Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), maintains a list of what they consider “critical infrastructure sectors.”
CISA issued coronavirus guidelines to help governments and businesses “ensure that employees essential to operations of critical infrastructure are able to continue working with as little interruption as possible.”
These are industries that CISA considers essential:
Chemical Sector
Commercial Facilities Sector
Communications Sector
Critical Manufacturing Sector
Dams Sector
Defense Industrial Base Sector
Emergency Services Sector
Energy Sector
Financial Services Sector
Food and Agriculture Sector
Government Facilities Sector
Healthcare and Public Health Sector
Information Technology Sector
Nuclear Reactors, Materials, and Waste Sector
Transportation Systems Sector
Water and Wastewater Systems Sector
What about construction?
The construction industry didn’t specifically make CISA’s list. However, when you dig a little deeper, it’s clear that construction is an essential part of each one. The transportation sector is made up of highways, rail systems, and mass transit infrastructure. The water systems sector includes pipelines, plumbing, and wastewater treatment plants. The healthcare sector needs hospitals. And so on.
Every single critical sector needs contractors and suppliers to provide materials and build facilities that they use to deliver essential, life-sustaining services.
Construction industry leaders have called for government leaders to add construction to the list of essential businesses. According to a joint statement from the CEO of the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) and the President of North America’s Building Trades Unions, “Government officials at all levels should treat the construction industry and the work it performs as vital and essential to the critical industries that must remain in operation.”
Construction is a huge term. We should be limiting construction activity to essential work and keeping nonessential construction workers safe. Building a lab to study coronavirus? Essential. Supplying materials to contractors that build that lab? For sure. Repairing roofs, pest control, helping fix faulty electric orl eaking pipes? Yes, that is good, too.
New kitchen tiles? A bathroom overhaul? New bedroom addition? Fancy new front door? Upgrading the carpets? Fresh mulch on the garden beds? Six new estate houses on that empty lot? A new pool for an apartment building? Landscaping the water trap area of a new shopping mall? NO. It can wait.
The Residences and Towne Centre at City Ridge in NW DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today in Maryland I have my neighbor getting a new addition worked on today. About 5 trucks and a dozen or so workman. Not a dust mask in sight.
Money talks.
Well, he probably signed a contract and the contractor wants to get paid soon will do the work rather than delay; even if the owner asked to delay, he would be violation of the contract by not allowing access and contractor could penalize him.
Force majeure baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), maintains a list of what they consider “critical infrastructure sectors.”
CISA issued coronavirus guidelines to help governments and businesses “ensure that employees essential to operations of critical infrastructure are able to continue working with as little interruption as possible.”
These are industries that CISA considers essential:
Chemical Sector
Commercial Facilities Sector
Communications Sector
Critical Manufacturing Sector
Dams Sector
Defense Industrial Base Sector
Emergency Services Sector
Energy Sector
Financial Services Sector
Food and Agriculture Sector
Government Facilities Sector
Healthcare and Public Health Sector
Information Technology Sector
Nuclear Reactors, Materials, and Waste Sector
Transportation Systems Sector
Water and Wastewater Systems Sector
What about construction?
The construction industry didn’t specifically make CISA’s list. However, when you dig a little deeper, it’s clear that construction is an essential part of each one. The transportation sector is made up of highways, rail systems, and mass transit infrastructure. The water systems sector includes pipelines, plumbing, and wastewater treatment plants. The healthcare sector needs hospitals. And so on.
Every single critical sector needs contractors and suppliers to provide materials and build facilities that they use to deliver essential, life-sustaining services.
Construction industry leaders have called for government leaders to add construction to the list of essential businesses. According to a joint statement from the CEO of the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) and the President of North America’s Building Trades Unions, “Government officials at all levels should treat the construction industry and the work it performs as vital and essential to the critical industries that must remain in operation.”
Construction is a huge term. We should be limiting construction activity to essential work and keeping nonessential construction workers safe. Building a lab to study coronavirus? Essential. Supplying materials to contractors that build that lab? For sure. Repairing roofs, pest control, helping fix faulty electric orl eaking pipes? Yes, that is good, too.
New kitchen tiles? A bathroom overhaul? New bedroom addition? Fancy new front door? Upgrading the carpets? Fresh mulch on the garden beds? Six new estate houses on that empty lot? A new pool for an apartment building? Landscaping the water trap area of a new shopping mall? NO. It can wait.
Anonymous wrote:The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), maintains a list of what they consider “critical infrastructure sectors.”
CISA issued coronavirus guidelines to help governments and businesses “ensure that employees essential to operations of critical infrastructure are able to continue working with as little interruption as possible.”
These are industries that CISA considers essential:
Chemical Sector
Commercial Facilities Sector
Communications Sector
Critical Manufacturing Sector
Dams Sector
Defense Industrial Base Sector
Emergency Services Sector
Energy Sector
Financial Services Sector
Food and Agriculture Sector
Government Facilities Sector
Healthcare and Public Health Sector
Information Technology Sector
Nuclear Reactors, Materials, and Waste Sector
Transportation Systems Sector
Water and Wastewater Systems Sector
What about construction?
The construction industry didn’t specifically make CISA’s list. However, when you dig a little deeper, it’s clear that construction is an essential part of each one. The transportation sector is made up of highways, rail systems, and mass transit infrastructure. The water systems sector includes pipelines, plumbing, and wastewater treatment plants. The healthcare sector needs hospitals. And so on.
Every single critical sector needs contractors and suppliers to provide materials and build facilities that they use to deliver essential, life-sustaining services.
Construction industry leaders have called for government leaders to add construction to the list of essential businesses. According to a joint statement from the CEO of the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) and the President of North America’s Building Trades Unions, “Government officials at all levels should treat the construction industry and the work it performs as vital and essential to the critical industries that must remain in operation.”
Anonymous wrote:North America's Building Trades Unions (NABTU), one of the country's largest labor federations, came out in support of categorizing construction workers as essential.
"It is vital to sustain construction and maintenance on the sixteen critical physical and virtual infrastructure sectors identified by the Department of Homeland Security, as well as projects of regional and national significance," NABTU president Sean McGarvey said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A consulting engineer to large construction projects said that there is no practical way to protect construction site workers and to maintain social distance. These are ticking time bombs for spread and illness (her language).
Definitely better for their families to become homeless.
Definitely also better for a construction site (Could be your house) that has no roof to get rained and stormed into for endless months.
Anonymous wrote:A consulting engineer to large construction projects said that there is no practical way to protect construction site workers and to maintain social distance. These are ticking time bombs for spread and illness (her language).
Anonymous wrote:As a practical matter, construction doesn’t expose the general public to infection the way a restaurant does. On our big jobs, we’ve started staggering shifts, dividing the site into zones, instituting daily temperature checks and making sure that our subs have appropriate PPE. For tenant improvement work, we’ve advised the owner that we need to shit down if we can’t maintain social distancing. On those jobs, we’ve donated the PPE we would’ve used to the local hospitals. Many of the GCs in this country are trying to do the right thing—it’s just not as simple as telling our sub’s employees to go home and starve and forgo any chance of being able to afford healthcare.