Record Keeping For Delay Analysis PDF
Record Keeping For Delay Analysis PDF
Record Keeping For Delay Analysis PDF
School of Construction and Property Management, University of Salford, Bridgewater Building, Salford, Greater
Manchester, M7 9NU, UK
2
Department of Built Environment, University of Central Lancashire, Harris Building, Preston, Lancashire. PR1 2HE,
UK
Received 10 September 2004; accepted 2 November 2005
Increasingly sophisticated computer software is being utilized to support detailed critical path method (CPM)
analysis for resolving delay and disruption claims. The accurate determination of entitlement is however still
dependent on the quality of programme and progress information provided by all parties. A comparative
analysis of record-keeping methods in the UK and the US reveals that there is less rigour to this practice in the
UK, where parties are not required by the contract to provide such records. In most forms of US government
construction contract the contractor is required to produce a schedule using CPM software and to regularly
update this to reflect project progress and changes. Recent recommended best practice in the UK also stipulates
that the contractor should keep reliable and accurate progress and programme records to assist
contemporaneous assessment of the cause and effect of project changes. While not contractually imperative,
a clear method of managing information is important in UK construction and engineering projects to facilitate
more effective and accurate assessments of delay and disruption. The US experience and good practice
approaches in the UK demonstrate the importance of implementing and establishing an event management
strategy and archive at the outset of projects.
Keywords: Delay analysis, records, change event, event archive, programme, claims
Introduction
No matter what project controls are put in place,
unfortunately delay and disruption especially on large
or complex projects are almost inevitable. As
McCullough (1989) states, The basis of most construction claims is a delay. Delay is the situation where
the works take longer than originally intended. Delays
can be approval delays, information delays or work
undertaken later than originally planned. (Williams
et al., 2003). The variable which is affected by the event
is time-related. Disruption by contrast does not refer to
the timing of the works but to the situation where the
works are made more difficult by some act of hindrance
or prevention by the employer.
1008
extension of time (EOT) claims and/or prolongation
claims after the project has finished (when relationships
can start to break down). This situation is unlikely to
change in the future. In paragraph 9.4 of the Latham
Report, Latham states that disputes may arise despite
everyones best efforts to avoid them. Carnell (2000:
89) adds: It is a mistake to believe that the post
Latham and Egan construction industries will be free
from claims.
Carnell (2000: 107) also states that disputes will arise
not least because there will be instances where a genuine
difference occurs, where the parties hold sincere but
diametrically opposed opinions: One should not demonize construction disputes. The key is to understand the
place in which disputes and the available mechanisms for
their resolution occupy in the construction process.
Williams (2003) states that most good contractors will
try to avoid getting into claims situations where possible.
Zack (1993) however suggests that claimsmanship
often reduces transparency in the claims process and lists
11 claim games commonly played out by contractors
on public projects.
The use of delay analysis is currently increasingly
popular with the courts in identifying culpability and
ascertaining damages. The increasing use of computers
in recent years has enabled critical path programmes to
be analysed and, using a range of assessment methods,
highly complex projects can in theory be analysed for
delays and disruption and very specific answers
regarding the impact of delay events on the programme
are often provided to the courts.
The problem is that delay claims involve detailed
investigation of the project, often retrospectively,
which requires a vast number of documents to be
reviewed and people to be interviewed, which can be
a time-consuming and resource-hungry process.
Alkass et al. (1995) discuss the effort involved in this
and say that 70 per cent of the effort in a claim is
spent on searching and organizing information.
Effective delay analysis must consider all delaying
events and is dependent on the facts of the case.
Facts in this sense mean the projects factual records,
i.e. variations, correspondence, minutes of meetings,
progress reports and so on. If this process is not
managed effectively, claims can be at best very timeconsuming to assess in terms of validity and at worst
deceivingly inaccurate.
Gibson (2003) states:
Too often do we see extension of time and delay claims
submissions containing several lever arch files of these facts
with no specific linkage to the alleged events that caused the
delay. There may also be a bundle of computer printouts
indicating the claimed effects but the causal link is not clearly
defined. The referee is expected to find it and often its like
looking for a needle in a haystack!
1009
N
N
N
N
agreed
agreed
agreed
agreed
and to prevent:
N
N
N
N
1010
(1) Records are required to show what work was
carried out and when; and
(2) the contractor and employer should agree what
records are to be kept.
While such an approach if implemented would
undoubtedly afford significant benefits to the employer,
it will clearly require a level of rigour that is unusual
with regard to normal project change management
practices. Indeed this recommended approach has been
criticized by some as placing too much of an administrative burden on the parties in terms of programming
and record-keeping, which will inexorably increase
construction costs (Henchie, 2002). Contractors are
under considerable pressure to minimize their profit
margins and it is sensible to assume that any additional
obligations that require extra resources and for which
there are no immediate benefits to the contractor will to
some extent be opposed. However, these potential
barriers also exist in the US, yet contractors on many
projects are very careful to provide contemporaneous
documentation and programme updates.
