SethWCE
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 27, 2012
- 6
When dealing with governmental agencies, I'm sure we all have easy agencies to work with and difficult ones. We have one particular agency that seems to have gone off the deep end. Not too long ago we had a development client upset a public agency by rejecting their demands to build a bunch of infrastructure for them as part of the developer's project. The arguments even got to the point the agency used vulgarity over a conference call. Obviously, when you have a development project with offsite impacts, an agency might require some improvements to infrastructure. We agreed with our client, and disagreed with the amount of infrastructure being demanded by the agency, verified by calculations. We felt they were being very unreasonable and overreaching their own regulations. Over much deliberation, even involving legal council, our client found it easier to just replace their infrastructure and move forward. Over the course of that project (which is still ongoing), we have argued back and forth on numerous occasions over the same infrastructure. They have also made it their job to look through the rest of our plans with a fine-tooth comb upon every submittal, looking for every single thing they can comment on, or require additional calculations for, even just demanding information be replicated across certain plan sheets, or that some details need to be moved to other sheets. It's an infill project, completely surrounded by dense development and existing modern infrastructure, and the drainage calculations requested to date are near 300 pages and growing. They seem to have taken this all very personally. This has even extended to different clients now. Virtually every project we submit gets flooded with comments, more calculations to provide, more hoops to jump through. Some projects we are on the 7th or 8th plan review and still get flooded with comments, all new or rejecting our previous arguument/response. We almost had another project approved prior to all of this happening, and on our recent submittal, came back with about 100 new comments. We have elevated the issue to senior staff at the agency on numerous occasions but get nowhere (likely made things worse). We have even discussed with colleagues in other departments of the same agency and they hate this department. We are to the point we just may not be able to business in the area anymore. We could request clients pay us T&M, and let the agency go wild, but most developers want fixed engineering fees in this area so it would be hard to find work.
Is this the way things should be? If you argue with the public agency, they force you out of the area by malicious plan checking? Sure, we could hire an attorney, but I'm not sure what to litigate for and how to prove anything. I guess the first step would be to contact an attorney and ask.
Just curious if anyone else has this issue and how they handled it? Maybe this is just a thread to vent and perhaps gain some solace in the fact it's not just us. I would love to get anyone's opinion or even share a story.
Probably comes as a shock to nobody, but we work in California.
Is this the way things should be? If you argue with the public agency, they force you out of the area by malicious plan checking? Sure, we could hire an attorney, but I'm not sure what to litigate for and how to prove anything. I guess the first step would be to contact an attorney and ask.
Just curious if anyone else has this issue and how they handled it? Maybe this is just a thread to vent and perhaps gain some solace in the fact it's not just us. I would love to get anyone's opinion or even share a story.
Probably comes as a shock to nobody, but we work in California.