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An inspector can red-tag (reject) your electrical installation based on their personal opinion about what would be better for the homeowner, even if no specific code section, approved-plan requirement, or local rule has been violated.
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Electrician Business Operations
Running an Electrical Contracting Business Course
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An inspector can red-tag (reject) your electrical installation based on their personal opinion about what would be better for the homeowner, even if no specific code section, approved-plan requirement, or local rule has been violated.
During an inspection, the inspector tells you they do not like how you routed a specific conduit run and issues a rejection, but they do not mention a specific code violation. You respectfully ask them for the code section or approved-plan requirement that the installation violates. By doing this, what are you primarily trying to accomplish?
During field operations, you will encounter various types of inspection rejections. Match each inspector scenario with the most appropriate contractor response to effectively manage corrections.
An inspector issues a rejection on your recent installation without citing a specific rule. You need to determine if it is an enforceable violation. Arrange the following actions in the logical sequence required to analyze the rejection and ensure any necessary corrections are based only on enforceable requirements.
You are evaluating a disputed rejection where the inspector admits the installation technically meets the code but insists on a different method 'for the homeowner's sake.' To justify refusing the costly rework, you respectfully request the specific code section violated. This strategic request allows you to establish that the rejection is invalid because it is based on the inspector's personal ________ rather than an enforceable requirement.