1011
UFGS
AIA
FIDIC4
SCL
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
1012
Table 2
Contract requirements
Baseline programme required
Periodic updates (as contract)
Periodic updates (contractors
discretion)
Update programme when
instructed by CA if behind
programme
Update programme only
when an EOT granted
Update programme only if
there is a variation
Update programme when CA
gives notice that programme
is inconsistent with contract
or actual progress
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
MTC
89
JCT
80&98
FIDIC/
Build 98
3
3
3
FIDIC 4 DB95
M&E87
Discussion
As discussed, there is a significant difference between the
US and the UK regarding the rigour with which parties
1013
progresses (represented by the black arrow in the
diagram) these records are continually added into this
general archive incorporating tender and contract
documentation which may be critical to the resolution
of disputes arising later in the project. On many
projects this archive is fragmented and disparate and
project records exist in different offices, scattered across
the entire project organization. It is becoming more
common for some form of electronic system to be used,
especially for drawing and document management,
which makes it easier to access files (but does not
necessarily mean they are ordered, cross-referenced or
managed any more effectively).
At some point in time as the project continues, the
occurrence of some form of change event is almost
Figure 1 Common process for dealing with project change events (EV1: change event 1; MS: management system; CA:
contract administrator; BP: baseline programme; MP: master programme; M: mitigation; C: claimant; RI:
retrospective investigation; CD: claims documentation)
1014
inevitable (Ev1 in Figure 1). Once a change event has
been notified by the contractor or identified by the
employer, there are a range of different ways in which it
will be dealt with by management Normally some form
of assessment is undertaken regarding the potential for
cost increases resulting from the change, but rarely will
effects on the project programme be considered or
the programme be formally updated. Frequently the
specifics of the change event are not recorded at
the time and the project progresses until slippage in the
programme manifests itself. At this point, if the
contractor believes he has been subjected to some form
of employer delay, he will submit a request for an
extension of time using evidence based on progress
information contained in the general project archive.
Some of this information will have been submitted to
the engineer/employer and some will not have been.
The contractor administrator (the engineer in this
example) will then attempt to make an assessment of
the change event to determine if any EOT is deserved.
And this can be where the problem starts. If none of the
records in the general project archive have been directly
related to the change event, the engineer must undertake an often complex assessment to determine cause
and effect, in a relatively short period of time (time
period being determined by the contract) in order to
check the contractors claim. Frequently the limited
records available make an accurate assessment difficult,
which leaves the door open for the contractor to quite
legitimately question the engineers analysis as lacking
the conclusive evidence on which to reach an unequivocal decision.
A separate process of investigating the event retrospectively then arises, often involving additional
resources such as external consultants, and which
frequently leads to arbitration and even litigation.
Meanwhile the project continues to progress and other
change events occur with similar results, which can lead
to numerous disparate disputes on events being dealt
with at the same time. This can seriously hinder any
attempts to mitigate delays due to the team not being
able to accurately assess the impact of concurrent or
parallel delays occurring on the project. This in itself is
rarely a simple task as there are many differing
approaches to assessing concurrent delay claims
(Martin, 2002). Mitigation strategies are therefore
often limited due to their reacting to specific events in
isolation. Even if all these disputes are resolved through
mediation, the time and resource expended in obtaining agreement can be monumental. It is also interesting
to note that so often the point at which reliable
information regarding a specific change event is
collated, documented and filed properly (in what we
term here as a claims archive) is when the initial
1015
Figure 2 Proposed process for dealing with project change events (Ev1: change event 1; MS: management strategy; CA:
contract administrator; BP: baseline programme; MP: master programme; M: mitigation; GPA: general project
archive)
Periodic updates
The update period needs to be specified and it needs to
be agreed that in the event of a departure from the
master programme the contractor will provide a revised
programme. The logic changes for each update also
need to be reported.
Scheduling software specified
In order to overcome issues of incompatibility it is
prudent to agree the type of software to be used for
programming.
1016
Resource and cost loading
Penalties
1017
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Conclusion
It is clear that common problems associated with the
production of project records in the UK may be
expedited through implementation of the SCL protocol
recommendations for procedures to help project teams
deal with delay and disruption.
The US currently has more rigorous and onerous
procedures regarding the production and maintenance
of project records, especially on public contracts.
However, certain barriers exist that might prevent such
an approach being adopted in the UK, notably public
sector clients disinclination to implement such recordkeeping as a contractual requirement.
While in the UK parties are not obliged to produce
the same degree of rigour when documenting project
change events or when recording project progress, it is
nonetheless imperative that they carefully establish
methods and procedures for dealing with such events
at the project front end. The implementation of such a
strategy within claims management or change management systems will avoid unnecessary and costly
investigations and will mitigate, where possible, legal
disputes for client organizations.
Figure 1 describes the common process for dealing
with project change events and illustrates how conventional methods of record-keeping can make assessing
the extent of delay and disruption complicated and
time consuming. Figure 2 suggests an approach which
overcomes these problems and which contains an event
management strategy and event archive. By following
the principles required to establish and implement a
front-end event management strategy as described in
Figure 2 and by establishing and maintaining an event
archive, the cause and effect of events can be analysed
more accurately and more efficiently. Such an approach
will reduce the amount of resource expended on the
assessment of change events when determining delay
and disruption entitlement and culpability and will
enable more effective and responsive mitigation strategies to be made before the negative impacts of a change
1018
event can fully manifest themselves. It will also enable
disputing parties to agree cause and effect on unequivocal evidence at a much earlier stage, thereby reducing
the likelihood of parties having to pursue the dispute
through arbitration or litigation.
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