The Day

Norwich continues building inspection­s with protection­s.

New building official presiding over an evolving system

- CLAIRE BESSETTE Day Staff Writer

Norwich — Three weeks after Dan Coley was appointed the city’s new building official, the entire operation of his office suddenly changed, as the COVID-19 emergency first shuttered city offices and required staff to work mostly remotely.

The city soon set up a still-evolving plan of online applicatio­ns processing, video inspection­s and solitary in-person inspection­s to maintain safe distances.

“Things are always changing,” Coley said earlier this week.

Coley, 48, of Preston, who grew up in Norwich in his family’s constructi­on business, succeeded longtime Norwich Building Official and Director of Inspection­s James Troeger

on Feb. 24.

By March 16, City Manager John Salomone had ordered most city offices closed to the public or with limited access by appointmen­ts and only emergency inspection­s.

Coley worked with City Planner Deanna Rhodes, who heads the Department of Planning and Neighborho­od Services and with the city’s technology staff to create the department’s remote inspection­s capabiliti­es.

Some of those new protocols will be permanent, Coley said, including online permit applicatio­ns — eliminatin­g handwritte­n scrawls in tiny boxes on paper forms — and at least some ability to do remote video inspection­s.

Remote video inspection­s are not ideal, Coley said, because some aspects require inspectors to put their hands on the work or closely examine elements, such as electrical con

nections and poured foundation­s. But when normal city operations resume, video inspection­s could be used for minor correction­s of specific items to close out a project and issue a certificat­e of occupancy.

The office is currently short-staffed, with just Coley and Assistant Building Official Christian Case doing building permit reviews and inspection­s. The two men alternate going to the office at 23 Union St. at the start of the day to get any paperwork and sort out the day’s activities. Phone messages and emails are forwarded to their cellphones, and their calendars are on their city computer tablets and mobile devices.

“We have had to pick and choose what we can do for inspection­s,” Coley said. “We haven’t told anybody ‘no’ yet. We’re being very creative. We’re trying to follow the rules the government set forth.”

He said the remote inspection­s are working “really well.” Contractor­s or homeowners can use FaceTime or other video connection to contact the inspectors, who will direct the person to move the device to show the work being done. Inspectors might ask to measure how deep wiring was installed inside a wall or the thickness of insulation. Contractor­s can use electrical outlet testers to show that they are working.

Still photos can be sent to inspectors ahead of time to familiariz­e them with the work being done.

For in-person inspection­s, Coley said, inspectors are scheduling times when contractor­s or homeowners are not home. They might provide a combinatio­n code to a key box to enter the building. Outdoor inspection­s of foundation­s and decks can be done while keeping social distancing or when contractor­s are not there, Coley said. Inspectors don masks and gloves and use hand sanitizer afterward.

The state building official’s office has been in contact with cities and towns during the coronaviru­s emergency, and towns are sharing plans. Norwich used the remote inspection­s process worked out by West Hartford as its model.

“We’re still working on communicat­ion,” Coley said. “When we go into a place, when they’re not there, we must send an email report and pictures of things that need to be corrected.”

Falmouth, Mass. (AP) — A hospital on Cape Cod is closing its maternity and inpatient pediatric units and making the space available for a potential surge of coronaviru­s patients, a hospital official said.

Cape Cod Healthcare, which runs Falmouth Hospital, has been considerin­g the move for some time due to a steep decline in the number of births at the facility in the past decade, but the coronaviru­s pandemic accelerate­d the process, Cape Cod Healthcare President and CEO Michael Lauf told the Cape Cod Times.

The Falmouth Hospital units will be shut down as of Monday, and they will be absorbed by Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Lauf said.

Nurses who work at the Falmouth units will have an opportunit­y to apply for other jobs within the system, he said.

The Massachuse­tts Nurses Associatio­n criticized the closure, calling it a “callous decision.”

“We have had to pick and choose what we can do for inspection­s. We haven’t told anybody ‘no’ yet. We’re being very creative. We’re trying to follow the rules the government set forth.” DAN COLEY, NORWICH BUILDING OFFICIAL

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Dan Coley, Norwich building official, dons a mask and gloves Wednesday before entering a home under renovation. He recently started the job and has had to quickly adjust how it is done with video inspection­s, remote phone consultati­ons using photos, and solitary on-site inspection­s, amid precaution­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Dan Coley, Norwich building official, dons a mask and gloves Wednesday before entering a home under renovation. He recently started the job and has had to quickly adjust how it is done with video inspection­s, remote phone consultati­ons using photos, and solitary on-site inspection­s, amid precaution­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
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