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Welcome to the Triage team at Unlikely Professionals. This guide covers everything you need to close out aged projects efficiently.

What We Do

Unlikely Professionals performs building code compliance inspections across Maryland, Washington D.C., and Virginia, primarily focused on structural foundation and water management systems. When a builder constructs or renovates a home, local building codes require third-party verification that the structure meets foundation, waterproofing, drainage, and structural integrity standards. We inspect the work, certify compliance, and deliver the paperwork the builder needs to close permits.

Why this matters Without our certification, the builder cannot pass final inspection and the homeowner cannot move in. We are a critical link in the construction process.

Why Triage Exists

In a perfect world, every project would move from inspection to certification within a few days. In reality, projects sometimes stall. Data goes missing. Clients stop responding. Inspectors move on to new jobs. When a project sits for more than 45 days after its last inspection without a certification being delivered, it is automatically transferred to the Triage team.

Triage exists because aged projects represent revenue that has been earned but not collected, and compliance work that has been done but not delivered. Every project in your queue is a builder who still needs their paperwork. Your job is to close that loop.

The 45-day rule This is the core mechanic of your role. When a project exceeds 45 days since its last inspection without certification delivery, it automatically transfers from the original branch to the Triage team. The original scheduler and assistant lose portal access to the project. You take ownership. Section 04 covers this in full detail.

What the Portal Is

The portal is a custom-built web application that manages every project from intake through certification delivery. Behind it sits SmartSuite (the project database), a FastAPI backend (the engine), and Supabase (a mirror for reporting). You do not need to interact with any of these directly. The portal is your interface to all of it.

Your Role: Triage

As a Triage user (triage), you are the aged project recovery specialist. Here is what that means practically:

The Big Picture

Here is how a project reaches you and what happens after:

Project is inspected by field team
45+ days pass without certification delivery
System auto-transfers project to Triage
You investigate: what is missing? why did it stall?
You gather missing data (RFIs, file requests, follow-ups)
Project becomes complete → ready for certification
Admin/Owner drafts cert + invoice
Cert + invoice delivered to originating branch’s GOA
Invoice routing Even though triage handles the project, the invoice always routes to the GOA of the originating branch — the branch that originally submitted the project. This happens automatically.
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Accessing the Portal

Open your browser and go to unlikely.works. This is the triage domain. Log in with the credentials Dustin provides.

Important The portal is accessible at unlikely.works or unlikely.management — both serve the same portal. Your role determines what you see after login.

Your Dashboard

After login, you land on your dashboard. It is role-filtered — you see what matters to your role. Here is what each section means:

Dashboard SectionWhat It ShowsWhy It Matters
Triage QueueAll active triage projects, broken down by status (Assigned, Under Review, Awaiting Documents, etc.)This is your primary work queue — every project here needs your attention
Active ProjectsProjects you are currently working onTracks what you have in progress so nothing gets forgotten
Recently ClosedTriage projects that have been resolved and closedShows your throughput and confirms projects are moving out of triage
RFIsOpen RFIs you have sent or that need your responseUnanswered RFIs block projects from moving forward
Schedule ChangesPending schedule change requestsRelevant when triage projects need re-inspection scheduling

Morning Numbers to Check

Every morning, glance at these numbers before doing anything else:

  1. Triage queue total — How many active triage projects are in the system? Is the count growing or shrinking?
  2. Awaiting Documents count — How many projects are stalled on missing data? These are your follow-up priorities.
  3. Open RFI count — Are any RFIs aging without response? Check the escalation cadence.
  4. Newly assigned count — Did any new projects land in triage overnight? These need initial investigation.
  5. Days-in-triage extremes — Which projects have been in triage the longest? These need escalation.
Cross-branch visibility Unlike other roles, your dashboard shows projects from all branches — Baltimore, Manassas, and Richmond. You are not scoped to a single branch. This is by design: triage operates across the entire organization.
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Work through these steps in order every morning. The priority sequence ensures the oldest and most urgent projects get attention first.

