Most Popular Case Histories of 2024
GBA has a tradition of collaborating on issues that impact the geoprofessions. One of the ways we work together is by providing lessons learned through GBA Case Histories. GBA Case Histories provide unprecedented real-world learning examples related to project and business management.
By reading the most downloaded Case Histories of 2024 (and sharing them with fellow GBA member firm employees!) you can see where others went wrong and avoid making the same mistakes.
We’ll begin with number 10 and count down to the number one most downloaded of this popular risk management series of publications.
#10: If The Bus Driver Doesn’t Have a License, Get Off the Bus – Case History No. 5
A firm performed a limited geotechnical study for a church project, but budget constraints and sub...
WANTED: GBA Case Histories
GBA has a tradition of collaborating on issues that impact the geoprofessions. One of the ways we work together is by providing lessons learned through GBA Case Histories. GBA Case Histories provide unprecedented real-world learning examples related to project and business management.
Here is your chance to share with others what went wrong, how you handled the problems, and how others can learn from your experiences so everyone can avoid the same problems in the future.
Here is how to get started:
Step 1. Share your idea for a Case History using one of the appropriate GBA template(s):
• Case History Project Management
• Case History Practice Management
Step 2. Send your i...
5 MORE CASE HISTORIES REFRESHED
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
GBA CASE HISTORY # 96 (download):
A Member Firm made the mistake of agreeing to work for both the owner (a school board) and its retained architect. Complicating matters, the architect refused to sign the Member Firm’s contract and the Member Firm refused to sign the architect’s. Ultimately, $1.7M changed hands.
GBA CASE HISTORY # 97 (download):
A construction-management company retained the ...
5 More Case Histories Refreshed
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
GBA CASE HISTORY 91 (download):
An assisted-living facility owner accepted the general contractor’s ill-advised “value-engineering” suggestions that led to a serious and costly mold infestation. The owner retained an environmental consultant to identify whom the owner could sue. Not the architect: He had disavowed further involvement after the owner authorized the value-engineering recommendation...
5 More Case Histories Refreshed
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being
used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional
development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
GBA CASE HISTORY 86 (download):
A “dream home” built on expansive soil and nonexpansive sandstone began to move about eight months after construction. The original geotechnical-engineering report warned of that risk, noted that a slope-stability analysis had intentionally been excluded from the scope of service, and a...
5 More Case Histories Refreshed
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
CASE HISTORY NO.81: Download Here
Not knowing your client’s preferences and expectations can be expensive, as one member learned on a nuclear power plant project. The client orally authorized the Member Firm to begin construction materials engineering and testing (CoMET) services and dictated the format for test reporting. The project manager complied, but learned the client was dissatisfied during a collectio...
5 More Case Histories Refreshed
GBA Publications Committee .
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring.
That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
GBA CASE HISTORY 76 (download):
“No good deed goes unpunished” was the lesson learned by this Member Firm, whose project manager did a favor for a friend. When the friend failed to follow the project manager’s recommendations, the friend forgot that the project manager had ever made them and filed suit.
GBA CASE HISTORY 77 (download):
What happens when a disgruntled homeowner sues a housing develo...
Five More Case Histories Refreshed
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past!
GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
Case History #71 (download)
A geotechnical engineer submitted its flawless subsurface exploration report which referenced an ASTM standard on soil classification. When a cost overrun occurred on the project, because a buried foundation was discovered, the assistant state’s attorney general handling the case read the report. He interpreted ASTM “references” in the standard to mean “incorporated by refer...
5 More Case Histories Refreshed
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes
of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss preventiondiscussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
CASE HISTORY NO. 66 (download)
By attaching the word “standard” to a recommended practice it had developed, a local contractors group gave the
document a status it did not merit: it was not developed using ANSI methods;it was not generally followed; and it was not incorporated into any local codes. Nonetheless, its existence gave an attorney the ability to confuse a trier of fact, encouraging the developer...
GBA Releases Five More Case Histories: 61-65
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too.
Five more Case Histories have been re-issued.
CASE HISTORY NO. 61 (download)
The owner of a gasoline station retained an environmental consultant to perform a Phase II ESA at the request of prospective purchasers, acting through an intermediary. When problems were discovered later, the consultant wound up as a target in a maze of litigation.
CASE HISTORY NO. 62 (download)
The GBA member was retained by a general contractor for a major utility project. Corners were...
GBA Releases Five More Case Histories: 56-60
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. We are more than halfway done as five more case histories have been re-issued.
