Hi,
A friend of mine working with a consultant, has a claim from the contractor. The client on the submission of the design drawings recommended a change within the 28 days of the submission. The contractor resubmitted the design and after a long period of arguments from both the sides the employer approved the original design submitted by the contractor.
Now the contractor claimed an EOT of 69 days when my friend inserted the delay in critical path that has a constraint the approved baseline, it showed the same but when he removed the constrained the delay was just 30 days.
Now, my question is can the consultant remove the constraint to analyze/ determine the delay?
CHEERS
Thanks for the question and thanks all for your valuable feedback. My personal opinion that Constraints should be minimized or even ommited and only to be used when satistfied for intermediate milestones.
Please refer to the below article which I really agree to its content and I believe is very helpful in this regard
http://www.ronwinterconsulting.com/ramile.htm
Regards,
Osama Qarakish
Mr. Testro
Thank you very much for your detailed reply. It really removed much confusion I have been surrounded with.
Cheers
Hi Tanveer
My first reaction is Yes - all co nstraints should be removed as they have no place in a live programme.
Your freind should remove all constraints from the baseline BEFORE impacting any events to see what the true end date is.
And while he is at it check out all the lead lags.
My second reaction is - Why was the constraint there?
If it represented an "Off Works" milestone - such as Approval of Design - then the constraint should be removed and the milestone set as ALAP.
If it is because a lazy planner had left out some tasks or not developed enough detail then the contractor should be asked to develope his programme.
Just because a programme has been approved doesnt't mean it should be set in stone for ever - particularly if it was wrong in the first place and doesn't react realistically to events.
In any case the contractor has a big incentive to set out his case correctly - just watch out that he doesn't rig the adjustments.
Best regards
Mike Testro