Wednesday, May 29, 2013

"Here are my client's LEED Platinum Plans, ...."

New Yorker, June 3, 2013


More P3 for new VA Facilities: Lease-Lease-Back for 30 years + Design Build

The San Francisco Business Times reports that the VA Medical Center San Francisco is looking for a public private partnership to fund a new $500 million hospital and research facility in Mission Bay.  That's next to McCovey Cove where the Giants hit their home runs for those of you not from around these parts. 

J.K. Dineen:
Given the tight fiscal constraints, and the slim chances that Congress would allocate money for a state-of-the-art medical center in San Francisco, U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) asked San Francisco VA officials to come up with a public-private alternative, according to Bob Obana, executive director and CEO of the Northern California Institute for Research and Education, a nonprofit institute set up to support the local facility’s research.
“We went to Senator Feinstein and the senator said, 'If you guys bring back to me a public-private partnership alternative, something that would figure out a way to bring to the VA a different mechanism for financing medical centers, I would be more than happy to support that and bring it to the secretary,'” Obana said. ....
 The public-private partnership — known as a P3 — could look similar to one that financed another Mission Bay building, UCSF’s $200 million, 237,000-square-foot neuroscience center. In that case a nonprofit group put together by UCSF is leasing the property from the UC system and financed construction through state bonds. The group then subleased the site to a partnership between McCarthy Cook & Co. and Edgemoor Real Estate Services, which in turn is leasing the building to UCSF over 30 years.
The report also explores the partnership that is financing the $1.1 billion Doyle Drive project. The $488 million second phase of that undertaking is paid for up front by a group of European investors in charge of designing, building and maintaining the parkway. It will be paid back over 30 years.
In addition to the San Francisco examples, Randolph’s team looked at P3s formed to finance a court house in Long Beach, a building at the University of Buffalo and public buildings in England, Canada and Australia.
“What we are finding is that the project is viable as a P3,” said Randolph. “It would be attractive to private investors. There is good precedent for this kind of facility.”
In other words, lease-lease-back for 30 years, private financing, and no competitive bidding. 

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Riks Mitigation in EPC Contracts: Division 4 Presentation by Philip Hamblin

Here is the presentation on identifying and mitigating project risks in EPC contracts, by Philip Hamblin of Criterium Consulting Group.  Phil Hamblin is an Associate Director at Criterium consulting.  

Date:  Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Time:  Noon Eastern time
Call No.:   866-646-6488
Code:        683-524-3965#

Phil Hamblin specializes in contract review and oversight, schedule preparation and analysis, risk avoidance, document management, and change order preparation and negotiation.  He has serves as Contracts Manager for three power generating turbine plant projects located in Algeria where his responsibilities include  overall risk management for the projects.  He has a degree in Construction from Arizona State University, and a Juris Doctorate degree in Law from Rutgers School of Law, Camden.  He is licensed to practice law in the state of Pennsylvania.

Join us for the presentation and discussion.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Design-Build vs. Design Assist

Steve Murphy, PE, LEED, AP BD+C, and Director of electrical, mechanical, and plumbing services at Blach Construction explains his perspective on the difference between design-build, and design-assist.  Blach Construction, founded in 1970, is a Northern California general contractor with offices in Silicon Valley, Monterey, and Sacramento.  Their focus is building education, corporate offices, medical facilities, historic preservation, high technology, and non-profits. They are an AGC member and are recognized as a great place to work.  They were recognized by AGC-CA in 2010 and 2011 as having the best safety program in the state.  They have a hip and effective website.