CASE HISTORY NO. 56 (download)
After a field representative failed to note that organic material had been buried instead of taken off site, the Member Firm that employed him submitted a form noting that grading had proceeded according to plans. The grading subcontractor relied on an outdated site map, which resulted in unsuitable organic fill beneath 100 of 250 housing lots.
...
Effort to refresh Case Histories launched
Effort to refresh Case Histories launched Present day context for historical best lessons learned
First Case Histories published
First Case Histories published Over 100 geoprofessional accounts of lessons learned
GBA Releases Five More Case Histories
GBA Releases Five More Case Histories: 51-55
GBA Publications Committee
Learn from others. Don’t repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring.That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. We are halfway there as five more case histories have been re-issued.
CASE HISTORY NO. 51 (download)
A complicated 70-acre riverside project with “Bay mud”, became more challenging when the excavation contractor and project civil engineer ignored the advice of the Member Firm and the client sued the Member Firm for negligence that caused $2.5 million in damages.
Although the Member Firm...
We Are Halfway There! GBA Releases Five More Case Histories: 46-50
Learn from others. Don't repeat the mistakes of the past! GBA Case Histories are being used by our
members for loss prevention discussions in support of professional development and mentoring. That is why GBA case histories are so valuable, and why GBA is updating them all, while adding new ones, too. We are halfway there as five more case histories have been re-issued.
CASE HISTORY NO. 46 (download)
Conducting an error-free ESA is not enough. Eighteen months after the client purchased the site, its representative called the Member Firm’s project manager to report that state regulators were claiming they had discovered exposed, friable asbestos at the site. The exposure constituted an unlawful release of hazardous material, the regulators said, and posed a threat to public h...
GBA BEST PRACTICES: E-COMMUNICATION
as its title suggests, covers e-mail, instant messaging (IMing), texting, and the use of Facebook, Skype, Twitter, and so on. Originall it was a Practce Alert 46.....
GBA BEST PRACTICES: E-MAIL DISCLAIMERS: A BETTER WAY
The long disclaimers that inhabit the bottom of so many business e-mails are counter-productive, especially in light of simple alternatives readily available. So says the Legal Affairs Committee of......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: ESTABLISHING A CELL-PHONE SAFETY POLICY FOR YOUR FIRM
All firms should want to establish cell-phone safety policies to help protect their employees from falling victim to their own bad, distracted-driving habits. Such policies, when rigorously......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: EXPECTATIONS MANAGEMENT
A truly realistic budget or schedule range that accounts for the potential for the unexpected gives geoprofessionals the ability to delight, or at least satisfy, client representatives. All too......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: FRAUD AND EMBEZZLEMENT
Fraud and embezzlement are the subject of the newest GBA Best Practices monograph, developed by GBA's Business Practices Committee. It's a particularly important topic for GBA-Member Firms, because......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: GBA GUIDE TO TEAMING AGREEMENTS AND JOINT VENTURES
This GBA Best Practices document discusses the most common types of project-pursuit agreements identifying what you should and should not do, elements of complete Teaming Agreements and Joint Ventures...
GBA BEST PRACTICES: GIVING CREDIT WHEN CREDIT IS DUE
Initiating a lawsuit to collect a fee may be the most common trigger to professional-negligence claims filed against geoprofessionals. The clients involved often use a portion of the amount they......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: GO NO GO CHECKLIST
There are very good reasons why we would choose not to spend time and effort pursuing a client or a project. GBA’s Business Practices Committee has prepare a comprehensive, simple to use, Go/No-Go ch...
GBA BEST PRACTICES: INVESTING IN RISK MANAGEMENT AND LOSS PREVENTION
"Friends don't sue friends." That mantra, initiated by GBA almost 50 years ago, is the theme of this GBA Best Practices monograph. Developed by GBA's Business Practices Committee, it focuses on the......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: PREPARING FOR RAPID RESPONSE: ASSEMBLING A PROJECT-INTERVENTION TEAM (PIT) CREW
Construction-risks can quickly take on mountainous proportions unless they are addressed when still in their molehill state. This is particularly the case when geoprofessional issues are involved......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: PROFESSIONAL-LIABILITY INSURANCE BASICS
Why do geoprofessionals need professional-liability insurance (PLI)? That's one of five fundamental issues addressed in this GBA Best Practices monograph titled "Professional-Liability Insurance......
GBA BEST PRACTICES: SAFETY AND YOUR GEOPROFESSIONAL PRACTICE
Safety has become a top priority for many design and environmental firms that are concerned for the welfare of their employees, an attitude shared by many major clients for which "safety......