Check the Triage Queue on your dashboard for any projects with status Assigned. These are projects that have just crossed the 45-day threshold and landed in your queue. They need initial investigation before anything else can happen.

For each newly assigned project:

  1. Open the project detail page.
  2. Read the project history — what inspections were done, when, and by whom.
  3. Check the file inventory — are photos, plans, and permits present?
  4. Check the SOW (Scope of Work) — are all line items complete?
  5. Identify what is missing and update the triage status accordingly.
Tip The project’s Comm Log (communication history) is invaluable. It shows every status change, RFI, and note ever logged against the project. Start there to understand why the project stalled.

Projects in Awaiting Documents status have open RFIs or outstanding data requests. Check each one:

  • Has the RFI been responded to? If yes, review the response and move the project forward.
  • Has the RFI been aging without response? If it has been more than 3 days, consider escalating.
  • Is the RFI directed to the right person? Sometimes a scheduler cannot answer a field question — you may need to redirect.
RFI escalation cadence The system auto-reminds recipients at Day 1, Day 3, Day 5, and Day 7+. If you are past Day 7 with no response, escalate manually through the Escalations page.

After handling new assignments and follow-ups, work your active projects. Prioritize by age — the project that has been in triage the longest gets attention first.

The Tracker page (covered in Section 07) gives you a clear view of days-in-triage for every project. Use it to maintain your priority order.

Why oldest first Aged projects represent the longest-outstanding revenue and compliance gaps. The older a project gets, the harder it becomes to close — clients forget details, staff turnover makes data retrieval harder, and the risk of the project becoming uncollectable increases. Working oldest first minimizes this risk.

Navigate to Field Ops → RFIs and review all open RFIs. Are any approaching the escalation threshold? Navigate to Field Ops → Escalations and review any active escalations.

See Section 09 for full details on RFI and escalation workflows.

If any triage projects require re-inspection (field visit required), check the calendar for upcoming visits. Review any pending schedule change requests relevant to triage projects.

Daily Priority Order Summary

1. Newly assigned triage projects
2. Follow up on Awaiting Documents / open RFIs
3. Work active projects (oldest first)
4. Review escalations
5. Check calendar / schedule changes
6. End-of-day checklist (Section 13)
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The 45-day rule is the foundational mechanism of your role. Understanding it completely is essential.

What Triggers the Transfer

The system scans for projects meeting all of these conditions:

  1. The project has had at least one site visit (inspection).
  2. More than 45 calendar days have passed since the last inspection date.
  3. No certification has been delivered.
  4. No new inspection is scheduled within the 45-day window (a scheduled visit resets the clock).
  5. The project belongs to an eligible branch: Baltimore, Manassas, or Richmond.
Clock start The 45-day clock starts from the last inspection date. If a project has had multiple site visits, only the most recent one matters. For projects with no site visits on record, the system falls back to the permit issue date.

What Happens When a Project Transfers

WhoWhat Changes
Original SchedulerLoses portal access to the project. Can no longer see it in their project list.
Original AssistantLoses portal access to the project.
GOA (Branch Manager)Retains visibility. Can still see the project. Receives the invoice when the project is complete.
Triage Team (you)Gains ownership. Project appears in your Triage Queue. You drive it to completion.
Admin / OwnerRetains full visibility. Handles cert/invoice drafting once you get the project ready.

Clock Reset

The 45-day clock resets if a new inspection is scheduled before the 45-day threshold is reached. This is by design — it means the branch is actively working the project and triage is not needed.

No override The 45-day transfer is automatic. The original branch cannot “opt out” or delay it. Once a project crosses the threshold, it transfers to triage. This ensures aged projects do not get lost in branch workloads.