Here is Steve: 
Design-Build and Design-Assist are not interchangeable. While these project delivery methods sound similar, they are in fact very different. The main difference I’ll address in this post is the designation of the firm that is legally responsible (and ultimately liable) for the design of the systems.
The project’s Engineers of Record (EORs) are design engineers that are responsible for interpreting the client’s needs and designing fully functional MEP systems for their building. Typically, there are different EORs for mechanical, electrical, plumbing and fire protection systems.
The drawings and specifications prepared by these EORs communicate the intent of the project to the building contractor. Ultimately, clients choose between what they want or what they can afford (I know it’s a shock, but these can be different at times!).  
In a pure “Design-Build” project, the different EORs are typically employed/contracted by the Design-Build MEP subcontractors. These subcontractors are solely responsible for designing, installing and commissioning the MEP systems to satisfy the intent of the project. The different Design-Build subcontractors collaborate as a team and are responsible for informing each other of how their system will impact the project overall.
In a “Design-Assist” project, the MEP EOR’s are typically hired by the project architect. These EOR’s are responsible for the project’s design and they coordinate closely with the other design team members (architect, structural engineer, landscape architect, civil engineer, etc.) to ensure that each individual system is designed to meet the intent of the project. 
Simply explained, MEP subcontractors are responsible (and liable) in a Design/Build project and the MEP consultant EOR’s and the architect are on the hook (from a liability standpoint) in a Design-Assist project.
This sounds right to me.  This division of ultimate responsibility, however, is often not stated crisply in design-assist contracts because owners and general contractors want to shove as much of the design responsibility down to a design-assist contractor as possible.  If the language is vague, goes the impulse, we can always argue that the design-assist contractor had ultimate responsibility, even if it's really design assist.  Better practice, IMHO, is to strive to make this division explicit and clear in the contract documents.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Economic Loss Rule, Proximate Cause, and Lack of Duty: Or How to Avoid Getting a Headache


I'm writing a chapter on construction defects in the ABA Forum's updated edition of the "Fundamentals" book.   Here's a stab at making sense of the Economic Loss Rule by putting it in the overall context of negligence law....

In evaluating negligence causes of action and what remedies might be precluded in negligence, it is always best to consider the concepts of foreseeable harm, duty, proximate cause, and the economic loss rule together.  It is not easy to do because the courts often ignore this advice, but without considering these concepts as an interrelated whole it is very difficult to make sense of the cases in this area of the law.

We all remember Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad from law school.  The court held that Mrs. Palsgraf could not recover damages from the railroad that employed a conductor who improvidently pushed a man who happened to be carrying a package of explosives, which exploded and caused a scale to topple onto poor Mrs Palsgraf.  The court developed the doctrine of proximate cause to draw a circle outside which the defendant would not be responsible for harm.  The conductor and railroad in Palsgraf were held not responsible for damage caused by the toppling of the scale because they could not reasonably have foreseen this damage. 

But once having formulated the law of negligence in terms of duty to act reasonably to avoid foreseeable harm, the courts have struggled ever since to figure out where to draw the line on “foreseeable” damages.  As the quip has it, “on a clear judicial day, courts can foresee forever!”  But society cannot function properly if defendants are exposed to unlimited liability for normal commercial conduct.  Consider a negligently installed coupling in a gas line in a commercial district.  It is surely foreseeable that an explosion might result, and that if an explosion results the streets will have to be dug up for a period of weeks to repair the damage, that every business in the vicinity will lose customers, that taxi drivers will lose fares, and that restaurants in the area will serve fewer meals.  But should a worker who installed the defective coupling be held liable in negligence for all those seemingly foreseeable losses?  It would be enough to make us stay in bed, and for insurance companies to stop underwriting.

The economic loss rule is one doctrine that serves the purpose of limiting potentially limitless damages that might flow from negligence or strict liability.   Initially applied to limit a defendant’s exposure in strict liability, it has been expanded to hold that in an action alleging negligence or strict liability, a plaintiff cannot recover its purely economic damages caused by a defective product that injures only itself.  Needless to say, this has generated a lively debate in the case law as to what is a “product” and what is consequential damage to “other” property separate from the product.  In the construction context some courts consider the entire structure as the relevant “product” for purpose of the economic loss rule, while others hold that particular building components are distinct “products” so that damage to other building components is damage to “other” property.

The purpose of the economic loss rule is sometimes expressed as preserving the respective societal goals of contract law and tort law.  With contract law the courts enforce justifiable expectations that have been raised by promises parties have made in their agreements; by contrast, with tort law, the overriding concern of the courts is to compensate victims who are injured because they were exposed to unreasonable dangers and to discourage harmful products and conduct.  When negligent construction or manufacturing damages only the product itself, the courts have held that the contractual expectation is limited to replacement of the product.  For example, when Wilson supplies a defective tennis racket to Roger Federer, the contractual expectation is that it will be replaced with a good one.  Although it is foreseeable that if this racket breaks during match point in the fifth set at the U.S. Open, a million dollar purse might be at stake, the economic loss rule says that Roger Federer will just have to settle for the $950,000 second prize, plus a new racket from Wilson.  Wilson will not be responsible in negligence or strict liability for the $1 million difference between the first prize purse and the runner up prize because this is a purely economic loss.

