Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah

National studies suggest that eighty percent of existing code professionals are expected to retire within the next fifteen years. As part of this research, it was determined that approximately half of all licensed building inspectors in the State of Utah will reach retirement age within the next ten...

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Main Author: Williams, George Reese
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5609
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6608&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-66082019-05-16T03:36:13Z Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah Williams, George Reese National studies suggest that eighty percent of existing code professionals are expected to retire within the next fifteen years. As part of this research, it was determined that approximately half of all licensed building inspectors in the State of Utah will reach retirement age within the next ten years. As building inspectors make up a large part of the Code Professional Industry this demographic was selected as the focus of this research. The purpose of this research project was to assess the urgent need for new entrants into the Code Professional Industry in Utah. As part of this research, trends within the local industry over a 20 year period were evaluated. A statewide survey of over 300 licensed building inspectors was conducted to investigate the demographics of the industry, and gain first-hand insight from individual code professionals. This research was successful in quantifying the size of the Code Professional Industry in Utah, and numbering the populations of certified professionals in each individual code discipline. In addition, projected losses were established within each code discipline, discovering many disciplines in which over 50% of current professionals would be lost within a ten year period. In addition projections were made contrasting the number of code professionals leaving the industry versus the small anticipated number of individuals entering the industry. This research conclusively predicts a steady and dramatic decline in the number of licensed code professionals, unless the industry actively works toward addressing the issue. The group of aging code professionals possess a level of knowledge and experience not easily replaced. This study was based on an extensive statewide survey of licensed building inspectors in Utah, and collected opinions, concerns and insights directly from the Code Professional Industry. The findings of this study provide a unique look at this specialized industry within a single state. The lessons learned likely apply to populations of code professionals in other locations. This study concluded that a combination of phased retirement, modified work duties and mentoring programs would be of great benefit to the Code Professional Industry, by allowing the transfer of knowledge between the outgoing generation and the future generation of code professionals. 2015-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5609 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6608&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive building department building codes construction regulations code professional spectrum international code council (ICC) international building code (IBC) certification inspector building official plans examiner Construction Engineering and Management
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic building department
building codes
construction regulations
code professional spectrum
international code council (ICC)
international building code (IBC)
certification
inspector
building official
plans examiner
Construction Engineering and Management
spellingShingle building department
building codes
construction regulations
code professional spectrum
international code council (ICC)
international building code (IBC)
certification
inspector
building official
plans examiner
Construction Engineering and Management
Williams, George Reese
Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah
description National studies suggest that eighty percent of existing code professionals are expected to retire within the next fifteen years. As part of this research, it was determined that approximately half of all licensed building inspectors in the State of Utah will reach retirement age within the next ten years. As building inspectors make up a large part of the Code Professional Industry this demographic was selected as the focus of this research. The purpose of this research project was to assess the urgent need for new entrants into the Code Professional Industry in Utah. As part of this research, trends within the local industry over a 20 year period were evaluated. A statewide survey of over 300 licensed building inspectors was conducted to investigate the demographics of the industry, and gain first-hand insight from individual code professionals. This research was successful in quantifying the size of the Code Professional Industry in Utah, and numbering the populations of certified professionals in each individual code discipline. In addition, projected losses were established within each code discipline, discovering many disciplines in which over 50% of current professionals would be lost within a ten year period. In addition projections were made contrasting the number of code professionals leaving the industry versus the small anticipated number of individuals entering the industry. This research conclusively predicts a steady and dramatic decline in the number of licensed code professionals, unless the industry actively works toward addressing the issue. The group of aging code professionals possess a level of knowledge and experience not easily replaced. This study was based on an extensive statewide survey of licensed building inspectors in Utah, and collected opinions, concerns and insights directly from the Code Professional Industry. The findings of this study provide a unique look at this specialized industry within a single state. The lessons learned likely apply to populations of code professionals in other locations. This study concluded that a combination of phased retirement, modified work duties and mentoring programs would be of great benefit to the Code Professional Industry, by allowing the transfer of knowledge between the outgoing generation and the future generation of code professionals.
author Williams, George Reese
author_facet Williams, George Reese
author_sort Williams, George Reese
title Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah
title_short Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah
title_full Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah
title_fullStr Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the Repercussions of a Mass Departure of Building Inspectors from the Code Professional Industry in Utah
title_sort assessing the repercussions of a mass departure of building inspectors from the code professional industry in utah
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2015
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/5609
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6608&context=etd
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