Long International’s Schedule and Delay Analysis Methodologies
Long International explains its detailed schedule analysis methodology using a construction delay claim on a hypothetical wastewater treatment plant project.
1. INTRODUCTION
The equitable allocation of responsibility for project delays is essential to the resolution of many construction disputes. Contractors frequently assert that they have been delayed for reasons beyond their control. Owners often remain unconvinced that the Contractor is legitimately entitled to a time extension or delay, acceleration and loss of productivity damages. Large dollar amounts may hinge upon the outcome of a dispute over project delay. Consequently, a thorough retrospective schedule analysis of all project delays is essential for the equitable resolution of delay and impact-related construction disputes.
Most construction contracts allow the Owner to recover either liquidated or actual damages for delay caused by the Contractor. Contractors also may be contractually entitled to recover: 1) extended field and home office overhead costs because of Owner-caused delays, 2) acceleration and disruption costs if the Owner fails to approve valid time extension requests, and 3) loss of productivity costs if delays caused by changes in scope, events beyond the Contractor’s control, or the Owner’s interference disrupt and negatively impact the Contractor’s planned sequence and efficiency of performing its work. However, the Contractor’s actions as well as the actions of its subcontractors, vendors, and suppliers may also cause delay, disruption, and impact to the Contractor’s planned performance. Therefore, a retrospective schedule analysis must evaluate the contractual obligations and rights of each party.
The retrospective delay analysis methods performed by Long International typically focus on comparing as‑planned, updated and as-built project schedules to identify and quantify delays to the critical and near critical paths of the project. These delays may include either variances in the duration of an activity or variances in the planned and actual relationship lag durations between predecessor and successor activities. Concurrent delays are also analyzed to properly understand the Owner’s and Contractor’s liability for delay and impact damages. Once all critical and near critical path activity delays have been quantified, the origins and causes of each delay are determined. This process often involves the organization and analysis of extensive project documentation to establish the cause-effect relationships of each party’s actions or inactions and the resulting delays. The responsibility for each delay is then apportioned to either the Contractor, Owner, a third party, if appropriate, and to force majeure or other excusable delays defined by the contract.
Long International frequently performs “Update Impacted” and “As-Built But-For” schedule analyses using a windows approach to evaluate the contemporaneous, cumulative impact of delays caused by each party on the contractual completion dates. These two delay analysis methods for construction determine the impact of delays during various schedule windows of time. The project schedule windows are typically based upon the data dates of the Contractor’s monthly schedule updates when the critical path may have changed due to key project events. The cumulative results of the analysis of delays to all schedule windows serve as the basis for an equitable apportionment of responsibility for delay and impact damages to the project participants.
In the sections that follow, Long International explains its detailed schedule analysis methodology using a construction delay claim on a hypothetical waste water treatment plant project. The fictitious parties in this example include the Owner, Olympia Chemical Corporation and the Contractor, Milestone Construction.
As shown in Figure 1 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 1), the Olympia Waste Water Treatment Plant (WWTP) project was planned to be completed in 502 calendar days. The actual duration, however, was 677 calendar days. Therefore, the net actual delay was 175 days. An update impacted and as-built but-for schedule analysis was performed to allocate responsibility for the 175 days of delay.
The update impacted analysis adds excusable delays into the schedule update to determine the cumulative impact of excusable delays to the project completion date. The update impacted analysis determines the amount of time extension that the Contractor is entitled to claim and the amount of liquidated damages that the owner is entitled to assess. For the Olympia WWTP project, the update impacted analysis determined that Milestone Construction is entitled to receive a time extension of 74 calendar days and Olympia Chemical Corporation is entitled to assess 101 calendar days of liquidated damages.
The as-built but-for analysis subtracts compensable delays from the as-built schedule for each schedule window to determine the earliest date that the Contractor could finish its work absent compensable delays. The cumulative amount of compensable delay calculated for all schedule windows using the as-built but-for analysis represents the total amount of delay for which the Contractor is entitled to recover extended field and home office overhead costs. For the Olympia WWTP project, the as-built but‑for analysis determined that Milestone Construction is entitled to receive compensation for 27 calendar days of extended overhead costs.
