the realization that their general conditions and “front-end” documents are inadequately protecting them. Here is a checklist of clauses for owners to consider including in contracts for protection against potential construction issues. The following, in no particular order of importance, are brief summaries of some of the key clauses that owners should consider including in their contracts.
Notice
Provisions –
These provisions require the contractor to provide the owner with prompt notice
of an alleged change, delay, claim for additional compensation, or differing
site condition. A well-drafted clause will strive to bar claims that did not
comply with the notice provisions because the owner can argue that there was a
lack of notice to be able to respond. The purpose of such provisions is to give
the owner an opportunity to adequately investigate the situation in order to
verify (or rebut) the contractor’s contention and to actively participate in
the resolution and monitoring of the work. In the case of an alleged differing
site condition, the notice requirement should be one of immediate notice, since
an owner investigation is likely essential to protect evidence of the condition
and to determine how the affected work will proceed.
Differing
Site Conditions – It is important to define what a differing site condition
is and how it will be treated should one be encountered during
construction. This clause is
particularly important in projects involving significant earthwork, tunneling,
work in highly developed areas or renovation projects due to the increased
likelihood of encountering susceptible conditions unknown to the designer and
bidders.
Scheduling
Requirements – Owners must take a more active role in monitoring the
contractor’s schedule submittals in order to protect against potential improper
schedule manipulation which could lead to inflated delay claims. In order to achieve this, owners must first
have a solid specification with a mandate that requires the contractor to
submit regular and meaningful schedule data.
The areas which the specification should cover include, at a minimum:
· Technical requirements for the
initial baseline submittal and updates
· Review/acceptance procedures and
timeframes
· Updating and revisions requirements
· Treatment of “early completion”
schedules
· Inclusion of submittals and
procurement activities in the overall schedule
· Means of submitting requests for time
extensions, i.e., fragnets
Audit
Provisions –
An owner can obtain extremely valuable information for evaluating or rebutting
a contractor’s change orders and claims by gaining access to the full volume of
the contractor’s records, including all cost records and correspondence with
subcontractors. General contractors
almost always have access to the public owner’s records by virtue of public
records statutes, but often an owner can only get access to a contractor’s
records after a formal litigation process has been initiated. A well-drafted audit or access to records
clause can provide the owner with the contractual right to have access to all
the contractor’s and subcontractors’ records at all stages of construction,
thereby giving the owner much more information to utilize when assessing a
request for change order or a claim demand.
Defined
Mark-ups –
Many disputes arise because contract provisions are not clear as to what is or
what is not included within a contractor’s and subcontractor’s mark-ups and
what is allowable under the contract.
Better defined provisions will take away the guesswork and arguments
associated with this common problem and will decrease the chances that an owner
pays for “double-dipped” overhead on extra or changed work.
Escrow
of Bid Documents – This is a procedure used on large projects whereby the
contractor is required to place all of its bid preparation materials into an
escrow. Then, if a change order or claim
arises that brings the contractor’s bid or original plan of performance into
question, the owner and contractor can jointly review the bid documents to
determine whether they support the contractor’s performance.
Claim
Submittal Requirements – Often, owners are frustrated at the end of a project when
the contractor submits a disjointed omnibus claim or a claim with too sparse
details that it is virtually “non-analyzable”. The addition of a claim
submittal clause can formally specify the format, content and level of back-up
documentation that is required within the contractor’s claim to be valid; otherwise,
it will be rejected until it meets the contract requirements.
Liquidated
vs. Actual Delay Damages – When drafting contracts, owners are faced with a choice in
deciding how they are going to address the possibility of contractor-caused
delays that extend a project completion date. The Owner can elect to include a
liquidated damages provision which is a pre-determined amount included in the
bid documents that “fixes” the contractor’s daily exposure or liability for
contractor-cause delays. The other option is for the owner’s contract to be
silent regarding the amount of damages that the contractor would be liable for
in the event of a delay. In that case,
the owner could claim all reasonable, foreseeable damages caused by the
contractor’s delay.
