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Who Will Take the Helm When the Building Officials Are Gone

Walk into almost any building department across the country, and you will notice something that should concern everyone in this industry. The people in charge are getting older. Many Building Officials, plans examiners, and inspectors are in their late fifties, sixties, or even seventies, still carrying the weight of decades of experience and responsibility. They are the ones keeping the system steady, guiding decisions, interpreting codes, and mentoring staff. But what happens when they retire? Who steps in to lead the next generation of code enforcement? That is the conversation we are not having, and it is one that cannot wait.

There is a growing crisis that is quietly unfolding in our profession. Skilled trades are already struggling to attract new people, but code enforcement is in even greater danger. The pipeline of future Building Officials is drying up, and few younger professionals are preparing to take the reins. When this current group of veterans leaves, they will take with them not only technical knowledge but also decades of judgment and local understanding that cannot be replaced by a certification class or an online course.

The path into this career has never been clear. Many Building Officials did not set out to become one. They worked in construction, inspection, or design, and one day found themselves managing a department. It was not part of a long-term plan, but a natural transition for people who understood the building process from the ground up. That background matters. It gives credibility, common sense, and perspective. A Building Official who has framed a wall, run conduit, or installed HVAC understands the intent behind the code better than someone who has only read about it. Contractors can tell right away if the person across the counter has ever been on a jobsite.

That kind of experience brings what many call “street credibility.” It earns respect because it comes from doing the work. When inspectors, plans examiners, and Building Officials speak the same language as the trades, enforcement becomes smoother, communication improves, and everyone on the job understands the goal is compliance, not conflict. The problem is that too few people with that experience are stepping into these positions. The next generation needs both the technical background and the interpersonal skills to lead effectively.

Part of the issue is awareness. Young people entering the construction field do not see code enforcement as a career option. They might hear about becoming a contractor, engineer, or architect, but not about becoming an inspector or Building Official. Even those in the trades rarely consider it until late in their careers. We need to start presenting this profession for what it really is: a path that combines technical skill, public service, and leadership.

Being a Building Official requires far more than reading code sections. It demands understanding the politics of local government, balancing public safety with practicality, and maintaining professionalism under pressure. It is one of the few positions in public service that touches every aspect of the built environment. The right person can make a town safer, stronger, and more resilient. The wrong person can erode public trust and damage relationships that take years to build.

The next generation of Building Officials must be adaptable, professional, and grounded in both construction knowledge and administrative skill. They need to understand how to manage staff, communicate with design professionals, and earn respect from contractors through competence and consistency. They also need mentors. Those who have spent decades in this profession have a duty to share what they know. That knowledge cannot disappear when they retire. Departments, associations, and organizations like ICC need to do more to encourage mentoring and to highlight the importance of succession planning.

If we fail to bring new people into these roles, communities will face a leadership vacuum in the very area that protects life and property. Codes will still exist, but enforcement will lose its human judgment. The Building Official’s role is not about control or authority; it is about responsibility. It requires technical understanding, administrative discipline, and the ability to stand firm when it matters most.

We need people who have walked the walk, who understand construction from the inside, and who can transition that experience into leadership. The next generation must carry forward the professionalism, balance, and integrity that define this job. It is not enough to know the code; they must understand the people it affects. The future of code enforcement depends on those willing to step up, learn from those who came before, and take the helm with the same sense of duty that built this profession in the first place.
 
Also, DEI is a framework for fair practices. It’s about giving everyone a fair shake - it’s not a quota system. What you guys are basically saying is that you’re terrified that the amount of people you’re measured against has increased. There will be women and people of color who are more qualified than you - get over it. Also, and in my humble opinion, it’ll take a very very long time for the amount of unqualified women and POC to equate to the amount of unqualified white guys that are employed in these positions cuz ya know, historically prejudiced hiring and promotion practices, etc.

If I could just find my small violin..
 
