mjr6550
Structural
- Jun 27, 2006
- 69
I often am hired to give opinions regarding the structural integrity of damaged trusses, bowed walls, termite damage, etc. This is mostly related to residential work, often after a home inspector has identified a possible problem. Using truss repairs as an example. I often have to make a site visit to inspect a damaged truss, then make a repair drawing, then explain the repair drawing to a contractor who has no idea what he is doing, then inspect the repair, then tell my client that the repair was not performed properly. You get the picture. I have often thought that in some cases I could in one or two visits evaluate the repair, design the repair, and perform the repair myself. From my standpoint I save time not having to prepare a drawing, deal with the contractor, and make extra site visits. Assuming my client is aware that I would be offering to perform the work, is this an ethical issue?
I can see where someone could question whether my opinion was biased based upon the desire to perform the work. However, the same could be said about offering to do the repair design work. any thoughts?
Where I have looked at this option, the total cost of the engineering and repair would be less expensive for the client if I performed both services versus using a separate contractor. I realize that does not change the ethics issue.
I can see where someone could question whether my opinion was biased based upon the desire to perform the work. However, the same could be said about offering to do the repair design work. any thoughts?
Where I have looked at this option, the total cost of the engineering and repair would be less expensive for the client if I performed both services versus using a separate contractor. I realize that does not change the ethics issue.