Presentation of:
DIVISION OF THE STATE ARCHITECT
Department of General Services
Project Certification Closeouts
What’s New At DSA
David Thorman – State ArchitectKathy Hicks – Acting Deputy Director, Division of the State Architect
Project Certification/Closeout Update
PL 09-04:90-Day Letter & Reopening of Files for Project Certification
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Purpose & Application
Purpose To streamline the process for issuing 90-Day Letters, and to
improve the re-opening of files when a project is closed without certification
Application Applies to ALL projects
As of January 1, 2010, the re-opening fee for all projects will be based on a project’s construction cost regardless of closing date
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Project Closeout: Background Project certification is the process DSA uses to
determine that a project has been constructed compliant with the codes governing school construction
A project may be closed with our without certification
The 90-Day Letter initiates the closing & certification process. The letter is issued when:
The DSE determines the project is essentially complete The project becomes occupied Construction stops for one year or more DSA received a final verified report from the project inspector and/or
the design professional in responsible charge of the project.
The 90-Day Letter requests that all outstanding requirements and documents be submitted to DSA within 90 days (and lists the missing documents)
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Close of File & Certification
After 90 days, DSA will close the file with or without certification
A letter of certification will only be issued if all missing documents have been submitted and all outstanding issues have been resolved
DSA will take no further action on a closed file until DSA receives a request from the Architect or school/college district to re-open and re-examine the file in order to certify the project
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Re-Opening & Re-Examination
A request from the Architect or school/college district to re-open and re-examine a closed, uncertified project must include:
A letter with the project name & DSA Application number requesting that the file be re-examined for certification
A copy of the DSA “Closed Without Certification” Letter A single COMPLETE comprehensive package that includes all items,
documents and issues listed on the DSA “Closed Without Certification” Letter
All outstanding Change Orders, Addendums and Revisions or alternate documents, must be approved prior to submitting the re-opening package.
The re-opening fee (if applicable)
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Fees after January 1, 2010
No fee is required for a one-time project re-opening request received within 9 months from the date the DSA 90-Day Letter expires
After 9 months (or for any 2nd or subsequent re-opening request), the fee is based on the project construction cost $500 for projects less than $5 million $750 for projects between $5 million and $50 million $1000 for projects greater than $50 million
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Responsibility on Requester
Partial or otherwise incomplete submittals will be accepted
DSA will issue an updated “Closed Without Certification” Letter to show remaining deficiencies
Submitting parties have 90 days to resolve deficiencies to obtain certification
If more than 90 days pass without resolution/DSA approval, the project will again be closed WITHOUT certification
Another re-opening fee is required to be paid each time it is necessary to re-open the file
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At the Discretion of DSA
90 Day Letters will NOT be extended, except at the discretion of DSA under the following circumstances: Construction is not complete & the contractor is still
mobilized at the site No portions of the project are occupied by staff and/or
students
IR A-20 discusses new projects associated with uncertified projects
IR A-20:New Projects Associated with Existing Uncertified Projects
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Policy
New work involving uncertified projects cannot be approved by DSA until the issue of the underlying certification is resolved.
DSA will NOT approve (stamp out) plans and specifications for alteration and/or addition projects or utilizing portions of, uncertified projects except when the new project is solely for the purpose of upgrading fire-life safety (FLS) aspects of the building/campus.
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Exceptions to Policy
The scope of projects accepted for DSA approval under this policy shall be limited to FLS alterations of the following types: Campus or system-wide fire alarm upgrade Upgrade/replacement of the uncertified building’s fire
alarm system
Written approval of the alteration plans & specifications will state: The approval is only for the FLS alteration The building itself remains uncertified
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Disclosure
The scopes of the projects and the uncertified buildings on the alteration project must be clearly identified in the following manner: The scope of the alteration project shall be clearly shown
on the cover sheet or index sheet of the plans Must include this statement: “DSA approval of these
plans shall not be construed as the Certification of Compliance for the following buildings as required by the Field Act, Education Code Section 17280-17316 and Sections 81130-81147”
Immediately after the above statement, list all the uncertified buildings on alteration project
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Other Projects
DSA may begin review of new projects associated with uncertified projects but DSA approval of the plans and specifications will be withheld until the underlying certification issue is resolved
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Clarifying Situations
Many situations occur that may or may not involve uncertified buildings/projects to the extent that a proposed new project may be affected. This appendix lists some of those situations in an attempt to provide clarity, uniformity and consistency in the application of this IR.
