Ghosts From The Boom
From the Las Vegas Business Press:
The number of local construction-defect lawsuits has risen alongside the valley’s population. And one reason for this may be the heavy regulatory burden assumed by the area’s building and safety officials who oversaw all the area development.
County officials say that at the height of the building boom some inspectors were doing as many as 70 inspections a day. In response to reports that county building inspectors were conducting as many as 120 inspections a day during 2004 and 2006, Clark County Director of Development Services Ron Lynn said those numbers never got higher than between 60 and 70.
This article seems to echo the sentiments of many outsiders to the construction defect industry - that it is the responsibility of the local building departments (i.e.: the government) to prevent construction defects by policing contractors. In order for such a situation to exist, the local official would have to be on site at all times, or at least on a daily basis, at every single project. Instead, officials perform periodic inspections at certain key points in the construction of a project. For this reason, it is almost unheard of to see successful legal action taken against building officials for construction defect claims. Although some forward-thinking developers employ third party consultants to maintain an active presence during construction, this is not commonplace, especially in the production housing segment. Those developers that have relied upon such quality control consultants, have very little exposure in terms of construction defect claims, as problems are corrected as they arise. Until this practice becomes more widespread, homeowners will continue to rely upon construction defect consultants, such as SHCC, Inc., to aid in resolving these issues.
27 April 2008 | Construction, Construction Defect, Construction and Law, Consulting, Experts, Inspections, Litigation | Comments


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