Thanks a lot Mr. Justin and Mr. Rafael for your valuable advices. Extra thanks to you Mr. Rafael for highlighting all the critical issues. Fortunately enough our contract does not requires any specific procedure to be followed for the delay notification. So, just sending a simple letter has done in our case. I totally agree with you Mr. Rafael that any further delay will make the TIA analysis more cumbersome. So, I have started working on the claim :)
Best Regards,
Kaif Mohsin
Member for
21 years 8 months
Member for21 years8 months
Submitted by Rafael Davila on Tue, 2013-12-17 12:53
I believe EOT shall be submitted within reasonable time after start of impact no matter if delay have not concluded. In the notice of delay I would expose my plan on how I will handle the claim. If the delay have not concluded just make it clear on every ETO request you will submit further requests on regular windows until it ends.
Very frequently delay continues for several months because the other side believes there is not such delay on his part. If latter comes out you are not entitled to all or some of the time you claim a surprise might surface, you will be liable for liquidated damages for time you thought you was entitled. Happy birthday if a long delay!
The longer you wait the harder it will be to analyze the delay using TIA and you will bear the burden to make your case using other methods that most probably will anyway require some windows approach.
To me it makes no sense to delay your EOT claim any longer than two update periods. It will be easier if you submit your TIA on separate windows from the beginning, preferably one per update period.
It is known selected windows can change outcome of the analysis, that it is better to use update periods as your windows period even when unequal windows is an option. An exception to consider is when delay started close to next update period and it makes sense to consolidate the first window.
Read the contract as on public works notice of delay is not official unless you follow specific procedures, a siple letter might not be enough, not even a discussion on meetings and other correspondence.
Before submitting your EOT claim, you must notify client your entitlement in accordance with your contract and try to record your delay damages in minutes / correspondences, when you discovered the full effect of the delay event you can submit you claim, However mitigating owners delay is one of the responsibility of contractor, Hence you must prove your EOT period is beyond recoverable.
Member for
14 years 8 monthsThanks a lot Mr. Justin and
Thanks a lot Mr. Justin and Mr. Rafael for your valuable advices. Extra thanks to you Mr. Rafael for highlighting all the critical issues. Fortunately enough our contract does not requires any specific procedure to be followed for the delay notification. So, just sending a simple letter has done in our case. I totally agree with you Mr. Rafael that any further delay will make the TIA analysis more cumbersome. So, I have started working on the claim :)
Best Regards,
Kaif Mohsin
Member for
21 years 8 monthsI believe EOT shall be
I believe EOT shall be submitted within reasonable time after start of impact no matter if delay have not concluded. In the notice of delay I would expose my plan on how I will handle the claim. If the delay have not concluded just make it clear on every ETO request you will submit further requests on regular windows until it ends.
Very frequently delay continues for several months because the other side believes there is not such delay on his part. If latter comes out you are not entitled to all or some of the time you claim a surprise might surface, you will be liable for liquidated damages for time you thought you was entitled. Happy birthday if a long delay!
The longer you wait the harder it will be to analyze the delay using TIA and you will bear the burden to make your case using other methods that most probably will anyway require some windows approach.
To me it makes no sense to delay your EOT claim any longer than two update periods. It will be easier if you submit your TIA on separate windows from the beginning, preferably one per update period.
It is known selected windows can change outcome of the analysis, that it is better to use update periods as your windows period even when unequal windows is an option. An exception to consider is when delay started close to next update period and it makes sense to consolidate the first window.
Read the contract as on public works notice of delay is not official unless you follow specific procedures, a siple letter might not be enough, not even a discussion on meetings and other correspondence.
From:
http://www.ronwinterconsulting.com/Time_Impact_Analysis.pdf
More Useable:
· Short duration of delay.
Less Useable:
· The less linear
· The more mitigation was accomplished during the delay
· The longer the time period between the schedule update and the start of the delay.
Best Regards,
Change Order
Member for
16 years 2 monthsDear Kaif,Before submitting
Dear Kaif,
Before submitting your EOT claim, you must notify client your entitlement in accordance with your contract and try to record your delay damages in minutes / correspondences, when you discovered the full effect of the delay event you can submit you claim, However mitigating owners delay is one of the responsibility of contractor, Hence you must prove your EOT period is beyond recoverable.
Regards,
Justin James.