 The picture is made murky by the fact that some courts muddle the economic loss rule with the concept of duty.  For example, should an architect (not in privity of contract with a contractor) be held liable in negligence for delay and disruption (economic damages) resulting from defective plans?  Although defective plans are more akin to a service than a product, some courts apply the economic loss rule to preclude recovery in this situation.  Other courts allow recovery on the theory that this is a species of fraud (negligent misrepresentation) and thus should be recognized as an exception to the economic loss rule.  But this mixes the concepts of (1) whether a duty exists, and (2) what damages should be recoverable if a duty does exist in an unhelpful manner. Whether a defendant has a duty to a plaintiff in a particular case that the courts should recognize, and whether the courts should limit certain types of damage (like economic loss) if a duty exists are separate questions and it is helpful to keep these in mind as separate issues, even if the courts often fail to do so.

Contrary to what Palsgraf and its “proximate cause” approach might suggest, negligence is ultimately about more than foreseeability.  In the seminal California case of Rowland v. Christian (CA Sup. Ct. 1968)(defective bathroom faucet severed tendons in hand of social guest) the court set forth several factors that should be considered in weighing the existence of a duty: (1) the foreseeability of harm to the plaintiff, (2) the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, (3) the closeness of the connection between the defendant's conduct and the injury suffered, (4) the moral blame attached to the defendant's conduct, (5) the policy of preventing future harm, (6) the extent of the burden to the defendant and consequences to the community of imposing a duty to exercise care with resulting liability for breach, and (7) the availability, cost, and prevalence of insurance for the risk involved.  Some courts discuss these factors in terms of “special relationship” between plaintiff and defendant.   But this “special relationship” is what defines duty.  

Thus, for those jurisdictions that hold an architect has a duty to prevent foreseeable harm to contractors by adhering to the standard of care of an architect, it makes no sense to artificially distinguish between physical damage to property and economic damage (e.g. between a wall falling down and delay and disruption).  It’s all money to the contractor.  By speaking about this in the context of the economic loss rule courts sometimes conceal what is at stake.  

When researching how the case law in your jurisdiction has allowed or disallowed economic damages in negligence you should find it helpful to keep in mind the different purposes of tort and contract law, and to clearly separate in your mind the concepts of foreseeable injury, duty, proximate cause, and the economic loss rule … even if the courts don’t always do so. 

Friday, May 17, 2013

Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad

When we are not careful, when an imprudent action causes harm,  should courts hold a defendant responsible for the entire chain of events and all harm that may flow from the action?  The courts have struggled with this question since the dawning of tort law.  The doctrine of proximate cause is one line-drawing tool developed by the courts to define a circle of harm that a defendant will be responsible for, and what he will not be responsible for.  

A seminal case in this development of the proximate cause doctrine is Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad (New York 1928).    




Other tools serving the same end are the economic loss rule and the concept of duty.  Sometimes we have a right to cause harm, and sometimes there are limits to the type of harm or the amount of harm we will be responsible for.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The Southeast Becomes the Wild, Wild West

On March 7, 2013, the Florida Supreme Court announced its decision in Tiara Condominium Association, Inc. v. Marsh & McLennon Companies, Inc., --- So.2d ---, No. SC10-1022.  The holding can be summarized succinctly: in Florida, the economic loss rule now has no application outside of product liability cases.  The impact of that holding will be felt throughout the Florida construction market for some time to come.