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This thread was about a shortage of qualified people and bringing more people into the fold … and its turned into badmouthing groups of people that we should actively be trying to recruit, educate, and inspire. Nice one!
 
I’m calling you out on your generalizations and the fact that you’re attributing failure to gender and race.
I did not apply an encompassing generalization in that I was specific to LA County. What you assume is a failure of the female gender is not being fair to females. Women don’t have a place in construction. Being ill suited for any of the myriad construction jobs renders them ill suited to function in a building department.

I have not said anything about race.
 
Also, DEI is a framework for fair practices. It’s about giving everyone a fair shake - it’s not a quota system. What you guys are basically saying is that you’re terrified that the amount of people you’re measured against has increased. There will be women and people of color who are more qualified than you - get over it. Also, and in my humble opinion, it’ll take a very very long time for the amount of unqualified women and POC to equate to the amount of unqualified white guys that are employed in these positions cuz ya know, historically prejudiced hiring and promotion practices, etc.

If I could just find my small violin..
You have an overactive imagination and seem to be grinding an axe. I believe it would be best if we agree to disagree and stop the discussion.
 
This is such an insane and bigoted statement it makes me question every other opinion you have.
Years ago I was in charge. The project was 3000 acres of undeveloped land in Chico, Ca. The scope was condominiums, apartment buildings and convalescent facilities. The company was large enough to have a HR department, vice presidents and assistants to the vice presidents.
Well one day an assistant to a vice president came to me with the news that we were in violation of a State law due to the protected classes being underrepresented in our hiring practices. I responded with the news that none had ever applied for a job toiling in the noon day Sun on this lava cap.

Wouldn't you know it, they found a few and one was a woman. We had a lot of butt to lap siding so I put her to work with a calking gun. Mid afternoon, Thom the timekeeper/runner found me and said there was something that I need to see. Marsha, well I don't remember her name but Marsha seems to fit, the poor girl was covered in caulk. I was concerned that any men in her life might show up with ball bats. Marsha didn't come around again and HR understood me when I said "Women don't have a place in construction."

Aside from blatant misogyny as a reason to not hire women is my belief that nobody should work a building department that has not been in that Sun on a lava cap. Knowing the codes is half the knowledge needed to be a competent inspector. The other half is understanding the construction trades. If you don't know what it takes to do the work, how can you be a regulator of that work.

Oops, I just crapped on another demographic... Dweebs, They get a few certs and they are an inspector. That works well today because the job is "customer service" first and foremost. They can recite the code for a purlin, word for word, and not be able to find one in a building.

The inspectors and managers, engineers and architects, plan checkers and permit techs that frequent this forum are not close to fauna in the wild.
The majority of forum members, and certainly the forum owner, would prefer that the perception people take away from TBCF is a professional experience. Courteous discussions of important topics handled with accuracy, clarity and authority. Just like it is at their local building department? That's right this microcosm is the typical pinnacle when in fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

Perhaps a couple dozen inspectors chime in out of 50,000 nationwide. 0.0005% One half of one inspector for every thousand inspectors. These numbers are conservative. Take two halves, make one inspector. Know that he, or let's be fair and include a possible she like Peach, okay so know that the inspector that is the one in two thousand is in a line with a slob like me. I fall out of line and look at the immediate attack. Ah who cares? Certainly not me.

The picture is a correction written by a Senior Building Engineering Inspector employed by LA County. He found a plastic water pipe, ABS sewer and coated steel gas pipe all together in one trench. With his 22 ICC certifications he was able to identify a non-issue with a correction notice.

In have hundreds of examples of bogus corrections written by the engaged multi-discipline code experts. The newbies with their three certs are not writing bogus corrections .... they avoid that mistake by not writing corrections.

One of you cream puffs lamented that the public sees this and might be upset about my post.
LOL If the public knew the truth about who they are forced to deal with.... there would be another forum for that.

Eager to question my opinions are you...oh well! I have never held my opinions out as anything to respect. In fact I have often admonished that one should probably not even consider doing some of the things I've done.


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