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Water and Wastewater Engineering - Sciences Club

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documents (EJCDC, 2002). Not withst<strong>and</strong>ing the engineer’s contract exculpatory provisions,<br />

the courts have insisted that the engineer provide a st<strong>and</strong>ard of responsible care (Loulakis <strong>and</strong><br />

McLaughlin, 2007).<br />

1-7 HINTS FROM THE FIELD<br />

E xperienced engineers have provided the following insights on the design <strong>and</strong> construction<br />

process:<br />

• The option for a municipal owner to purchase equipment should be considered carefully.<br />

Tax issues should be discussed with appropriate legal counsel. Other issues include potential<br />

late or early delivery of equipment. In these cases what is the impact/responsibility for<br />

contract completion? Who stores equipment delivered early? Who insures it?<br />

• Construction cost estimates should be conservatively high. A low estimate may require<br />

redoing the bond application <strong>and</strong> authorization including the potential requirement for an<br />

election to approve additional bonding authority.<br />

Operation <strong>and</strong> maintenance personnel who have to live with the results of the engineer’s<br />

design have offered the following suggestions:<br />

• The engineer’s job is not done when the owner accepts the project. Good engineering practice,<br />

as well as good client relations, requires that the design team keep in contact with the<br />

facility. Immediately after project completion, a monthly phone call for a status check, <strong>and</strong><br />

to hear about problems <strong>and</strong>/or concerns, is a first step. This is to get issues raised early by<br />

the owner, so they do not become major sore points. After a reasonable time of operation,<br />

generally within six months <strong>and</strong> perhaps again a year or two later, the design team should<br />

visit the facility. The purpose of the visit is to assess the practical operation of the facility as<br />

well remove the impression that “It’s built, I am paid, so I am gone.” Often these visits will<br />

reveal some enhancement that operators have made to make the operation of the facility<br />

easier or more economical.<br />

The visit can also serve as an after-action summary of the communications issues that<br />

occurred <strong>and</strong> corrections to enhance future work. It is also useful at this time to compare the<br />

economic analysis assumptions with actual operating experience.<br />

• O&M manuals do not give much operational guidance. Their focus is the mechanics of<br />

equipment start-up, shut-down, <strong>and</strong> maintenance. Frequently, they only include the equipment<br />

suppliers’ O&M manuals. In general operators must prepare st<strong>and</strong>ard operating procedures<br />

(SOPs) for process control. This means the operators should be hired before project<br />

construction is completed so they have a chance to ask questions <strong>and</strong> prepare the SOPs.<br />

Because hiring is the owner’s responsibility, the need for operators to be on board before<br />

construction is complete should be brought to their attention by the engineer.<br />

Visit the text website at www.mhprofessional.com/wwe for supplementary materials<br />

<strong>and</strong> a gallery of photos.<br />

THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION PROCESSES 1-23

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