The Tiara case itself was not particularly novel.  The Tiara Condo Association used Marsh & McLennon as its insurance broker.  Marsh procured a property insurance policy for the Association with a $50 million coverage limit.  The Association's property was substantially damaged in 2004 by two hurricanes, and the Association filed claims.  Marsh (apparently) assured the Association that the policy had a "per occurrence" coverage of $50 million, such that the Association would have as much as $100 million in coverage because the damages had been sustained in two hurricanes.  The Association therefore proceeded with extensive repairs, and presented a substantial claim to its insurer.  The insurer took the position that the coverage was limited to $50 million in the aggregate.  The Association settled with the insurer, resulting in a net loss (to the Association) of approximately $11 million.  The Association then sued Marsh (in federal court) on a variety of theories, both tort- and contract-based.

The federal district court dismissed all of the claims against Marsh.  The Eleventh Circuit upheld the dismissal of most of the claims, but certified a question to Florida's Supreme Court: did Florida's version of the economic loss rule bar the Association's tort-based claims, or does an insurance broker fall within the "professional services" exception to the economic loss rule that Florida has created, such that the Association's claims would not be barred?

The certified question touched on an issue that has long been a sore spot for designers in Florida.  The Florida courts have long held that negligence actions against "professionals" (including both architects and engineers) are not barred by the economic loss rule.  Therefore, in Florida, it has long been common for subcontractors and suppliers to bring claims against designers arising out of alleged errors and omissions in the plans and specs.

The Florida Supreme Court's answer to the Eleventh Circuit's certified question will allow many other industries to feel designers' pain.  For, after a long analysis of the origins and evolution of Florida's economic loss rule, the Florida Supreme Court concluded:


"Having reviewed the origin and original purpose of the economic loss rule, and what has been described as the unprincipled extension of the rule, we now take this final step and hold that the economic loss rule applies only in the products liability context. We thus recede from our prior rulings to the extent that they have applied the economic loss rule to cases other than products liability."

It is not the author's place to comment on the effects this holding will have in other industries in Florida.  But it is certainly the case that there will be impacts in the construction industry.  Third-tier subcontractors who feel that the prime contractor's project management caused the cost of their work to increase can now sue the prime contractor directly.  If the prime defends by saying that it was the owner's fault, the third-tier subcontractor can sue the owner directly--not as a pass-through claim, but in its own name and right.  Designers may also be equipped with a sword of their own: imagine a dispute about whether a submitted product meets the design.  The designer says no and rejects the submittal.  The subcontractor sues for the higher cost of the approved product.  The designer should now be able to counterclaim for its own administrative time and effort dealing with the wrongful product submission.

It will take some time to see what the impact truly is.  But the warm, wet Southeast may start to resemble the high and dry Wild, Wild West of yore when disputes break out on construction projects.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

What Do Google Employees and Prisoners of the California Department of Corrections Have in Common?

There was an interesting discussion at the San Francisco Bay Area Design Build Institute of America Luncheon today, entitled “The Cost of Design-Build Pursuits.”

John Igoe, Director of Real Estate Design and Construction, discussed Google’s 1.1 million square foot Bay View campus being built down by the Bay in Mountain View.  He said that Google's marching orders to the design team at NBBJ was:  1) enhance the employee interaction; 2) make it as healthy as possible for employees; and 3) make it as green as possible while serving the first two goals.  Also on the panel was Mike Meredith, Project Director at the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, who was careful to point out that maximizing the subjective quality of occupant interaction is not the goal of CDCR—despite the recent re-emphasis on rehabilitation.  CDCR tends to be more utilitarian.  However, Igoe and Meredith share a view that design-build is the way to go. 

Igoe reported that Google does approximately $150 million of tenant improvement construction per year, all of it design build.  For this work in existing buildings they bring the contractor in very early in the design process to guard against unforeseen surprises.  They are big fans of the “big room” and having the entire team collaborate.  “Tell any owner to do this,” says Igoe.  

Meredith from CDCR agreed.  He reports that the Department has obtained tremendous value from the design-build process.  He is hopeful that the legislature will remove all sunset provisions from existing design-build enabling legislation soon. CDCR uses a two-step process:  pre-qualification, followed by proposals by pre-qualified/selected teams.  “We believe D-B teams compete with each other” [to advance design further than the RFP might require, thereby providing great value for the Department], said Meredith.  He noted that one of the constraints on public entities is that they will always need to use an objective process.  There are a lot of stakeholders in public construction, and this limits some of the flexibility in team selection.  “Hire now, we’ll work things out later” won’t fly, said Meredith.  The need for transparency and accountability introduces costs that Google might be able to avoid.

