Los Angeles County is in the process of developing a streamlined permitting/inspection procedure for ADUs. There is a backlog of applications. The plan is to have the inspectors perform the plan check for ADUs. A standard plan and inspection checklist is in the works. The inspectors will bear the responsibility for achieving code compliance. The administration has rose colored glasses on when assessing the inspection staff.
The solar industry has achieved a milestone with their permitting and inspection and they did it without an inspection checklist. Any system that is 10KW or less is plan checked in the field by inspectors. The state allows just one inspection which is the final inspection. That is when the plans are corrected. It's a done deal at that point. Here is part of an email that was sent to me by an inspector. It exemplifies the folly.
Also on another job the plans called out for a 200 amp panel with solar and only 1/0 service wires and I wrote up a correction to install 2/0 copper service wires and revise the plans to show this. Also the plans only called out for (2) 3/8” ground rods with #6 going to the cold water and they had a 200 amp service with there solar and I wrote up a correction , that said they needed (2) 5/8” ground rods with a depth of 8ft and spaced more than 6 ft apart and I need #4 copper in armor cable going to the main cold water within 5 ft at the front of the house
The inspector that sent this to me is not the inspector that wrote it. The inspector that wrote this was asking for validation of his corrections but I took it out of context.
I don't have much confidence in the competency of inspectors and haven't for at least ten years. As areas of construction expand faster than the jurisdictions can keep up there is a worsening of the quality. It will become apparent over time and then be too late.
Plan checking after the work has been completed is beyond ridiculous. With an ADU, the first time the inspector sees the plans will be at the underslab plumbing inspection. Any deficiency in the plans that is not caught at that time will be off limits in the future. Envision a 29" wide hallway that wasn't flagged at the first inspection....that water heater that's a foot from the property line....sorry about that bedroom window that's too small. How will an inspector deal with violations that are on the approved plans?
I used to blame it on the plan check engineer. Inspectors will just move on to the next ADU..... just like they do with solar.
The solar industry has achieved a milestone with their permitting and inspection and they did it without an inspection checklist. Any system that is 10KW or less is plan checked in the field by inspectors. The state allows just one inspection which is the final inspection. That is when the plans are corrected. It's a done deal at that point. Here is part of an email that was sent to me by an inspector. It exemplifies the folly.
Also on another job the plans called out for a 200 amp panel with solar and only 1/0 service wires and I wrote up a correction to install 2/0 copper service wires and revise the plans to show this. Also the plans only called out for (2) 3/8” ground rods with #6 going to the cold water and they had a 200 amp service with there solar and I wrote up a correction , that said they needed (2) 5/8” ground rods with a depth of 8ft and spaced more than 6 ft apart and I need #4 copper in armor cable going to the main cold water within 5 ft at the front of the house
The inspector that sent this to me is not the inspector that wrote it. The inspector that wrote this was asking for validation of his corrections but I took it out of context.
I don't have much confidence in the competency of inspectors and haven't for at least ten years. As areas of construction expand faster than the jurisdictions can keep up there is a worsening of the quality. It will become apparent over time and then be too late.
Plan checking after the work has been completed is beyond ridiculous. With an ADU, the first time the inspector sees the plans will be at the underslab plumbing inspection. Any deficiency in the plans that is not caught at that time will be off limits in the future. Envision a 29" wide hallway that wasn't flagged at the first inspection....that water heater that's a foot from the property line....sorry about that bedroom window that's too small. How will an inspector deal with violations that are on the approved plans?
I used to blame it on the plan check engineer. Inspectors will just move on to the next ADU..... just like they do with solar.