2. UPDATE IMPACTED ANALYSIS
Long International’s Update Impacted schedule analysis, as illustrated by Figure 2 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 2) adds excusable delays to affected activities in the Contractor’s schedule update at the start of each schedule window to determine how much time extension the Contractor is entitled to receive as a result of the excusable delays that occurred during the schedule window. Excusable delays may include compensable delays caused by the Owner such as change orders, late delivery of Owner-furnished equipment, or delayed approvals, or noncompensable delays such as strikes, unusually severe weather, or governmental actions for which the Contractor may also be contractually entitled to a time extension, depending on the contractual terms or case law.
For example, during each monthly update or schedule window, the Contractor may have experienced approved scope changes. New activities may have been added to the schedule updates to account for the new work associated with the approved changes, or the Contractor may have increased the duration of existing activities to show the effect of the increased work scope. The delays to each activity affected by the changed work are typically quantified by making estimates of the additional time required to perform the changed work or by including any time extension agreed in the approved change order into the critical path leading to project completion. A comparison of the actual activity durations and relationship lag durations that occurred in the as-built schedule at the end of the schedule window to the forecasted activity durations and relationship lag durations at the beginning of the schedule window may also be used to quantify the delay. However, Contractor-caused delays included in the activity durations or relationship lag durations of the as-built schedule updates are not included in the time extension calculation.
Changes that occurred during a schedule window may also affect existing activities beyond the data date of the schedule window. For example, if a change order is approved during the engineering phase that will add additional work to the construction of a piping system in a later schedule window, the increased duration is added to the affected future construction activity as part of the analysis of the earlier schedule window when the change was approved. By adding the excusable delays to affected schedule activities of the as-planned schedule as they occur, Long International determines the amount of time extension that would be required as a result of the delays. Acceleration paid for by the Owner may reduce activity durations or relationship lag durations and the Contractor’s entitlement to a time extension. As a result, the effect of any owner-paid acceleration is also evaluated in Long International’s schedule analysis.
The sum of the delay results that are calculated in each schedule window represents the overall time extension for the project. The projected extension in the schedule completion date compared to the contractually required completion date represents the amount of time extension that the Contractor is entitled to receive. For example, the update impacted analysis for the Olympia WWTP project determined that Milestone Construction is entitled to 1 calendar day of excusable delay in Window 1, 39 calendar days of excusable delay in Window 2, 27 calendar days of excusable delay in Window 3 and 7 calendar days of excusable delay in Window 4 for a total of 74 calendar days.
A comparison of the update impacted schedule completion dates to the as-built schedule actual completion dates, as shown by Figure 2, determines: 1) the amount of Contractor-caused delay in the as-built schedule that is subject to liquidated damages if the as-built completion date is later than the update impacted completion date, or 2) the amount of acceleration that the Contractor has accomplished if the as-built completion date is earlier than the update impacted completion date.
3. AS-BUILT BUT-FOR ANALYSIS
Long International’s As-Built But-For schedule analysis, as shown by Figure 3 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 3), determines the earliest date that the required project completion or Final Acceptance milestone(s) could be achieved if the compensable delays did not occur. Unlike delay claim analysis to the critical path of the Contractor’s schedule update at the beginning of a schedule window, Long International’s As-Built But-For schedule analysis quantifies delay responsibility to activities on the actual critical path of the project that is calculated at the end of each schedule window. Because the actual critical path in each schedule window may be different than the planned critical path at the start of each schedule window, as illustrated by Figure 4 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 4), Long International’s As-Built But-For schedule analysis focuses on responsibility for delays that affected the dynamic nature of the actual critical path of the project. For example, at the beginning of Window 3 on the Olympia WWTP project, the as-planned critical path ran through piping procurement and installation. By the end of Window 3, however, fabrication and delivery delays caused the anaerobic pump installation to become the as-built critical path.
