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Arrange the correct sequence of actions an electrical contractor must follow to protect their right to compensation when an architect requests a minor change that will unexpectedly increase project costs.
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When must an electrical contractor provide a written notice stating that a requested minor change will actually affect the contract price or schedule?
When an electrical contractor sends written notice that a requested minor change will affect the contract price or schedule, the notice must include a detailed cost estimate or time delay analysis.
Arrange the correct sequence of actions an electrical contractor must follow to protect their right to compensation when an architect requests a minor change that will unexpectedly increase project costs.
Match each scenario involving an architect's 'minor change' order with the correct contractual consequence for the electrical contractor.
An electrical contractor completes an architect's minor change order to reroute conduit, but their subsequent claim for a schedule extension is legally denied. Analyzing this breakdown in contract administration, the claim was rejected because the contractor waived their rights by failing to submit a ____________ before performing the changed work.
An architect orders your electrical contracting crew to switch from surface-mounted conduit to in-wall conduit in one room—classified as a minor change. Your foreman estimates it will add roughly $1,200 in labor and two extra days. Which of the following responses best protects your company's right to recover the added cost and time while maintaining a professional working relationship?
You are establishing a new Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for your electrical contracting business to handle 'minor change' requests from architects. To create a workflow that legally protects your company from performing free labor, arrange the following steps in the correct order.
As an electrical business owner, you are critiquing your team's handling of 'minor change' requests. Match each foreman's reasoning for their actions with the most accurate evaluation of their decision-making based on contract standards.
According to standard electrical contracting agreements, what is the legal consequence if a contractor proceeds with a 'minor change' without first giving notice that the change will affect the contract price or schedule?
If an architect orders a 'minor change' that an electrical contractor believes will actually impact the project schedule, what is the primary purpose of sending a written notice before starting the work?