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Clarifying Situations
Q. The district submits a project for a fire alarm upgrade and/or fire alarm addition. The project requires connecting the new fire alarm system/components into a fire alarm panel that resides in an uncertified building.
The new project submittal must include the following two documents from NFPA 72 to be completed and submitted with the project.
Fire alarm system record of completion.
Fire alarm inspection and testing form.
DSA may begin review of new projects associated with uncertified projects but DSA approval of the plans and specifications will be withheld until the underlying certification issue is resolved
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Clarifying Situations
Q. A school building is not certified and the district submits an application to DSA for an alteration or addition to that building.
DSA will accept the new application and provide plan review but will not issue project approval (stampout) until and unless the issue of certification is resolved.
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Clarifying Situations
Q The district submits an application to DSA for a new building but the new building depends on portions of an uncertified project to be minimum code compliant (e.g. accessible restrooms located in uncertified buildings, path-of-travel part of an uncertified project, parking part of an uncertified project, etc.).
DSA will accept the new application and provide plan review but will not issue final approval (stamp out) until and unless the associated project certification is resolved. (See also Project Certification Guide on DSA website for potential alternatives)
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Clarifying Situations
Q The district submits an application to DSA for a new project on a campus but the entire campus (or portions of the campus) is not certified.
As long as the new project does not depend on uncertified construction to satisfy minimum code requirement (accessible restrooms, path-of-travel, parking, etc.) DSA will accept the new project as a viable, approvable project.
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Clarifying Situations
Q The district submits an application to DSA for a new classroom building but another ancillary building (gymnasium, administration building, shade structure, library etc.) is not certified.
As long as the new project does not depend on uncertified construction to satisfy minimum code requirement (accessible restrooms, path-of-travel, parking, etc.) DSA will accept the new project as a viable, approvable project.
DSA Project Certification Guide
Intent and Recent Updates
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Guideline Goal & Intent
Provide information, procedures and concepts that lead to: Project certification Consistency between DSA Regional Offices.
Projects have been closed by DSA without certification. The guide cannot possibly address all scenarios or
specific situations encountered during the closeout process
Experience and analytical skills are essential when determining appropriate actions necessary to obtain project certification.
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Organization of Guideline
SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION
SECTION 2 RE-EXAMINATION OF CLOSED FILES
SECTION 3 CONTACTING DSA
SECTION 4 DOCUMENTS REQUIRED FOR PROJECT CERTIFICATION
SECTION 5 RESOLUTIONS AND STRATEGIES FOR PROJECT CERTIFICATION
SECTION 6 UNIQUE STRUCTURES
Appendix
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Recent Changes to the Guideline
The guideline has been updated for the following purposes:
Editorial Changes
Clarifications
Updates with new polices and procedures
New alternates
Change intent from use of guide for pre 2007 projects to all projects
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SECTION 1 (INTRODUCTION)
Added to Section 1.5
If necessary, how can project certification be proved to DSA?
Copy of DSA certification letterCopy of DSA history card showing certificationDSA Tracker shows project is certified
Added to Section 1.5.1 (causes for closing initiation)
DSA received a final verified report from the project inspector and/or the design professional in responsible charge of the project.