Long International quantifies the cumulative effect of compensable delays on the project completion date by first removing compensable delays caused by the Owner from the activity durations and relationship lag durations in the as-built calculation schedule1 for each schedule window and then recalculating the calculation schedule absent compensable delays. If the as‑built calculation schedule completion date collapses to an earlier completion date after the Owner-caused compensable delays are removed, the net duration of the schedule collapse is the amount of compensable delay days for which the Owner may be liable for the Contractor’s extended field overhead and home office overhead costs. If the calculation schedule does not collapse, the Owner-caused delays that were removed were either: 1) not on the critical path, or 2) concurrent with Contractor-caused delays or other excusable but noncompensable delays that were also on the as-built critical path or parallel critical path(s) and prevented the completion date from collapsing to an earlier date. The net overall compensable delay at the end of the project is determined by adding the number of compensable delay days derived from the as-built but-for calculations in each schedule window. For example, the as‑built but‑for analysis for the Olympia WWTP project determined that Milestone Construction is entitled to 3 calendar days of compensable delay in Window 1, 20 calendar days of compensable delay in Window 2, 4 calendar days of compensable delay in Window 3, and zero calendar days of compensable delay in Window 4 for a total of 27 calendar days of compensable delay.
4. DETAILED PROCEDURE
Long International’s detailed schedule delay claim analysis procedure includes the following steps:
- Identification of Schedule Windows
- Correction of the Schedules and Verification of Actual Dates
- Development of a Reasonable As-Planned Schedule for the Start of Each Schedule Window
- Development of As-Built Calculation Schedules for Each Schedule Window
- Preparation of Duration and Lag Variance Tables
- Identification of Delays and Allocation of Delay Responsibility
- Schedule Calculations to Determine Delay Liability
A more-detailed discussion of each of these steps is explained in the following sections.
4.1 IDENTIFICATION OF SCHEDULE WINDOWS
For both the Update Impacted and the As-Built But-For schedule analyses, Long International analyzes delays to the Contractor’s work during specific schedule “windows” of time. This windows approach enables Long International to assess the dynamic as-built critical path throughout the project as the Contractor’s work was performed and affected by delays. Although performed retrospectively, the analyses evaluate the effect of delays as they occurred and cumulatively over the entire period of the project. Typically, Long International starts with the Contractor’s original planned schedule and schedule updates to establish the as-planned and as-built schedules during each schedule window. Using either each monthly schedule update or combining several consecutive updates to define a schedule window, Long International establishes the specific window periods for its analysis based on the data dates of the schedule updates and the timing of key events during the project that may have caused changes to the critical path.
4.2 CORRECTION OF THE SCHEDULES
Based on its review of the Contractor’s schedules, Long International identifies any deficiencies or errors that, if not corrected, would substantially affect the accuracy of the delay claim analysis results. For example, the Contractor’s schedule updates may contain inaccurate or inconsistent actual dates. Long International validates the actual dates in the Contractor’s schedules against dates recorded in contemporaneous project documentation such as engineering drawing logs, purchase orders, material receiving reports, daily construction reports, test reports, punch lists, meeting minutes and monthly progress reports in order to verify the accuracy of the schedule activity actual dates. This step ensures that the as-built schedules accurately reflect the actual start and finish dates for completed work activities and properly forecast the critical path for the remaining work scope.
Common schedule deficiencies that Long International examines and corrects include the following:
- Incorrect and inconsistent use of as-built dates;
- Activity planned durations that are inconsistent with the Contractor’s bid estimate calculations;
- Missing contractual scope of work;
- Lack of contractually required completion activities;
- Over use of constraint dates;
- Missing predecessor or successor logic ties creating open-end activities;
- Inadequate depiction of equipment and materials procurement and delivery activities;
- Inaccurate predecessor logic for Owner approval activities;
- Lack of a contractual Owner approval period for submittal and turnover packages;
- Lack of reasonable project punch list and demobilization periods;
- Inconsistent use of Calendars, Progress Override and Retained Logic schedule calculation options; and
- Unrealistic as-built logic relationships indicating out-of-sequence progress.
