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While performing an electrical upgrade in an old building, your crew discovers on October 1st that the existing junction boxes are encased in a type of hardened insulating foam not mentioned in the plans, which will significantly increase the labor hours required. You stop work in that area immediately but wait until October 20th to send a formal notice to the owner and architect. If your contract follows the standard 14-day notice requirement, why might your request for additional labor costs be denied?
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When a contractor discovers an unexpected hidden condition on a job site, the contractor is allowed to disturb or alter the condition first and then provide written notice to the owner afterward, as long as the notice is sent within the required timeframe.
While trenching for underground feeders on a commercial site, an electrical crew strikes an unmarked, concrete-encased duct bank that is not shown on the site plans. It completely blocks the planned trench path and will require significant extra labor to bypass. To properly preserve the right to a contract adjustment, what is the most critical action the contractor must take before the crew takes any further action in that area?
Match each action involved in the concealed condition notice process with its underlying purpose.
An electrical crew encounters an unexpected structural obstacle hidden behind a wall that will require extra labor and materials to bypass. To properly manage this concealed condition and preserve the right to a contract adjustment, arrange the following actions in the correct operational sequence.
An electrical crew uncovers an unexpected, concrete-encased obstruction while trenching. The site foreman proposes immediately breaking through the obstruction to maintain the project schedule, planning to submit a claim for the extra labor later. Upon evaluating this plan against standard contract requirements, the project manager rejects it, determining that doing so would destroy critical evidence needed for a contract adjustment. The manager correctly insists that formal notice must be provided to the owner and architect before the condition is _________.
You are composing a formal 'Notice of Concealed Condition' email after your crew discovers an undocumented buried concrete slab while trenching. Arrange the following components in the correct order to create a professionally structured and contractually compliant notice.
While performing an electrical upgrade in an old building, your crew discovers on October 1st that the existing junction boxes are encased in a type of hardened insulating foam not mentioned in the plans, which will significantly increase the labor hours required. You stop work in that area immediately but wait until October 20th to send a formal notice to the owner and architect. If your contract follows the standard 14-day notice requirement, why might your request for additional labor costs be denied?
What is the primary objective of the contractual requirement to provide formal notice of a concealed condition before the electrical crew disturbs the area?
During an electrical renovation of a hospital wing, your crew discovers crumbling white insulation on existing conduits that was not mentioned in the project's hazardous materials report. The hospital's facilities manager tells you to 'just wear a mask and keep working' to avoid closing the hallway during the day. To properly follow the 'Concealed Condition Notice Before Disturbance' process and protect your company's right to a contract adjustment for abatement costs, what should you do?
An electrical contractor discovers an undocumented buried steel tank while trenching for a new service line. To avoid a $2,500 daily delay penalty, the contractor takes high-resolution photos, removes the tank immediately, and then sends a formal notice to the owner and architect that same afternoon. Evaluate the effectiveness of this approach in protecting the contractor’s right to a contract adjustment.