Branch Eligibility

Only JES branches are eligible for triage transfer:

BranchEligible
BaltimoreYes
ManassasYes
RichmondYes
New HavenNo — excluded from triage

The Transfer Flow

Project last inspected on Day 0
Days 1–44: Normal branch ownership
Day 45: Has cert been delivered? Is a new visit scheduled?
Yes (either)
Project stays with branch. Clock resets if new visit scheduled.
No (neither)
Auto-transfer to Triage. Scheduler/assistant lose access.
Project appears in your Triage Queue
Why 45 days? The target SLA for certification delivery is 3 business days after final inspection. 45 calendar days is a generous buffer that accounts for legitimate delays (client holds, pending RFIs, multi-visit projects). If a project has not been certified in 45 days, something has gone wrong and intervention is needed.
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Every triage project follows the same general path from assignment to resolution. This section walks through the complete process.

Triage Flags

Triage is now flag-based. A project is either In Triage, Resolved, or Returned. Internal workflow stages (Under Review, Awaiting Docs, Desk Review, Field Visit) are tracked in your triage notes, not as separate top-level statuses.

Triage FlagWhat It MeansYour Action
In TriageProject is actively being worked by the triage team. All investigation, RFIs, desk reviews, and field visit coordination happen under this flag.Investigate, gather missing data, coordinate re-inspections. Track internal workflow stages (Under Review, Awaiting Docs, Desk Review, Field Visit) in your triage notes.
ResolvedTriage work is complete. The system automatically runs cert validation and, if it passes, auto-advances the project to Ready for Cert.Mark as Resolved when all data is gathered and verified. The system handles the rest.
ReturnedProject sent back to the originating branch (rare).Used when the project was transferred in error or the branch has resolved the issue themselves.
Internal workflow tracking Use your triage notes to track where you are in the investigation process (e.g., “Under Review — checking SOW completeness” or “Awaiting Docs — RFI #45 sent for drive logs”). This keeps the top-level status simple while preserving the detail you need.

The Full Triage Flow

1. In Triage
Project lands in your queue via 45-day auto-transfer
2. Investigate
Open project detail. Read Comm Log. Check files, SOW, site visits. Note progress in triage notes.
3. What’s missing?
Data / Docs Missing
Send RFIs. Note “Awaiting Docs” in triage notes.
Wait for response. Follow up per escalation cadence.
Response received. Review and verify.
Re-inspection Needed
Note “Field Visit Required” in triage notes.
Coordinate scheduling for re-inspection.
Inspection complete. Review new data.
Everything Present
Lucky — skip to desk review.
4. Desk Review
Verify all data, photos, SOW, and test results are complete and consistent.
5. Resolved
Mark triage as Resolved. System runs cert validation → auto-advances to Ready for Cert if passes.
6. Invoiced
Cert + invoice sent to originating branch’s GOA. Project moves to Invoiced, then Closed on payment.

Investigation Checklist

When you first open an assigned triage project, check each of these:

CheckWhat You’re Looking ForIf Missing
SOW CompletenessEvery line item in the Scope of Work has data. Quantities match what was inspected.Send RFI to original scheduler or field team
Site Visit RecordsInspection date(s) recorded, inspector noted, results for each test.Send RFI to field team
PhotosRequired photos attached (foundation, waterproofing, drainage, structural elements). Clear and properly labeled.Send RFI to field team. If re-shoot needed, mark Field Visit Required.
Drive LogsPSI and torque readings for UND (underground duct) projects.Send RFI to field team
Files & PermitsPlans, permits, and supporting documents attached to the project.Send RFI to scheduler or branch GOA
Account / AddressCorrect account linked, address is valid and complete.Correct in the system or send RFI to scheduler
Comm LogReview history for clues about why the project stalled.N/A — use the log to inform your investigation
Tip The most common reason projects land in triage is missing photos. The second most common is an unresponsive client who was supposed to provide permits or plans. Start your investigation with these two items.
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Triage Intake is a separate submission path from regular project intake. You access it from your sidebar under Triage → Triage Intake.

Important distinction Regular Intake is used by schedulers to submit brand new projects. You do not have access to regular Intake. Triage Intake is specifically designed for re-submitting aged projects back into the active pipeline.

