Executive Summary The “Steel Team” composed of fabricator and erector joined together to sue the owner and general contractor for failure to pay on changes. The “right” parties appeared to win, but they paid dearly. The Project and Players The project was the Ascent...
Top 5 Uh-Oh Signs of a Client
Executive Summary: If you do not have a relationship with a client, or you are moving to a different management team within a familiar client, there can be some telltale warning signs. Listen to your client for some of the items listed below and beware. #5 The taped...
The “All Zeroes One” Code Prevents Lost A/P Invoices
Executive Summary: A key component of job cost reporting is accurate posting of accounts payable (A/P). The time between receiving the invoice in the mail and posting it to your job cost reports can be fatal to a job, or a company. The answer is to not let the invoice...
Getting Paid: Some Suggestions
Executive Summary The law* provides the rules of getting paid in construction. Sometimes contractors must use the law, other times there are other easier (less expensive and quicker) ways of getting paid. *I’m not a lawyer, so please make sure to consult with your...
Make Claim Preparedness the Standard, not the Exception
Executive Summary: More and more construction jobs year after year go to litigation – or at least go “legal” as I say, by requiring the services of a lawyer. Don’t make preparing for a claim a monstrous duty towards the end of the job, prepare as you go with good...
Jury Finds City Acted in Bad Faith and Contractor Still Pays His Own Attorney’s Fees
Executive Summary: Kevin McKeon, Senior Partner at Watt Tieder (McLean, Virginia), reported in their firm’s Fall 2016 newsletter on an interesting case in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. Despite the jury finding the City of Allentown acted in bad faith, the trial...