Limitations
on “Early Completion” Damages – Another damages-related area where
an owner can protect itself is in limiting the types of damages a contractor
can claim in the event of owner-caused delays or disruptions. One type of claim that is quite prevalent is
“early completion” whereby the contractor alleges that it would have finished
the project earlier than the required contract completion, but the owner caused
the delay, so the contractor is thereby entitled to the extended overhead
costs. Owners can include clauses in their contracts that prohibit the recovery
of damages based on missed early completion dates, forcing bidders to accept
language that specifically acknowledges this premise. A contractor may argue that in the public
sector such a clause is rendered unenforceable under certain state-enacted
statutes, which essentially makes wholesale no-damages-for-delay clauses
difficult to sustain. However, the distinction that the clause only limits a
contractor’s right to claim for early completion delays is not a wholesale
denial of liability for all owner-caused delay similar to most typical no-delay-for-damages
clauses. Like any contract provision
that restricts a contractor’s ability to recover, the mere potential for disagreement
should not hinder an owner from including such a clause in its contracts.
Defining
Submittal Review Times – An area of frequent dispute and delay allegations involves
the time taken by owner’s representatives to review required contractor
submittals. When a contract is silent
about how long an owner’s representative has to review submittals, there is
often a difference of opinion as to what a reasonable review period is. This
can result in protracted arguments and even claims. An easy way to address this from the outset
is to simply specify in the bid documents the timeframe, (e.g., 20 calendar
days) that the owner has to review submittals.
This forces the contractor to schedule its work accordingly based on the
assumption that the owner contractually has “X” number of days for review. Consideration should also be given in the
specifications as to whether the review “clock” fully or partially starts over
when a submittal is properly rejected and has to be resubmitted/re-reviewed. In addition, owners should consider
prohibiting the transmission of a large number of submittals simultaneously which
could effectively overwhelm the owner’s project staff.
Estimating Requests for Information (RFI) Times and Volume – Often, claims by contractors include allegations devoted to “untimely responses” or “excessive volume” of RFIs. Both of these subjects can be addressed by the owner in the contract. The first, dealing with turnaround time, can be resolved by simply specifying a contractual turnaround time. Many owners accuse contractors of failing to plan their work ahead and then demand instantaneous responses to RFIs. To fairly set the turnaround time, the owner must take into consideration the complexity and duration of the project. With regard to the volume of RFIs, a clause can be put into the contract stating that the contractor should expect “X” number of RFIs. This way, the owner can establish a reasonable baseline for denying “excessive” RFI-related claims and establish a baseline for contractor expectation. The owner must also be on the lookout for contractors that may submit unnecessary RFIs to circumvent the baseline.
The contract provisions discussed in this article are only a handful of the key clauses that an owner should consider to help protect against untimely or inflated claims. Because each project brings a different set of circumstances and complexities, it is always advised that owners engage a construction claims expert as early as possible to resolve potential issues arising on a project.
Mark Guevara, Esq., CFCC, PSP, PMP is a Principal Claims Analyst with ARCADIS and has over 35 years of experience in the areas of construction dispute and claims analysis and resolution. He has appeared before dispute review boards, panels, mediations, trial and appellate courts, and has testified as an expert witness. He served as Chairman of the Certified Forensic Claims Consultant (CFCC) Certification Board, AACE International (AACEi) and currently serves as Chairman (Elect) of the Construction Law Section, Orange County Bar Association.
Tuesday, November 15, 2022
Pennsylvania Superior Court Places Time Limit on Good Faith Withholding Under Prompt Payment Act
Constructural Dynamics, Inc. v. Thomas P. Carney, Inc., No. 1104 EDA 2021, 2022 Pa. Super. Unpub. LEXIS 1500, 2022 WL 2390125 (Pa. Super. July 1, 2022), reargument denied (Sept. 8, 2022).