Two Categories of Triage Intake

CategoryWhen to UseWhat Happens
Category 1: Existing ProjectThe project already exists in the system. You are assigning it to triage from an existing record.The system looks up the project, shows you the file inventory, and you confirm the triage assignment. All existing data is preserved.
Category 2: New ProjectRare. A project was discovered during triage work that does not exist in the system at all (e.g., an old inspection that was never entered).A new project record is created with triage status from the start. You provide the project details manually.

Category 1 Flow: Existing Project

Navigate to Triage Intake
Search for the project by address or project ID
System displays project details and file inventory
Is this the correct project?
Yes
Confirm assignment. Project is moved to triage with status Assigned.
No / Not Found
Refine your search or switch to Category 2 if the project does not exist.

Category 2 Flow: New Project

Navigate to Triage Intake → New Project
Enter project details: address, account, SOW, notes
Upload any available files (photos, permits, plans)
Submit. New project record is created with triage status.
Project appears in your Triage Queue as Assigned.

File Staging

During triage intake, you can upload files to a staging area before finalizing the submission. This lets you gather documents incrementally. Staged files are associated with a session ID and are attached to the project record when you confirm the submission.

Tip Category 2 (new project creation) should be rare. Most triage work involves existing projects that were already inspected. If you find yourself creating many new projects through triage intake, flag this to Dustin — it may indicate a systemic gap in the regular intake process.
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The Tracker is your operational dashboard for monitoring the health of the triage pipeline. Access it from Triage → Tracker in the sidebar.

What the Tracker Shows

ViewWhat It DisplaysHow to Use It
Triage Counts by BranchHow many triage projects belong to each originating branch (Baltimore, Manassas, Richmond).Identify which branch is producing the most aged projects. This can indicate branch-level process issues.
Days in TriageHow long each project has been in triage status.Prioritize by age. Projects with the highest day counts need immediate attention or escalation.
Current Status BreakdownCount of projects in each triage status (Assigned, Under Review, Awaiting Documents, etc.).Spot bottlenecks. If “Awaiting Documents” is disproportionately high, your RFI process may need help.

Using the Tracker for Prioritization

The Tracker is not just a reporting tool — it is your primary prioritization instrument. Here is how to read it effectively:

Pattern recognition Over time, the Tracker helps you spot patterns. If the same type of project (e.g., UND foundation projects) keeps landing in triage from the same branch, that is actionable intelligence for improving the upstream process.
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The Projects page gives you access to all triage-status projects in the system. Access it from Projects → Projects in the sidebar. Each project row includes a pipeline indicator — a compact dot-and-line graphic showing exactly where the project sits in its lifecycle (green = completed stages, blue = current stage, grey = upcoming stages, amber = on hold).

What You See

As a triage user, the Projects page shows you all projects that are currently in triage status. You are not branch-scoped, so you see triage projects from all three branches (Baltimore, Manassas, Richmond) in a single view.

Searching and Filtering

Project Detail View

Clicking into a project opens its detail view. Here you can see:

No financial data As a triage user, you do not see invoice or payment information in the project detail view. Financial data is restricted to Admin and Owner roles. Your focus is on getting the project ready for certification — the invoicing happens after you hand it off.
Tip Use the Triage Notes field liberally. Document what you found during investigation, what you requested, and what remains outstanding. These notes are visible to Admin and Owner, so they provide continuity if someone else needs to pick up where you left off.
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RFIs (Requests for Information) are your primary tool for gathering missing data. Escalations are your tool when RFIs go unanswered or issues need management attention.

Sending an RFI

When your investigation reveals missing data, send an RFI:

You identify missing data during triage review
Create an RFI — specify what is needed and direct it to the right person
Set triage status to Awaiting Documents
System sends notification to the recipient
Does the recipient respond?
Yes
Review the response. If complete, resolve the RFI and move forward.
No Response
Auto-reminders at Day 1, 3, 5, 7+. After Day 7, escalate manually.