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SECTION 1 (INTRODUCTION)
Added to Section 1.6.3 (closeout Type 3 letter)
Clarifies Type 3 letter causes Reported deviations in the construction Unconstructed but required minimum scope Required documents were not received by DSA or are otherwise
missing Required documentation was not properly completed Missing testing and/or inspection reports Required further and/or additional fees owed to DSA have not been
paid Unapproved documents such as change orders, deferred approvals,
and addenda
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SECTION 1 (INTRODUCTION)
Added to Section 1.6.4 (closeout Type 4 letter)
Clarifies Type 4 letter is reserved for safety related issues Unresolved safety issues Type 4 letter is issued for unresolved SSS, ACS and/or FLS safety
related deficiencies Specifically identified by DSA, Inspector or Design Professional. Missing documents are not considered as cause to issue a type 4
letter. Unconstructed scope, if resulting in a potential unsafe condition,
could cause a type 4 letter to be issued. Type 4 letters must be approved by the DSA Regional Manager prior
to being issued.
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SECTION 2 (Re-Opening of Files)
Change to Section 2.1 (General Requirements)
Aligns the certification guide re-opening of files information with DSA Policy PL09-04
How to file for re-opening Re-opening fees Length of time a re-opening will be held open for resolution
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SECTION 6 (Unique Structures)
Added New Section 6.3.7
Relocatable Building Fire Alarm Deferred Approval California licensed Architect, or Electrical Engineer or Structural
Engineer causes and witnesses fire alarm inspection and testing in compliance with NFPA 72
Completion and submittal of NFPA 72, “Fire Alarm System Record of Completeness” form
Completion and submittal of NFPA 72 “Fire Alarm Inspection and Testing” form
Signed letter from the Architect or Electrical Engineer or Structural Engineer stating, “I have witnessed the fire alarm system test for the project and in my opinion the alarm is in essential compliance with NFPA 72”
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Appendix
Read and use appendix B
Relocatable Buildings General Information on Certification This appendix explains how relo buildings can be approved for use
depending on their certification status Appendix information can be used to process relo buildings through
DSA.
What’s New at DSA
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Improved Intake Process at DSA
Problem: Incomplete plans are being submitted to DSA, leading to
delays at intake and in plan review, if the plans are accepted.Solution: Effective March 1, 2010 plans will be considered incomplete if
Form DSA 1 or DSA 3 is missing, or information required in the form(s), is incomplete or missing.• DSA-1 Application for Approval of Plans and Specifications
Provides Project specifics as well as general project scope information• DSA-3 Project Submittal Checklist Provides a listing of documents needed (i.e., title sheet, site plan, floor
plans, structural drawings, etc) as well as detailed project scope information needed to allow for an efficient plan review.
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New Intake Process
When required documents are missing at intake: Incomplete projects will no longer be returned to
Architect/Engineer The Architect/Engineer and School District will be notified
by letter that plans are incomplete, what is missing and that the plans will be held for four weeks to allow time to correct the deficiencies
If the Architect/Engineer does not comply within four weeks the plans will be returned.
Plan reviews will only commence when a complete submittal is made.
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DSA Bulletin 10-02, Form DSA-1 & DSA-3
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Electronic Review Submittals ($400,000 or Less)
To allow DSA time to reduce bin time and streamline planreview process:
• Effective March 3, 2010 mandatory submittal of electronic plans is suspended
• Projects with an estimated cost not exceeding $1,000,000 may be submitted electronically
• The electronic submittal process will be re-evaluated June 20, 2010
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Policy 09-02
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Access Fees
The Access Fee was doubled effective February 16, 2010
The Access Fee has not been changed since 1984
Since some projects may already or inadvertently submitted fees under the lesser fee schedule, the following will apply:
DSA will accept Access Projects with the wrong fees until March 30, 2010
These projects will receive an application number, but the project will not be stamped out until the balance of fees due are paid in full
Beginning April 1, 2010, the full Access fee must be submitted with the plans
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DSA Bulletin 10-01
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Automatic Fire Sprinkler Systems (AFSS)
Currently, DSA allows AFSS to be deferred
Effective July 1, 2010 AFSS will no longer be deferred
Separating AFSS from plans leads to delays
When AFSS finally come in at deferred plan review stage the plans are usually incomplete, leading to delays stamping plans out
Many of the other plan review jurisdictions in the state do not allow deferrals of AFSS
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Policy 10-01
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QUESTIONS?