klipper
Structural
- May 2, 2002
- 7
Hello All,
I have a situation here that I am hoping that some of you will have some valuable insight into. Here is the back ground: I am a liscenced PE practicing structural engineering for a design build general contractor. I am the sole engineer, draftsperson, basically I am the engineering dept for this small company. We carry E&O insurance for my part of the business. This week I was told that 1)All employees are to take a 5% cut in pay, 2)All employees are to take two week unpaid leave, and 3)The big one for me - they are going to let the E&O insurance run out May 1. My initial comment to them was - well I'm done engineering for you. I can project manage, estimate, etc. but I am not taking the risk for the engineering personally.
Here is the problem - I recently received a PO to do some engineering work for a fabricator to raise a penthouse on an industrial building. Best case scenario is that I finish the calcs/dwgs end of March and the calcs/dwgs would go to the state for approval as well as the local municipality for permitting. Basically I feel that construction would start May 1 or thereabout. I would still be the supervising professional at that time (and thru construction) and the E&O insurance would have run out.
I have come flat out and told my employer that I am not going to finish the job or stamp it if I am not going to be insured through the project, period. I told them that if they wanted to subcontract the engineering out, that would be fine with me. I also told them that I feel obligated to let the customer know what is going on. Ownership in this company is 50/50 (two brothers). One brother is gone until the 24th of this month (March)and they really aren't giving me any direction on this. Meanwhile, my customer is assuming I am hammering away at this project.
What would you do???
1. Continue to engineer as usual, and when May 1 comes around say "I'm done find another engineer of record." (crappy, I think)
2. Continue to engineer as usual until the other owner comes back and, hopefully they decide what they want to do.
3. Sit on it and do nothing until both owners are back and decide what they are going to do?
4. Call my customer and say something is going to happen here, either I am going to leave or they are going to let me go, your deadline is not going to be met and you should probably be looking for another engineer.
5.??
6.???
Thanks in advance for your help/comments.
I have a situation here that I am hoping that some of you will have some valuable insight into. Here is the back ground: I am a liscenced PE practicing structural engineering for a design build general contractor. I am the sole engineer, draftsperson, basically I am the engineering dept for this small company. We carry E&O insurance for my part of the business. This week I was told that 1)All employees are to take a 5% cut in pay, 2)All employees are to take two week unpaid leave, and 3)The big one for me - they are going to let the E&O insurance run out May 1. My initial comment to them was - well I'm done engineering for you. I can project manage, estimate, etc. but I am not taking the risk for the engineering personally.
Here is the problem - I recently received a PO to do some engineering work for a fabricator to raise a penthouse on an industrial building. Best case scenario is that I finish the calcs/dwgs end of March and the calcs/dwgs would go to the state for approval as well as the local municipality for permitting. Basically I feel that construction would start May 1 or thereabout. I would still be the supervising professional at that time (and thru construction) and the E&O insurance would have run out.
I have come flat out and told my employer that I am not going to finish the job or stamp it if I am not going to be insured through the project, period. I told them that if they wanted to subcontract the engineering out, that would be fine with me. I also told them that I feel obligated to let the customer know what is going on. Ownership in this company is 50/50 (two brothers). One brother is gone until the 24th of this month (March)and they really aren't giving me any direction on this. Meanwhile, my customer is assuming I am hammering away at this project.
What would you do???
1. Continue to engineer as usual, and when May 1 comes around say "I'm done find another engineer of record." (crappy, I think)
2. Continue to engineer as usual until the other owner comes back and, hopefully they decide what they want to do.
3. Sit on it and do nothing until both owners are back and decide what they are going to do?
4. Call my customer and say something is going to happen here, either I am going to leave or they are going to let me go, your deadline is not going to be met and you should probably be looking for another engineer.
5.??
6.???
Thanks in advance for your help/comments.