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Civil Engineering Project Management (4th Edition)

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Contract state that the employer will obtain this licence, but that the contractor<br />

must comply with all other requirements of the Act and any conditions<br />

attached to the licence (Clause 27). The contractor has to give notices as<br />

required by the Act and the Street Works (Registers, Notices, Directions<br />

and Designations) Order 1992. Notice to start work must be given at least<br />

7 working days in advance, and the work must be started within 7 days of the<br />

notified starting date. The Street Works (Qualifications of Supervisors and<br />

Operative) Regulations 1992 require a qualified supervisor and at least one<br />

qualified operative to be full time on site. Road reinstatement requirements<br />

are set out in the Street Works (Reinstatement) Regulations 1992 and a Code<br />

of Practice issued by the Secretary of State.<br />

A highway authority can direct the timing of works, require safety measures<br />

and stipulate avoidance of unnecessary delay or obstruction. A standard<br />

charge for inspections can be made and the authority can also charge for the<br />

occupation of a highway where works are unreasonably prolonged, and for<br />

the cost of temporary traffic regulation.<br />

The highway authority is required to keep a register of street works; this<br />

can be of use to the contractor but, in the nature of things, it may not show<br />

every service that lies underground nor provide exact information as to its<br />

position. A highway (termed a ‘street’ in the 1991 Act) normally means all the<br />

land between the boundaries of private properties fronting on a public road,<br />

that is, including the road verges.<br />

The diversion of existing services often requires joint action by the agent and<br />

resident engineer. If need be, the resident engineer should arrange for meetings<br />

with the district engineers of the authorities concerned, for example, county or<br />

district roads department, gas, water, sewerage, electricity, telephone and TV<br />

cable authorities. The resident engineer must see that the reasonable requirements<br />

of the various authorities are complied with by the contractor; on the<br />

other hand he should help to resist any unreasonable requests being put upon<br />

the contractor. Most authorities prefer to divert their own services; many will<br />

not permit a contractor to undertake diversion of their equipment. Similarly<br />

with respect to final road reinstatement, the road authority has power to do this<br />

and may prefer to do so. A common requirement of a road authority is that a<br />

trench for a pipeline, sewer, etc. laid along a road must be at least 1 m away<br />

from the road edge (i.e. fully in the road or fully in the verge), except where it<br />

has to cross below a road edge.<br />

12.15 Site drainage<br />

Site surveys, investigations and layout 141<br />

Difficulty often occurs in draining a site where large scale earthmoving is taking<br />

place. The excavations disturb the natural drainage of the land and large<br />

quantities of mud may be discharged to local watercourses during wet weather.<br />

Complaints then arise from riparian owners and water abstractors downstream.<br />

If this possibility should occur the resident engineer should advise the

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