Like many prompt payment acts, Pennsylvania’s Contractor and Subcontractor Payment Act (CASPA) permits owners and contractors to withhold payment for good faith claims — but not forever. Owners and contractors who wait too long could find themselves litigating prompt payment claims and paying the penalties those acts impose on procrastinating payors. A recent decision by the Pennsylvania Superior Court provides some guidance on how long is “too long” to withhold.
The decision arose from a breach of contract action by concrete supplier Silvi Concrete Products, Inc. (Silvi) against contractor Thomas P. Carney, Inc. (Carney). Silvi supplied concrete to Carney for the construction of a Philadelphia luxury hotel. Initial tests of Silvi’s concrete indicated that it broke at lower-than-expected compression strengths. Carney immediately terminated Silvi and hired a replacement supplier. Supplemental testing was conducted, during which Carney withheld payments to Silvi. The project engineer ultimately accepted Silvi’s concrete. Even after acceptance, Carney continued to withhold payment.
Silvi filed a complaint against Carney, alleging breach of contract, violation of CASPA, and unjust enrichment. Carney counterclaimed for breach of contract. A jury found in favor of Silvi on its breach of contract claim and awarded its unpaid $160,000 contract balance and $1 million in lost profits. In a subsequent bench trial, the court denied Silvi’s CASPA claim, finding that Carney had withheld payment in good faith. Carney appealed, and Silvi cross-appealed.
Silvi asserted that the trial court abused its discretion in denying its CASPA claim. It argued that in finding that Carney breached the parties’ contract, the jury implied that Silvi’s CASPA claim was valid. Silvi also argued that Carney did not prove that the amount it withheld was reasonably related to the value of its claim.
The appeals court concluded that the jury’s finding that Carney breached the contract was irrelevant to the validity of Silvi’s CASPA claim. Despite the breach, Carney had good faith basis for withholding payment — at least initially. And the amount withheld ($160,000) was reasonable since it was significantly outweighed by the potential cost to remove and replace the concrete ($13 million to $19 million). The court remanded for the trial court to reexamine whether Carney’s withholding after the project engineer accepted the concrete was in good faith, and whether Silvi could receive CASPA penalties as a result.
In its cross-appeal, Carney argued that the trial court erred by allowing Silvi to present evidence of its lost profits because its claim for lost profits was in essence a “lost volume seller” claim. Pennsylvania disallows “lost volume seller” claims because “[a]pplication of the doctrine would encourage the non-breaching party to do nothing to minimize its damages.”
The appeals court rejected Carney’s argument. Despite disallowing “lost volume seller” claims, “Pennsylvania permits a non-breaching party that has reasonably attempted to mitigate its damages to recover damages for lost profits.” The trial court specifically found that Silvi “made every reasonable effort to mitigate the lost sales and damages it suffered at the hands of Carney by reselling the material, thereby fulfilling the non-breaching party's duty to mitigate losses.” The trial court thus properly allowed the lost profits evidence.
Author Rachael Cain is an associate in the Litigation practice of Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, and a member of the Construction practice group. Prior to joining Troutman Pepper, Rachel served as Land Use and Real Estate General Counsel for Building & Land Technology. Her experience includes negotiating and drafting construction, design, architectural, and service contracts, as well as presenting zoning applications. Rachael has experience in both litigation and transactional matters and has appeared in state and administrative courts.
Author Jane Fox Lehman is an associate at Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP, and a member of the Construction practice group. Jane has substantial experience representing a variety of construction project participants in disputes arising from industrial, commercial, and multifamily residential construction projects. In addition to representing clients in state and federal courts and alternative dispute resolution proceedings, Jane assists clients with bid protests, contract review and negotiation, project management issues, and risk assessments. She is the co-editor of the firm’s construction law blog, Constructlaw.com.