The third presenter, Steve Steinberg, a principal with The Ratcliff Architects located in Emeryville, California, shared just how tremendously expensive it can be for design-build teams to compete for these projects.  They successfully teamed up with the Smith Group and Clark construction on a recently completed $431 million Highland Hospital Project in Oakland, California.  The team spent $1.8 million in pursuit of the project.  The owner provided a proposal stipend of $500,000 to the unsuccessful competing proposer.  Nevertheless, pursuing these projects is a high stakes proposition.

A clear challenge for owners, whether public or private,  is to evaluate the benefit that might flow from a given delivery method and to size a stipend to encourage a number of quality proposals, while still optimizing value for the owner.  

Thursday, May 9, 2013

CAGC Fights to Ensure North Carolina PPP Legislation Maintains a Level Playing Field

I recently read the below article in North Carolina Construction News.  The legislation is fairly interesting and seems to track recent similar Georgia legislation.  While the legislation was received well in the house, it'll be interesting to see whether it can actually pass.  North Carolina has attempted similar legislation for years to no avail.
Proposed Design Build/PPP Legislation Introduced in NC:
 Bob Kruhm, April 23, 2013
A bill was filed on April 11 in the NC State House that would allow for design-build and public private partnerships in North Carolina. The bill would not affect NC Department of Transportation projects.  
The bill, H857, would require local and state governments to seek at least five design-build proposals and evaluate the three most highly qualified respondents.The PPP legislation would not allow the developer to self-perform the work except in limited circumstances. It would also require the developer to finance at least half of the project.   
The bill was introduced by Rep. Dean Arp, R-Union, a Monroe engineer, who asked Carolinas AGC to provide extensive input on the issue before its introduction last week. ... The legislation comes at a time when, this year alone, a dozen or so local bills have been introduced across the state to allow for design-build on local public construction work, a trend that has occurred routinely in the Legislature in recent years as public owners lean more toward the alternative delivery method.  [For example], The NC Department of Transportation currently has legislation in place allowing for unlimited design-build. In addition, PPP legislation this year passed the Senate allowing for Onslow County to use that delivery method on one project. The action came after CAGC staff and Raleigh attorney Keith Coltrain of Wall Templeton spent several days negotiating on the bill in an effort to provide for a level playing field for the construction industry.
...
 In approaching CAGC about H857, Rep. Arp said that with design-build being used extensively by the federal government and surrounding states, including South Carolina, it is time in North Carolina to try to craft design-build, PPP legislation that is as acceptable as possible to both the design and construction industry in the state. By shaping such legislation, rather than continually having to react to local bills, it would be better to play offensive instead of defensive ball and not, as one lawmaker put it, have to "die a death of a thousand cuts." ...
Some of the provisions that CAGC supports in H857 and actively sought for in the ongoing negotiations include:
  • On PPPs, not allow for unsolicited bids, a proposal that has been pushed by some PPP advocates in the NC General Assembly for nearly a decade, based on existing legislation in Virginia. CAGC to date has been able to turn away those efforts. In addition, on PPPs, the developer, similar to language on at-risk construction management, generally cannot self-perform the work.  
  •  Require on both design-build and PPPs bonding to protect all construction parties. The PPP payment bond would expressly protect general contractors and the designers as well.  
  •  Publicly advertise and seek competition in seeking design-build or PPP proposals.  
  •  In design-build, the owner must evaluate the design-builder(s) based on their responses to a request for qualifications. In that response, the design-builder must either identify the contractor, designer and licensed subcontractors that it proposed to use or outline its strategy for subcontractor selection. 
CAGC continues its efforts to try to remove from the bill language that would ostensibly allow designers - not general contractors - to take the lead on the design-build projects, an option which CAGC maintains is not allowed by North Carolina law. 
CAGC favors open, competitive bidding on public work whenever possible. Currently, on non-DOT work, public delivery methods include single prime-bidding, multi-prime bidding, dual bidding with single-prime and multi-prime, and at-risk construction management. In addition, on local and state government projects, public owners may continue to seek special permission from the NC State Building Commission for design-build and other alternative delivery systems on a case-by-case basis.  
The House Bill H857 contains a usual litany of goals and needs, including the following:
  • A need for high-performing public buildings within the State of North Carolina; 
  • Public dissatisfaction with existing procurement methods
  • Hectoring by local government entities for public-private partnerships and use of design-build contracting;
  • A hope that an integrated approach for the design and construction with a single point of responsibility is more efficient;
  • A desire for improved collaboration among design professionals, builders, and owners;
  • A lack of funds;
  • A belief that private developers can invest needed funds;
  • A hope that PPP will bring confidence with the general public;
  • A belief that open competition delivers the best value for taxpayers and public owners;
  • A desire to create transparent, fair, and equitable contracting procedures for the use of public funds in government construction contracting; 
It will be interesting to see if the legislation, if it passes, can successfully reconcile all of these goals.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

