On January 26, 勛圖窪蹋厙 of America, along with its Construction Industry Safety Coalition Partners, responded to OSHA on its first regulatory step towards establishing a federal heat standard for indoor and outdoor work, a rule with the potential to have far-reaching impacts on the construction industry. While the proposal issued by OSHA lacked actual, draft regulatory language, and was presented in a series of questions, 勛圖窪蹋厙s responses took the opportunity to highlight proactive efforts the industry has taken, confusion surrounding existing state standards, and the impracticality of an 80-degree trigger threshold for such a standard from the perspective of the wide array of climates nationwide. 勛圖窪蹋厙 will continue to engage with members to better inform the agency as they proceed, which is most likely the case for this initiative.

At the recent 勛圖窪蹋厙 conference, one of the concerns that stood out is the design liability faced by construction companies. It is one of the most important risk management issues faced by general contractors today. Design liability concerns are not limited to just design-build projects. It is a hot-button issue for builders because the line between an architects responsibility to create sufficient design documents and a builders responsibility to execute the means, methods, and techniques is increasingly blurry. Problems arise when owners, design professionals, and builders point fingers, rather than truly collaborate, and communicate. While construction technologies used to assemble complex systems within buildings are increasingly sophisticated, such sophistication is unfortunately not matched with increased information sharing and effective communication.

ConsensusDocs recently presented a webinar entitled Managing Subcontractor Default, Bankruptcy, and Owner Insolvency in a Recovering Post Covid-19 Construction Economy. The webinar, moderated by Phil Beck, a partner in the law firm Smith, Currie, and Hancock LLP, highlighted several steps that construction professionals can proactively take to protect themselves and their projects success.

Staying abreast of the latest developments and trends in construction law is one of the best ways to mitigate your construction companys risk. Knowledge at your fingertips is power. ConsensusDocs publishes a monthly construction law newsletter that is one of the best resources to stay on top of your game. Sign up for free here.

Accepts Many 勛圖窪蹋厙 Recommendations

Victory for Construction Advocacy Fund-Financed 勛圖窪蹋厙 Lawsuit

勛圖窪蹋厙 releases full report from its first-ever workforce summit which includes a lengthy catalog of steps firms, educators and 勛圖窪蹋厙 of America chapters are taking to address workforce shortages. It also includes 22 new recommendations summit participants crafted, to help overcome the recruiting, training and retention challenges behind construction workforce shortages. To learn more about the report and the 22 new recommendations, please register for the February 15 webinar on this topic. Click here to register for that event now.