Friday, November 11, 2022
Jurisdiction – Employee Training, Alone, May Subject You to a Foreign State’s Jurisdiction
Thursday, October 20, 2022
View from the Field Part 5 – Field Labor Disruption - Effective Project Management & Strategies
The Series – View from the Field
View from the Field is a series of blog posts providing a practitioner’s view of the management processes and challenges associated with construction megaprojects as well as large and complex projects. Addressed by both Edward W. Merrow of Independent Project Analysis, Inc. (IPA) and construction lawyer Andy Ness at a recent ABA Forum on Construction Law conference, their high-level perspectives are elaborated herein. This multi-part series has and will expand upon some practical aspects of the many challenges facing managers as well as highlight suggestions for implementation by inside or outside counsel.
Summary – Forensic Labor Productivity Management and Disruption
Purpose – The importance / value of this post:
Protect Clients / Direct Hire Contractors from compensable losses due to overruns in Field Labor Direct Labor Hours.
Protect Clients / Owners (reimbursable cost contracts) from improper charges for unproductive Field Labor Direct Labor Hours by the direct hire party.
Enhance probability of success and amount of damage recovery in dispute resolution processes.
Disruption
By the terminology Forensic Labor Productivity Management, I refer to productivity issues / losses or disruption that occur during changed work or that has occurred in a completed project.
Field Labor Disruption – the other “D” (Delay)
It is crucial to differentiate between delay and disruption. While the two may exist concurrently or on the same project, either (delay or disruption) can occur or be present without the presence of the other. Further, either (delay or disruption) can be recovered (through dispute resolution process) without reliance on the other being recovered or recoverable.
This has several important implications. In dispute resolution process, a two (or more) paths forward to recovery of damages enhance the probability of recovery. Potentially, Disruption and Delay are two separate paths. Recovery of damages from one (delay or disruption) does not necessarily rely on entitlement or recovery of damages from the other. Further, since the two derive damages from different cost pools or cost accounts, the potential recovery is increased.
The following table differentiates between the Disruption and Delay at a relatively high level:
Parameter | Disruption | Delay |
Stakeholders | Owners, Construction Managers, General Contractors, Non-Direct Hire Contracors, Direct Hire Contractors | Owners, Construction Managers, General Contractors, Subcontractors, Vendors |
Contract Provisions* | Assumptions about construction contracts – contractor entitled to economical operations, Implied Duty to Cooperate, contractor acts reasonably in planning** | Time, Schedule Specifications, Changes, others |
Fact Set | Factors that impact the field labor productivity baseline (planned or experienced during project execution) | Facts that impact variances from the As-Planned schedule |
Cause | Derived from Fact Set | Derived from Fact Set |
Effect | Variances resulting from the “Causes” | Variances resulting from the “Causes” |
Entitlement | Derived from Contract provisions and Fact Set / Cause | Derived from Contract provisions and Fact Set / Cause |
Analytical Methodologies | Lost Labor Productivity – measured mile, for example | Forensic Schedule Analysis – typically Critical Path Analysis |
Impacts | Labor Direct Work Hours exceed baseline without increased productivity / production / output | Project Completion later than originally planned date |
Damages / Cost Pool | Direct Costs – labor and equipment | Indirect Costs – site and home office |
Many Others | See References | See References |
*M&M is a consulting firm. We are not attorneys. These are practitioner views.
Changes and Variances – this is basic project “blocking and tackling.”
The presence and need for changed work provisions within larger projects is a necessary managerial and contract administration tool. Scope of Work, external conditions, other factors depart from the contract baseline. Equitably adjusting the contract for variances makes the stakeholders whole. Regarding disruption, the party(ies) taking the risk of labor Direct Work Hour quantities must be compensated for change-related variances. This includes one-off impacts such as cumulative impact.
Pricing changed work will use contemporaneous project productivity from the Field Labor Productivity curve (see below). This ensures full compensation for changed work.
Change Order releases must be skillfully implemented. Specificity and completeness are key. For example, if productivity impacts and costs are to be resolved by the change, it is essential that the intent is clear and that the releases are consistent with the intent. If cumulative impacts are not resolved (generally, cumulative impact cannot be resolved until project completion), make sure that the release is clear in this regard.