After the above schedule deficiencies or errors are corrected, the Contractor’s as-planned and/or as-built critical path may be different than the Contractor or Owner thought during the project. Therefore, conclusions regarding the effect of and responsibility for delays may be different if the schedule deficiencies or errors were not corrected.
4.3 DEVELOPMENT OF A REASONABLE SCHEDULE UPDATE FOR THE START OF EACH SCHEDULE WINDOW
To perform the update impacted schedule analysis, Long International first ensures that the schedule updates at the start of each schedule window are reasonable, i.e., the schedule deficiencies identified above have been corrected. Long International then uses the scheduling software to recalculate the corrected schedules to determine: 1) the reasonable baseline schedule at the start of the project prior to any scope changes or delays, and 2) reasonable schedule updates that not only identify consistent and accurate as-built dates for activities that have started and finished prior to the schedule data date but also correctly forecast the planned start and finish dates of remaining schedule activities at the start of each successive schedule window. These schedule updates represent the as-planned schedules for the start of each successive schedule window. Figure 5 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 5) graphically depicts the forecast critical path at the start of Window No. 3 of the Olympia WWTP project schedule analysis. In this example, the critical path to achieving Final Acceptance by November 7, 2002 is being driven by the delivery of piping materials.
Liquidated damages may apply to not only the project completion date but also to intermediate milestone activities. Using the reasonable as-planned schedule at the start of the project and the forecast schedule updates for the start of each successive schedule window, Long International sorts and organizes the activity data by float value and/or longest path to identify the driving paths for each contractually required milestone date and the overall critical path leading to the project completion date.
4.4 DEVELOPMENT OF AS-BUILT CALCULATION SCHEDULES FOR EACH SCHEDULE WINDOW
To perform the as-built but-for schedule analysis, Long International prepares an as-built calculation schedule for each schedule window. The as-built schedule window can be defined as the period of time between the data dates of two or more successive schedule updates. The as‑planned schedule update with its data date at the beginning of the schedule window contains forecast start and finish dates during the schedule window period. The as-built schedule update with its data date at the end of the schedule window contains actual start and finish dates during the schedule window period.
Forecast start and finish dates and float values in a CPM schedule are driven by the schedule logic and the original or remaining durations of the schedule activities. When actual dates are used to update a schedule for work that has started and/or finished during the as-built schedule window, the actual dates override the schedule logic to fix the as-built dates of the activities. Therefore, there is no float assigned to activities having actual finish dates in a statused schedule. Therefore, the as-built critical path cannot be readily identified with only the statused schedule containing fixed, as-built dates.
The as-built calculation schedule converts the fixed as-built schedule dates into calculated early start and early finish dates based on actual activity durations and as-built logic. The as-built calculation schedule forecast dates are the same as the as-built schedule dates but are calculated by the scheduling delay analysis software using as-built schedule logic and actual activity durations instead of using the fixed actual dates input to the schedule. For example, as shown in Table 1 (please download the article PDF to view Table 1), the as-built calculation schedule forecast dates are the same as the as-built schedule actual dates for Window No. 3. This process enables Long to determine the actual float values and actual critical and near critical paths during the as-built period of the schedule. Identification of delays to the as-built critical path is vital to determine the actual causes of the delay to the project.
The as-built start and finish dates often show that the work was performed out-of-sequence compared to the as-planned schedule logic. For example, the Contractor may have planned to install pipe after all pipe spools were prefabricated and delivered. The planned relationship was a finish-to-start tie between the completion of the delivery of all prefabricated pipe and the start of the pipe installation activity. In the as-built schedule, however, the project data may show that the Contractor started to install pipe 5 days after the first shipment of prefabricated pipe was delivered and that pipe continued to be delivered for another 30 days. The actual relationship between the pipe delivery and installation activities, therefore, was a start-to-start relationship. If the actual sequence of work indicates that a different logical relationship between the activities is warranted, Long International adjusts the schedule logic to represent the as-built conditions. The derivation of the as-built logic during the schedule window may reveal that the as-built critical path at the end of the schedule window was different from the as-planned critical path at the start of the schedule window. In all cases, Long International evaluates the reasonableness of the as‑built critical path to ensure that minor, non-critical activities are not depicted as as-built critical activities without good reason.
