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![]() "Michael Mckelvy" wrote in message ... "Sockpuppet Yustabe" wrote in message ... Tell mw why private inspectors would be more resisitant to bribes than public inspectors. Because he would be an employee being supervised by the people paying him, who are more likely to keep a sharp eye on him. Gimme a break!! If private industry were so ethical and responsible as that, we wouldn't need inspectors at all. Thje workers doing the job are also employees being supervised by the people paying them. When you have a governemtn agency involved people tend to think that all they need to be assured. If you are having something built and it's your money on the line, you want to make sure the people you pay are giving you your money's worth. It's not "fool" proof, I grat you. Turning it over to government is less perfect. Private Inspectors would have more to lose. Corrupt public employee inspectors have lost their jobs, their retirements, and have gone to jail. Where I work, we contract with engineering firms for inspectors. The construction manager, an engineer, is also private, but under a different arrangement, as a contract employee. The overall supervision is from a government agency. And you have to wait for their schedule and sometiimes follow rules that are overkill. Not at all! In my area (not engineering), I contract with consultants to do most of the actual work, and I manage the consultants and the projects (not engineeriing) As to your assertion about bribery, it is just as likely a private inspecor would take a bribe, as it is likely a public one would do the same. I doubt it since they would be paid better the government agents. As far as government projects, it is ultimatley the government's responsibility to be sure thery are properly built. Civil service jobs being the most highly qualified and tightly controlled? No cost overruns? We have extremely well qualified engineers in our organization. However, they really are mmore project managers than nuts and bolt design engineers. We actually leave that to our priovate consultanats, and rely on their seals on the plans. We tend to find a number of mistakes when we got to construction. We don't do technical reviews, because we are not allocated enough staff. Cost overruns are actually a political problem. I prepare estimates for my functions, after I turn them in, they are lowered, to make them more palatable to the public. Then, whe the project moves forward, and costs come in near my original estimate, we have an overrun. Also, public projects are susceptible to mission creep, politcos and directors lke to addon features as we build it. Then there are always the unforeseen problems, such as unexpected soil conditions, or a previously unknown underground water flow. we do test pits, but only every several hundred feet or so. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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