Planning, Scheduling & Programming Discussion Member for 19 years 3 months Member for 19 years 4 months Submitted by Chris G. on Sat, 2012-10-13 08:17 Permalink Mr. Mike,Appreciate your Mr. Mike, Appreciate your prompt response. Regards, Chris Member for 19 years 10 months Member for 19 years 11 months Submitted by Mike Testro on Thu, 2012-10-11 19:39 Permalink Hi Chris As soon as you get a Hi Chris As soon as you get a LOA - provided it is drafted correctly - then the contract is active so Yes you can hit the deck running. If the Engineer has not yet been appointed then you have your first grounds for an Eot before you have started. Best regards Mike Testro Log in or register to post comments
Member for 19 years 3 months Member for 19 years 4 months Submitted by Chris G. on Sat, 2012-10-13 08:17 Permalink Mr. Mike,Appreciate your Mr. Mike, Appreciate your prompt response. Regards, Chris
Member for 19 years 10 months Member for 19 years 11 months Submitted by Mike Testro on Thu, 2012-10-11 19:39 Permalink Hi Chris As soon as you get a Hi Chris As soon as you get a LOA - provided it is drafted correctly - then the contract is active so Yes you can hit the deck running. If the Engineer has not yet been appointed then you have your first grounds for an Eot before you have started. Best regards Mike Testro
Member for
19 years 3 monthsMr. Mike,Appreciate your
Mr. Mike,
Appreciate your prompt response.
Regards,
Chris
Member for
19 years 10 monthsHi Chris As soon as you get a
Hi Chris
As soon as you get a LOA - provided it is drafted correctly - then the contract is active so Yes you can hit the deck running.
If the Engineer has not yet been appointed then you have your first grounds for an Eot before you have started.
Best regards
Mike Testro