Figure 6 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 6) graphically depicts the simulated as-built critical path for Window No. 3 of the Olympia WWTP project schedule analysis. In this example, the critical path to achieving Final Acceptance by December 23, 2002 is being driven by the fabrication of the pump for the anaerobic reactor tank. Absent the 22 calendar day pump fabrication delay caused by a change order, Milestone Construction would have achieved Final Acceptance only four calendar days earlier because near critical piping erection work was also delayed by late piping material deliveries.
4.5 PREPARATION OF DURATION AND LAG VARIANCE TABLES
The as-built calculation schedules are then compared to Long International’s corrected as‑planned schedule updates to create Duration and Lag Variance tables for each schedule window, as shown by Tables 2 and 3 (please download the article PDF to view Tables 2 and 3) for Window No. 3 for the Olympia WWTP project schedule analysis. The Lag and Duration Variance Tables enable Long International to quantify the actual delay that occurred for each activity duration and relationship in each schedule window.
4.6 IDENTIFICATION OF DELAYS AND ALLOCATION OF DELAY RESPONSIBILITY
Using contemporaneous project documentation, Long International then identifies delays to the as-planned and as-built critical and near critical paths of each schedule window based on an analysis of changes, impacts and other delaying events that occurred during the schedule window. Typical causes of delays may include but are not limited to the following issues:
- Approved project change orders
- Changes in the Owner’s quality assurance requirements
- Changes in the planned means and methods of construction
- Contractor-caused delays and improper management of work (inefficiency)
- Customs clearance delays
- Defective and deficient design
- Defective construction
- Delay in the answer of requests for information or field questions
- Differing site conditions
- Disruption or interference by other contractors under the direction of the Owner
- Government approval delays
- Inadequate or unskilled workers
- Late approval of job tests
- Late delivery of equipment and materials
- Late issuance of Notice to Proceed
- Late Owner approval of the Contractor’s Turnover Packages
- Late Owner responses to the Contractor’s submittals and drawings
- Poor subcontractor performance
- Site access and limited work space problems
- Strikes
- Variations in estimated quantities
- Weather impacts
In order to quantify the amount of delay that these issues may have caused to the start and finish of the schedule activities, Long International performs detailed reviews of the Project Record to determine: 1) the timing of the delay-causing events and actions or inactions of the Parties, 2) work that may have been affected by the delays, and 3) responsibility for the events or actions/inactions and resulting delays within the terms and conditions of the contract and the risks assumed by the parties. After identifying and quantifying the project delays, Long International can correlate delay issues to the appropriate schedule activities as shown by Figure 7 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 7). For example, a memo from Milestone Construction discussing the late delivery of pumps (Bates no. M30217) can be correlated to the planned and actual pump delivery dates.
Long International then allocates responsibility for delays to critical and near critical activities during each schedule window in the Duration and Lag Variance Tables. This integrated process enables Long International to link not only the causes of delays to specific activities, but also to identify the appropriate timing of each delay. For example, a change in scope may cause delay to a construction activity in Window No. 3. However, if a noncompensable delay to that same activity also occurred in a prior schedule window before the change occurred, the earlier delay may not be related to the later change in scope. This delay and date variance data then enables Long International to assign reasons and responsibility for delays to each schedule activity and quantify the number of days associated with each cause of delay. Long International also evaluates the dependency of activity duration and lag relationship delays. For example, an activity may appear to have incurred a Contractor-caused delay but the extended duration may actually be the result of the Contractor pacing its work because it was aware that the scheduled completion of other work now had float because of an Owner-caused delay. For example, the Contractor may not complete certain equipment foundation concrete pours as planned because it learned that the Owner had incurred equipment procurement delivery delays and the installation of the equipment foundations was no longer critical.