Process
Productivity Key Performance Indicators (KPI)
During the execution of the work, contemporaneous Productivity Ratio (PR) should be calculated, graphed and reported (in Monthly Progress Report – MPR). This Field Labor Productivity graph serves to detect variances over time, compile the data, report results (Cumulative and Incremental – 3-week moving average).
Time Periods 1, 2 and 3 indicate (possibly) differing cause(s) of reduced Field Labor Productivity. Hence, the fact set / evidence for each Time Period must be established / compiled. An effective compilation tool is shown below:
Contract Types and Stakeholder Considerations
In his ABA Forum on Construction Law presentation, Mr. Merrow, IPA presented the following regarding Contract Types and Outcomes:
Focusing on disruption, in any of the Contracting Approaches:
Fixed Price – generally the direct hire contractor is at risk for labor overruns due to disruption.
Reimbursable Cost – generally the owner is at risk for labor overruns due to disruption.
The at-risk / aggrieved party must have a mechanism for recovering damages that are caused by others. This is particularly true in the Reimbursable Cost Contracting Approach. Hence, contract provisions must be fashioned such that the risk profile has processes for recovering damages. This is particularly tricky when the risk is Field Labor Disruption.
Single Source of Truth (SSOT)
The data management associated with field labor productivity is a key consideration. A major limitation on both the recognition and recovery potential of disruption damages is the lack of data. More specifically, the data needs to establish output or progress per Direct Work Hour.
Define the productivity-related data in the Project Execution Plan. Gather the data on a contemporaneous basis (needed regardless), and control access to the editing or changing of this data. This ensures availability if claims for additional compensation for productivity-related losses become desirable.
Analytical methodologies, along with order of preference, are thoroughly discussed in AACE International Recommended Practice No. 25R-03, ESTIMATING LOST LABOR PRODUCTIVITY IN CONSTRUCTION CLAIMS.
Damage Calculation Options and Methods
Reconciliation to Actual As-Built Conditions
Delay – When performing schedule analyses, the analyst typically reconciles from the schedule baseline (As-Planned) to As-Built schedule.
Disruption – When performing disruption analyses, the analyst should reconcile to Actual Direct Work Hours. Payroll data is a typical source. The reconciliation can be displayed graphically using a pie chart where the entire pie represents Actual Direct Work Hours. Slices of the pie are groupings of key allocations such as: As-Planned, Issue #1 DWH’s, Issue #2 DWH’s, Contractor Responsible or Unallocated.
References
Useful references are available through: CII, AACE, ASCE, MCAA, NECA, USACE, SCL, BRT, Ibbs, Bramble & Callahan, Wickwire, Dale & D’Onofrio, ABA, Schwartzkopf and others.
Conclusions (Part 5)
Forensic Direct Labor Productivity management focused on field labor productivity can have many business and dispute resolution considerations:
Using proper Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) during project execution can achieve timely recognition of field labor productivity issues as well as facilitate contemporaneous gathering of data and documentation to support a potential change order request or claim (see prior post – Part 4 for suggestions).
Incorporating a disruption claim into a dispute resolution package can enhance probability of a successful outcome.
Costs of dispute resolution process can be mitigated by spreading the elements over the elements of the claim / complaint.
For the direct hire contractor, disruption recovery becomes a potential Competitive Edge.
For the owner (cost reimbursable type contracts), disruption recovery becomes a potential leverage or claim relative to the managing entity.
View from the Field – Scope of Work Management (Part 6)
Having discussed Retrospective Labor Productivity Management, Part 6 of this series will address managing the scope basis / baseline including changes thereto.
Author George T. McLaughlin PMP CCM has worked worldwide in this industrial marketplace since the early 1980’s. He serves Owners, Prime Contractors, and Subcontractors. For the most part, Mr. McLaughlin’s work is performed on-location where the relevant work is being performed hence the title “View from the Field.” Mr. McLaughlin is a testifying expert, speaker and author. Mr. McLaughlin is a principal of McLaughlin & McLaughlin out of Austin, Texas.