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126LEGE Contract G eneral C onditions : P rovisions to R eview C hecklists

126LEGE Contract G eneral C onditions : P rovisions to R eview C hecklists. Ales Tomek , CVUT March 2014. PART 1 - CONTRACT PROVISIONS THAT MUST BE REVIEWED FOR CLARIFICATION. 1. Owner’s responsibility. • Drawings and specifications ( construction documents ) • Site layout

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126LEGE Contract G eneral C onditions : P rovisions to R eview C hecklists

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  1. 126LEGE Contract GeneralConditions:Provisionsto ReviewChecklists Ales Tomek , CVUT March 2014

  2. PART 1 - CONTRACT PROVISIONS THAT MUST BE REVIEWED FOR CLARIFICATION

  3. 1. Owner’sresponsibility • Drawings and specifications (constructiondocuments) • Site layout • Soil borings and site conditions • Environmentalreports and approvals • Abatement of any hazardous material • Special studies (traffic, water, utilities) • Permitsclarification • Utilities • Disputes with adjacent owners or municipality • Testingresponsibility • Other areas where the owner has control and must submit the information .

  4. 2. Schedule • Type that has to be prepared • Updatesrequired • Penalty clauses • Substantialcompletionprovisions • Delays (not covered by force majeure) • Extensions • Delays caused by owner or owner’s subcontractors or vendors

  5. 3. Costs • As defined in the contract • Allowances and how to be used • Definitionofallowanceitems • How will GMP be impacted by actual cost vs. allowances allocated? • Contingency and how is it to be used and who controls it? • General condition’s clarifications (what is included and what is excluded?) • Inflationclause • Costs covered by the owner • Valueengineering • New regulations by municipal and government agencies • Auditing of project by the owner

  6. 4. Changeorders • Howdefined • Methodfordevelopingcosts • Approvalprocess • Who signs off on any change orders? • Will labor rate change if new contracts are agreed upon

  7. 5. Disputeresolution • Records that have to be kept • Type of daily reports that have to be maintained • Owner and CM/GC executive review • Independent reviewboard • Mini trials (the executives of each party are involved in the negotiations. The lawyersfor each of the affected parties prepare briefs and summaries and thenpresent theseresults to the executives. A neutral party selected by the executives’ acts as a mediatorbetween the disputed parties)

  8. Disputeresolution - contd • Mediation (includesnegotiationsbetweenparties, the parties select a mediator from the Mediation Board. The mediator does not comeup with a decision. The mediator assists the M/GC and the owner in trying to get thetwo parties to agree to a solution to the problem. • Arbitration • Other legal means, including litigation • Noticeprovisions (How to …)

  9. 6. Requisitions and retainer • Schedule of values required? When is it paid and how often? • What is required with submittal? • Waiver of liens and from whom? • Subcontractorsinvoices • Percentageofretainer • When will the retainer be released? • Will retainer be held on fee, bonds, or insurance? • Final payment (In what manner?)

  10. 7. Insurance • Coverage • Is builder’s all risk policy required? (Property insurance covering loss arising from any fortuitous cause except those that are specifically excluded) (fortuitous = happening by chance rather than intention) • Will wrap-up insurance be considered? (The wrap-up policy takes the place of all of the individual insurance policies that theowner, CM/GC, and subcontractors would normally provide to cover their contractualrequirements, risks, and the construction work. The concept is the same, whether theowner or contractor procures the wrap-up insurance policy for the project—to provideone umbrella insurance policy for the entire project that will cover all parties) • Understandingtherequirements • Who is to be covered?

  11. 8. Bonds • Types (i.e., bid, performance, payment, lien) • Enforcement • Circumstances in which they will be evoked

  12. 9. Unforeseenconditions • Foundations and bearingcapacity • Property lines • Utilities

  13. 10. Owner’s representative, architect, and consultants • Definitionof role • Changesofscope • Means and methods • Review shop drawings and RFIs

  14. 11. Coordinateddrawings • CM/GC vs. the design team • What is to be coordinated

  15. 12. Close-out • Punchlists • Final waiver of liens and claims • Department of Buildings sign off • Close-outdocuments • Warranties (what is covered and when does it start?) • Maintenanceagreements (ifany) • Atticstock (additionalmaterial), As-builtdrawings, Maintenancemanuals, Training(ifrequired) • Specific equipment use and maintenance classes • Maintenancecostsrequired?

  16. 13. Termination • Underwhatcircumstances? • Definepayment

  17. PART 2 - POTENTIAL ONEROUS CONTRACT CLAUSESCHECKLIST The CM/GCs should review certain clauses in the contract to make sure that anypotential risk involved is within acceptable levels, including, but not limited to thefollowingprovisions Onerous = burdensome, oppressive, or troublesome; causing hardship

  18. 1. Payment • Owner should make payments within a 30-day period. • If payments will be made outside of 30 days, then the contractor and the subcontractorsmust be aware of this delay, and bid accordingly. • Be careful of states that refuse to enforce “pay when paid” clauses, thereby requiring payments to subcontractors even when the contractor is not paid by the owner in a timely manner. • Check to see if the state in which you are working gives certificates of capital improvements (usually means that you do not have to pay sales tax on the labor portion of a capital improvement).