4.7 SCHEDULE CALCULATIONS TO DETERMINE DELAY LIABILITY
To calculate the Contractor’s entitlement to a time extension, Long International adds all excusable delays that occur in each schedule window to the as-planned schedule update at the start of the schedule window. These schedules are then recalculated and new projected activity start and finish dates are determined. The update impacted schedule calculation result for Window No. 3 of the Olympia WWTP project is shown by Figure 8 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 8). The cumulative result of the update impacted schedule calculations for all schedule windows is shown by Figure 2. The results of this analysis show that Milestone Construction is entitled to 74 calendar days of time extension to the project completion date.
In Figure 2, the overall update impacted schedule completion date is compared to the as-built schedule completion date. Because the as-built completion date was later than the update impacted schedule completion date, this comparison shows that Milestone Construction did not accelerate its work and may not be entitled to recover certain of its acceleration costs. Also, Milestone Construction may be liable for 101 calendar days of liquidated damages because it did not finish its work by the update impacted completion date.
To calculate the Contractor’s entitlement to extended field and home office overhead damages, activity durations and relationship ties in the as-built calculation schedules for each schedule window are reduced by the duration of compensable delays that occurred in each schedule window. The calculation schedules are then recalculated and a new project completion date is determined but-for compensable delays. The as-built but-for schedule calculation result for Window No. 3 of the Olympia WWTP project is shown by Figure 9 (please download the article PDF to view Figure 9). The 22-calendar day fabrication delay to activity W2042 in the as-built calculation schedule (see Figure 6) was removed, which caused the as-built but-for critical path to be driven by the WWTP piping delivery activity. The cumulative result of the as-built but-for schedule calculations for all schedule windows is shown by Figure 3. The results of this analysis show that Milestone Construction may be entitled to 27 calendar days of compensable field and home office delay damages.
5. SUMMARY
The update impacted and as-built schedule analyses performed by Long International provide a supportable analytical basis for credible opinions related to the following:
- The validity and accuracy of the Contractor’s contemporaneous schedules used during the project. The use of inaccurate schedules to determine delay responsibility and liability produces unreliable and incorrect results and opinions.
- The reasonable as-planned critical path of the project both at the beginning of the project as well as at the start of each window analysis period.
- The actual critical path of the project schedule and the dynamic nature of the actual critical path for each window analysis period.
- The timing of changes to the planned and actual critical path of the project.
- The responsibility for delays to both activity durations and relationship lags in each window analysis period.
- An assessment of excusable compensable, excusable noncompensable, and inexcusable delays.
- The relationship between the timing of delay events and changes to the planned start and finish dates and durations of the schedule activities. This cause-effect analysis demonstrates that the delays alleged by the project documentation actually affected critical path activities.
- The responsibility for out-of-sequence work performed by the Contractor.
- The potential overstatement of schedule progress in the Contractor’s periodic progress reports.
- The effect of concurrent delays on near critical activities.
- The cumulative impact of multiple change orders and delays.
- The Contractor’s entitlement to a time extension for excusable delays.
- The Owner’s entitlement to liquidated damages.
- The Contractor’s entitlement to acceleration costs and the timing of when the acceleration occurred.
- The Contractor’s entitlement to extended field and home office overhead damages.
- The Contractor’s entitlement to disruption and loss of productivity costs associated with craft labor disciplines.
6. ALTERNATIVE SCHEDULE ANALYSIS METHODOLOGIES
When appropriate, Long International may employ other schedule analysis methodologies than the update impacted and as-built but-for analyses. The selection of the most appropriate schedule analysis methodology depends on the relevant contract conditions, the governing case law, the quality of the available project records, the accuracy and completeness of the project schedules, the nature of the impacting events, the time available to perform the analysis, the amount of the claim value in dispute, and other factors.
For example, it may be appropriate to perform a “time impact analysis” in each schedule window where Contractor and Owner-caused delays, as well as excusable noncompensable delays, are added one at a time as they occur. Responsibility for projected delay is then assessed and accumulated throughout the life of the project. This procedure may be particularly relevant in situations where the Contractor owns the float. In such cases, a delay caused by the Owner may create float that absorbs a subsequent Contractor-caused delay. A determination may then be made that the Contractor’s concurrent delay was not dominant and the Contractor is entitled to compensation for the Owner-caused delay. Conversely, in certain jurisdictions, the Contractor may not be entitled to a time extension or compensation for concurrent Owner delays if a determination is made that the Contractor’s delays were dominant and the Owner’s concurrent delays were dependent upon the Contractor’s delay.
