Fee Guidelines for Engineering Services Table Of Contents - APEGBC
Fee Guidelines for Engineering Services Table Of Contents - APEGBC
Fee Guidelines for Engineering Services Table Of Contents - APEGBC
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<strong>Contents</strong><br />
<strong>Table</strong> of <strong>Contents</strong><br />
Foreword<br />
Section A<br />
Section B<br />
Section C<br />
<strong>Table</strong> 1<br />
<strong>Table</strong> 2<br />
<strong>Table</strong> 3<br />
<strong>Table</strong> 4<br />
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<strong>Fee</strong> <strong>Guidelines</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Engineering</strong> <strong>Services</strong><br />
n After negotiations have been successfully completed with the preferred<br />
consultant, the other companies are notified and their fee envelopes<br />
returned unopened.<br />
Sound agreements prevent problems: The agreement between client<br />
and consultant is governed by the size, complexity, duration and other<br />
aspects of the assignment. A simple project may require only a simple<br />
agreement while a large project would usually need documentation reviewed<br />
by legal counsel. Projects between these extremes may employ one<br />
of the four standard agreements most commonly used in British Columbia:<br />
• ACEC 31 (1996), Prime Agreement between Client and Engineer<br />
• ACEC 32-S (1984), Agreement between Engineer and Subconsultant<br />
• BC Ministry of Health, Standard Form of Agreement between Client and<br />
Consultant (an agreement between the Ministry and the Architect, and<br />
the Ministry and the Engineer, in parallel)<br />
• NPP Doc 9 (fomerly Doc 6C), Standard Form of Agreement between<br />
Architect and Consultant<br />
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