Skip to Main Content
Building Safety Journal Logo

Building Safety Journal - International Code Council

Main Menu

Menu

      • April, 2025 Articles
      • March, 2025 Articles
      • February, 2025 Articles
      • January, 2025 Articles
      • December, 2024 Articles
      • November, 2024 Articles
      • 2025 Articles
      • 2024 Articles
      • Deep Dives
      • Member News
      • Personal Perspectives
      • Quick Hits
      • Technical Topics
      • Press Releases
      • Sponsored Content
      • View All
      • Buildings, Construction, Architecture/Design
      • Fire, Wildland-Urban Interface
      • Plumbing, Mechanical, Fuel Gas, Pools/Spas
      • Energy, Solar, Green, Sustainability
      • Disaster Preparedness, Mitigation, Resiliency
  • Subscribe
    • ICC Family of Solutions
    • ICCSafe
    • myICC
    • Digital Codes
    • cdpACCESS
    • Store
    • Support

Join today!

Keep up-to-date on crucial industry news, innovative training and expert technical advice with a free subscription to the award-winning Building Safety Journal.

Subscribe

Sign In or Register Here

Provide your email address
Provide your password
Answer the math challenge
Please enter your e-mail address below. We will email you a link to reset your password.
Provide your email address
Answer the math challenge
To complete your registration, please verify your email address.
Answer the math challenge

We have emailed the address you provided. Please click the link in the email to confirm your email address.

Your account has been marked for password reset. Please change your password.
Provide your new password
Verify your new password
Answer the math challenge 4 plus six

Only registered ICC members have access to this article at this time.

Explore all the benefits that ICC Membership has to offer and become a member today to gain access to this exciting content.

If you're already an ICC member Sign In Now.

Can We Help?

  • Reset My Password
  • I Need More Help

IAS accredited special inspection agencies helping to protect Clark County, Nevada

September 7th, 2020
by Greg West, Lawrence O’Connor
  • Quick Hits

Clark County, Nev., is home of the world-famous Las Vegas Strip. Clark is the nation’s 13th-largest county in the U.S. and provides extensive regional services to more than 2.3 million citizens and more than 45.6 million visitors a year. The Clark County Building Department relies on International Accreditation Service (IAS) accredited special inspection agencies to help ensure a high level of building safety for everyone that visits, lives and works in the county. “The Clark County process for approving special inspections is a very robust program. We want to make sure the agencies going out in the field to represent us are qualified. They are an extension of us,” said Sam Palmer, assistant director, Department of Building and Fire Prevention, Clark County.

Clark County uses an amended version of the International Building Code (IBC), published by the International Code Council, to ensure the construction of safe buildings. Special inspection is defined in the IBC as “the inspection of construction requiring the expertise of an approved special inspector in order to ensure compliance with the code and the approved construction documents.”

Chapter 17 of the IBC includes 16 major categories of mandatory special inspections that have critical life-safety and structural-safety roles, including:

  • Inspection of fabricators
  • Concrete construction
  • Masonry construction
  • Steel construction
  • Wood construction
  • Soils
  • Pile foundations
  • Smoke control
  • Wind requirements
  • Pier foundations
  • Vertical masonry elements
  • Sprayed fire-resistant materials
  • Mastic and intumescent fire-resistant coatings
  • Exterior insulation and finish systems
  • Special cases
  • Seismic requirements

The IAS Special Inspection Agency Accreditation Program was developed to help building departments implement the special inspection requirements mandated in Chapter 17 of the IBC. “When we talk about special inspections, IAS almost mirrors the steps in the IBC Chapter 17,” said Palmer. “The program itself follows all of the main items that we need that show how the firm operates, who are the main players, what are their qualifications, what are their certifications, etc. IAS follows each step all the way down in a very precise and qualified format. That’s one of the main reasons we like the IAS program.”