BIM Levels of Development Specifications Are Out for Comment: Submit Comments by June 7, 2013


The BIM Forum of the Associated General Contractors has released for public comment a draft specification for levels of development of building information models. Interested parties have until June 7 to comment on the draft, which has been under development for two years by a committee of about 20 people.
The 134-page document defines and illustrates characteristics of model elements of different building systems at different levels of development. It is intended as a reference to enable practitioners to specify “with a high level of clarity” the content and reliability of BIMs at various stages in the design and construction process. The goal is for model authors to be able to define for downstream users the specific uses and limitations of their models, says the BIM Forum.
The document's release is scheduled for August, depending on the commentary received. Interested parties can get an electronic copy of the draft by registering at http://bimforum.org/lod/. The final specification will be made available at no charge. 
The Level of Development Specification is a reference manual designed to enable you to clearly specify the required content of a Building Information Model at various stages in the design and construction process. The basic definitions developed by the AIA for the AIA G202-2013 Building Information Modeling Protocol Form are used.

The primary objectives are:
  • To help teams, including owners, to specify BIM deliverables and to get a clear picture of what will be included in a BIM deliverable
  • To help design managers explain to their teams the information and detail that needs to be provided at various points in the design process
  • To provide a standard that can be referenced by contracts and BIM execution plans.
If you open the bimforum.org/lod link, above, and provide your basic information you can receive a copy of the draft standards.  Take a look and do your part to help make this document the best it can be.  


Monday, May 6, 2013

CA High Speed Rail Puts Focus on Environmental Impact Study Process

Madera County in California's Central Valley is ground zero for the 65 mile first leg of the California high speed rail project from Fresno to Merced.  The May 2013 issue of California Lawyer magazine takes a close look at how a group of farmers from Madera County and others have highlighted the ongoing need for smart California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) reform.  The article, Collision Course,  is well worth reading for anyone with an interest in how environmental review processes affect large infrastructure projects.

In California there have been several unsuccessful efforts to revamp CEQA in order to streamline the environmental review process and make it a little more predictable.  So far to no avail. 

The central charge leveled against CEQA by its diverse critics is that it has succumbed to mission creep. Though they disagree about proposed changes, they share a belief that the statute has expanded well beyond its purview of reviewing projects, and proposing either mitigation or alternatives to environmental impacts. Now, they say, CEQA too often is used to stop development - solar and wind farms, for example, along with new freeways and strip malls. 
...
"In the years since CEQA, we've passed a great many laws that have been very effective in protecting the environment," [former Democratic Senator Michael] Rubio says. "Think of the federal and California Clean Water Acts, the federal Clean Air Act, the federal and state Endangered Species Act, AB 32 [stipulating dramatically reduced atmospheric carbon emissions], and SB 375 [requiring regional land use and transportation plans to meet AB 32's goals]. The problem is that a project - including truly green projects like high-speed rail, solar, and wind farms - must satisfy these statutes, and then they're still subject to CEQA litigation."
How to avoid endless litigation?  One of the  options being considered for CEQA reform is to move from a mitigation model, to a standards model.  By establishing firmer standards project design can take account of safe harbors, and projects may be able to gain certainty as to what is achievable, and how projects can be kept out of court. 

The last lawsuit for Phase of the CA High speed rail project settled last month.  But there are many segments to go, and lots of reason to carry CEQA reform forward.