Another methodology may add, as a separate set of calculations, only Contractor-caused delays and Contractor-initiated acceleration to the updated schedule in each schedule window to calculate the projected delay caused by the Contractor. The result of this analysis may then be compared to the result of the update impacted analysis with Owner-caused and excusable delays and owner-paid acceleration to apportion acceleration costs.
When time and budget permit, the combined use of multiple schedule analysis methodologies may strengthen the accuracy and reliability of the analysis.
About the Authors
Richard J. Long, P.E., P.Eng., is Founder of Long International, Inc. Mr. Long has over 50 years of U.S. and international engineering, construction, and management consulting experience involving construction contract disputes analysis and resolution, arbitration and litigation support and expert testimony, project management, engineering and construction management, cost and schedule control, and process engineering. As an internationally recognized expert in the analysis and resolution of complex construction disputes for over 35 years, Mr. Long has served as the lead expert on over 300 projects having claims ranging in size from US$100,000 to over US$2 billion. He has presented and published numerous articles on the subjects of claims analysis, entitlement issues, CPM schedule and damages analyses, and claims prevention. Mr. Long earned a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh in 1970 and an M.S. in Chemical and Petroleum Refining Engineering from the Colorado School of Mines in 1974. Mr. Long is based in Littleton, Colorado and can be contacted at rlong@long-intl.com and (303) 972-2443.
Andrew Avalon, P.E., PSP, is Chairman and CEO of Long International, Inc. and has over 35 years of engineering, construction management, project management, and claims consulting experience. He is an expert in the preparation and evaluation of construction claims, insurance claims, schedule delay analysis, entitlement analysis, arbitration/litigation support and dispute resolution. He has prepared more than thirty CPM schedule delay analyses, written expert witness reports, and testified in deposition, mediation, and arbitration. In addition, Mr. Avalon has published numerous articles on the subjects of CPM schedule delay analysis and entitlement issues affecting construction claims and is a contributor to AACE® International’s Recommended Practice No. 29R‑03 for Forensic Schedule Analysis. Mr. Avalon has U.S. and international experience in petrochemical, oil refining, commercial, educational, medical, correctional facility, transportation, dam, wharf, wastewater treatment, and coal and nuclear power projects. Mr. Avalon earned both a B.S., Mechanical Engineering, and a B.A., English, from Stanford University. Mr. Avalon is based in Orlando, Florida and can be contacted at aavalon@long-intl.com and (407) 445‑0825.
Ronald J. Rider, M.B.A., is a Senior Principal with Long International and has over 30 years of experience in construction project management and contract dispute resolution. Mr. Rider has performed CPM schedule development, project cost control, cost and labor hour variance modeling, impact identification and causation, change order pricing and resolution, retrospective schedule delay, time extension and acceleration analyses, concurrent delay assessments and damages quantification. Mr. Rider’s experience includes petrochemical, oil refinery, power, commercial, industrial, road/highway, transit, hospital/medical, airport and casino projects. He holds a B.S. degree in construction management from Colorado State University and an M.B.A. degree from the University of Colorado. Mr. Rider is based in the Denver, Colorado area and can be contacted at rrider@long-intl.com and (303) 346-5836.
1 An as-built calculation schedule has the identical as-built start and completion dates for all activities as the as-built statused schedule. However, these as-built calculation schedule dates are driven by the as-built activity durations and as-built logic rather than the fixed actual start and finish dates that were entered into the scheduling software. The as-built schedule only shows float on activities that have not yet been completed beyond the schedule window. The as-built calculation schedule, however, also calculates the as-built float on the as-built activities that occurred during the schedule window. In this manner, the delay on the as-built critical path can be determined rather than basing delay on the as-planned critical path.
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