Special inspectors are hired by the owner, engineer or architect of record, and not the contractor. While special inspectors are not employed by the building department, the building official is responsible to approve special inspector qualifications and verify that mandatory special inspections are being performed.

Chapter 17 of the IBC provides specific requirements for approving agencies performing special inspections. The special inspection agency must be independent of the contractor responsible for the work being inspected. The agency shall have adequate equipment to perform required tests and the equipment shall be periodically calibrated. The agency shall employ experienced personnel educated in conducting, supervising and evaluating tests and special inspections. The IBC includes additional requirements related to inspection reports, labeling, follow-up inspections, etc.

Building departments are often understaffed with many duties, both technical and administrative, making it difficult if not impossible to manage a special inspection program. The lack of staff and the absence of an administrative framework to enforce special inspection compliance are big obstacles. IAS developed the Special Inspection Agency Accreditation Program to help building departments overcome these obstacles. “The IBC basically requires you to have special inspections,” said Palmer. “The IAS special inspection program helps you as a building department to manage the process and ensure the projects being built in your community are built safe and sound.”

The IAS Special Inspection Agency Accreditation Program is a trusted method being used by building departments to document the qualifications of special inspection agencies and the special inspectors that serve their jurisdiction. IAS also provides accreditation for special inspection agencies recognizing the requirements of various local jurisdictions as adopted in the New York City Building Code, Philadelphia Building Code, Southern Nevada Building Code and others. IAS assesses special inspection agencies based on the requirements in IBC Chapter 17 as adopted by the states and other large jurisdictions. Getting accredited involves an assessment of the agency’s inspection procedures, the competence of its inspection staff, and its reporting procedures. Every accredited agency is given an Accreditation Certificate and Scope document that lists the specific inspections the agency to accredited to conduct. These documents, placed on the IAS website, serve as the basis for approvals from the building department.

For more information about the IAS Special Inspection Agency Accreditation Program, review the IAS Special Inspection Agency brochure.

 

About the Author
Greg West
Greg West is Vice President of the Accreditation Program Development Group for the International Accreditation Service. He is responsible for business development, customer service, regulatory services, communications and marketing. West has a broad range of experience in advertising, communications, customer service, marketing, public relations and government relations and has published articles and given presentations internationally about IAS accreditation services, marketing and public relations. West has a master's degree in communications from Oklahoma State University.
Lawrence O’Connor
Lawrence J. O'Connor, P.E., LS, F. NSPE, has more than 40 years of experience in New York as a civil engineer working in government, industry and consulting. His career has a broad scope, including roles in design, research, land and hydrographic surveying, infrastructure management, and nuclear power quality assurance. Since 2010, he has served the International Accreditation Service and has performed more than 440 on-site assessments for accreditation of Special Inspection Agencies, Inspection Bodies, Testing Laboratories, Building Departments, Product Certification Agencies, Calibration Laboratories and most recently Management System Certification Bodies. His work evaluating firms to global standards has been supplemented with nearly 150 unannounced surveillance visits to companies certified by IAS Certification Bodies in India, Turkey and Korea. He teaches seminars on the importance of Special Inspections and Chapter 17 of the International Building Code and ISO/IEC 17020.
Submissions
Check out upcoming BSJ topics and send us articles for consideration:
Or send by email

Want to advertise in the BSJ?
Click Here

Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Linkedin

  • 25 24862 MTS CLE BSJ WAD 270X270 FINAL
  • 25 24731 BSM BSJ Website 270x270 WAD FINAL
  • 25 24651 TRN WDS BSJ BSJW WAD 270x270 FINAL a
  • tile 3
  • 25 24699 PD TRN SKGA Sub Plan BSJ WAD FINAL 270 x 270 2
International Code Council
International Code Council
International Code Council
International Code Council

Subscribe to the Building Safety Journal

Subscribe

Connect with Us

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

ICC Family of Solutions

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact Us
  • Accessibility Policy
-gzZlqvVPzQ1n-fGBAWtozGpc1prAF8BHUwjM__K0bg=.html