I’m an electrical plans examiner/ inspector for a municipality. For context, this is the only location I’ve held this position so not much to compare it to; I still think our records are trash. Addressing is a mess and doesn’t match information on the property appraisers website (I still can’t wrap my head around that). Nothing in our system links properly, especially when it comes to information that transferred from our previous system (we had trakit and switched to IMS) so I can’t find all the associated permits when I search by parcel or by address because of slight variations in how the address was written before or if there are unit numbers involved make them not link. Everyone is aware of this issue so it’s not just my ineptitude - I’ve asked and investigated but nothing so far.
All of that to say that every time I’ve tried to figure out if something was permitted or not, I couldn’t confidently come to a conclusion. So what then?
For example, change of occupancy/ alteration level 3 (Florida). Multi tenant building, used to be Sears. 2 of the bottom floor tenant spaces were demolished to create a larger tenant space (no permit). A stop work order was posted but they kept working anyway - a lot has been done and a lot is new, contrary to what is clearly written on the plans as existing to remain, that the occupancy is the same, alteration level 2, etc. Not a good start.
A site visit soon followed at which point the following was observed: The service is supplied from a utility vault on the first floor that supplies switchgear on the second floor. 2000A, 480/277V. Multiple tenants and house loads are supplied from that switchgear, from separate breakers. They avoided showing me the room at first - probably because the lights didn’t work and the door was unlocked and open to only one of the tenants. In order to gain access to the service equipment, the building manager had to call the tenant to let us in. During the follow up visit (still no issued permit), the building manager figured out how to access the space from a stairway. A padlock was placed on the door - not a code compliant door for the space given the equipment (like listed panic hardware). They got the lights on in the room and actually labeled the breakers by tenant. They do not have GFPE documentation, nor any Arc energy reduction stuff, nor fault study. None of the tenants have access to their own service disconnecting means and building management is not continuous, fire department does not have a key to room either. Most of the ~ 12 panels in the proposed remodel space look pretty new but square d stuff always looks pretty new to me. Not finding permits that would’ve covered that electrical scope since it changed from a sears to commercial multitenant; they could’ve installed some of this right after the stop work order - how could I know?
I’d love to know how you guys would approach this from an existing building code perspective and any other comments you might have. This is the first beast of its kind for me.