  19. 2. Retention • Most owners require 10% retention. This means that when a subcontractor submitsa monthly invoice, only 90% of the submitted costs will be paid. Theremaining 10% is held by the owner (or financial institution paying for theproject). • The contract should define at what point in the project the retention will bereleasedorreduced.

  20. 3. Changeorders • May require the contractor to proceed with the work even when the cost is in dispute.In this particular case, all involved parties must retain accurate cost, scheduling, and photographicinformation. • Negotiating skills must be exercised so that the cost issue can be resolved as expeditiously as possible. Many disputes and claims are based on change order work that has progressed without resolving the monetary issues. • Method for providing data for a change order should be spelled out in the documents. • Make sure that change orders will only precede after the owner’s authorized representativesignsa proposal.

  21. 4. Authorization • The owner must assign one person who has the authority to make changes and to approvechangeorders. • Be careful of multi-approval process (i.e., architect and owner representation).

  22. 5. Liquidated damages or consequential damages • The contractor is usually better off with a specified sum for each day lost than having to determine what the cost expenses might be at some future date. • The schedule has to be clearly defined. • Achange initiated by the owner must be detailed as to the possible extension of time. • Never agree to any consequential damages. They may include items by the owner that would be completely out of the scope of the project. If it cannot be avoided then a list of all the consequential damages (with the costs) must be enumerated. The contractor should review this and unreasonable items should be eliminated.

  23. 6. Forcemajeure • Events or circumstances beyond the control of the parties. Examples could bewar, flooding, earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes, and volcano eruption. • Force majeure clause must be part of the contract. Thus, weather informationhistory for the area in question must be analyzed.

  24. 7. No damages for delay (by the owner) • This is an onerous contract provision and should be deleted. It typically statesthat the contractor’s sole and exclusive remedy, if delayed, is a time extension.The CM/GC should be paid for any event precipitated by the owner that willcause the project schedule to extend beyond the original agreed upon date. • Any delay caused by the owner will cause extensive costs to the CM/GC. Thiscould be additional general conditions, subcontractor costs, and potential inflationarycosts for material and labor.

  25. 8. Warranty • Warranty for construction is usually for 1 year (except for certain work and equipmentthat may have an extended warranty). • When does the warranty period start? AIA documents state that the warrantyperiod will start from substantial completion of the project. • Substantial completion as defined by the AIA is the period when the facility canbe occupied for the owner’s beneficial use.

  26. Warranty - contnd • If the owner should occupy the space prior to substantial completion, then theresponsibility of the owner must be detailed in writing as to the owner’s obligationfor non-completed areas. This could include protection of the walls, ceiling,and flooring; rebalancing of the mechanical systems; and early start-up costs forallsystems. • Make sure that any warranty does not include maintenance of the equipment during the period unless expressly requested in the design documents. • If the owner wants the CM/GC to attend any meetings after the warranty period,thendefine the meetings and how the CM/GC will be paid.

  27. 9. Allowances • When documents are presented that are not complete, an allowance must beindicated. • Make sure that any allowance is based on as much information as possible provided by the design team. • In order to protect the CM/GC, the allowance cost item must be clearlydefined (i.e., curtain wall is standard 1/4 in. insulated glass in aluminummullions that will be spaced 5 ft apart and can withstand a wind load of 60 lb/ft2with no air or water leakage. The total area of the curtain wall will be 80,000 ft2).

  28. Allowances - contnd • When the drawings are complete (no drawings are 100% complete) and youreceive a bid from a subcontractor, the cost is going to be compared to theallowance you developed. If the bid is lower, there is no problem. If the bid ishigher than the allowance, then the problems start. The CM/GC may be requiredto pay the difference if the allowance was not clearly defined.

  29. 10. Constructiondocuments • The contract documents (drawings, specifications, addendums, bulletins, sketches)must be listed with the latest revision dates. • These documents will act as your base for the construction of the project

  30. 11. Disputeresolution • Some form of dispute resolution should be included in the contract. • This would take the form of collaborating, arbitration, mediation, or a disputeresolutionboard. • If the parties do not agree to arbitration, they can end up in court.

  31. 12. Constructionacceleration • If the owner has this provision in the contract, then the CM/GC must prepare acost (with inflation) that would account for the economic effect of finishing theworkearlierthenanticipated. • It is of utmost importance that the CM/GC does not proceed until a cost has beennegotiatedwiththeowner. • It must also be stipulated that at least 1 month would be required to obtain the costsforacceleration.

  32. 13. Schedule • The contract should be specific as to the time to complete the work (i.e., 100workdays, no weekends or holidays). • The approved schedule should be based on one that is submitted by the CM/GCand approved by the owner. • All holidays, weekends, and restrictive days (no work mandated by a municipality)must be noted on the schedule. • Owner-provided equipment and finishes must also be shown on the schedule.

  33. 14. Approvalprocess • Be careful of clauses where the owner’s consultants will act as final and conclusivearbitrators of any disputes that may arise. This will mean that an individualwho works for the owner will have the final say on a disagreement between theowner and the CM/GC.

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