Who to Send RFIs To

Missing ItemSend RFI ToNotes
Site visit data, test resultsField team (Darius)The field inspector who performed the original inspection
Photos (re-shoot needed)Field teamMay require scheduling a new site visit
Photos (existing but not uploaded)Field team or schedulerCheck if photos exist on a device but were never uploaded
Permits, plans, client documentsScheduler or GOAThe originating branch may need to contact the client
SOW discrepanciesSchedulerScope of work may need correction from the original submitter
Account or address issuesScheduler or AdminData corrections may require admin privileges
Drive log data (PSI/torque)Field teamSpecific to UND (underground duct) projects

RFI Category-Specific Uploads

When creating an RFI, you can specify which document types are needed. The recipient’s upload interface will show only the relevant fields for what you request. Available document types:

Multi-category RFIs You can request multiple document types in a single RFI (e.g., “Photos + Drive Logs”). The recipient will see separate upload fields for each requested type. This is often more efficient than sending separate RFIs when you need multiple items from the same person.

RFI Best Practices

Escalation Process

Navigate to Field Ops → Escalations when:

Escalation limit There is a maximum of 5 escalations per project. Use them judiciously. If you have exhausted all 5 escalations and the project is still stuck, contact Dustin directly.
Escalation routing — branch-scoped RFI escalations now route to specific branch contacts instead of broadcasting to all GOA users. The escalation chain for each branch is:

Baltimore: Julia Marketis → Nicole Lovo → Ryan Joyner
Manassas: Sidney Kent → Lily Jacobs → James C
New Haven: Kai Perkins → J Corso → J Corso
Triage: Stephaney Bilyard (all levels)

The system routes each escalation to the correct branch contact automatically. If the first contact does not respond, the escalation moves up the chain.
Auto-advance on RFI resolve When the last open RFI on a project is resolved, the system automatically advances the project out of Pending RFI status. If the project passes all 10 cert validation checks, it moves to Ready for Cert. Otherwise it falls back to Field Complete for further review. No manual status change is needed.
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The Calendar

Access the calendar from Schedule → Calendar in the sidebar. The calendar shows scheduled inspections and site visits.

As a triage user, the calendar is primarily useful when:

Read-only context You do not manage the calendar directly — schedulers and admin handle scheduling. The calendar gives you visibility into when things are happening so you can plan your follow-ups accordingly.

Schedule Changes

Access schedule changes from Schedule → Schedule Changes. You can submit schedule change requests for triage projects that need re-inspection.

Schedule Change Request Types

TypeWhen to UseWhat Happens
Add InspectionTriage project needs a re-visit that was not previously scheduled.Request goes to Admin for review. Once confirmed, visit appears on calendar.
RescheduleA scheduled re-inspection needs to move to a different date.Request goes to Admin. Calendar updated once confirmed.
HoldA triage project needs to be paused (e.g., waiting for client response before scheduling re-visit).Project moves to Holding Pool.
Tip When requesting a re-inspection for a triage project, include detailed notes about exactly what needs to be re-inspected. The field inspector needs to know what to focus on so they do not repeat work that was already captured correctly.
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The Holding Pool contains projects that are on hold — paused for a specific reason. Access it from Projects → Holding Pool in the sidebar.

Why Projects End Up on Hold

Your Responsibility

As a triage user, you should review the Holding Pool periodically for triage projects that may have been on hold for too long. A project on hold is not making progress, and if the hold reason has been resolved, it needs to be reactivated.

Holding Pool discipline Projects on hold are easy to forget. Check the Holding Pool at least once per week. If a project has been on hold for more than 30 days, investigate whether the hold reason is still valid and consider reactivating it or escalating.
Tip When you place a triage project on hold, always document the reason in the Triage Notes field. “On hold — waiting for client to provide revised foundation plans per RFI #123” is much more useful than just “on hold.”
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These are the situations you will encounter most frequently. Each one includes the recommended approach.

Situation: The project has site visit records and SOW data, but required photos are missing or unusable (too dark, wrong angle, wrong area).

Steps

  1. Check the file inventory — are any photos uploaded but mislabeled?
  2. Check the Comm Log — was there a known issue with the camera or upload process?
  3. Send an RFI to the field team asking for the specific photos needed. Be precise: “Need clear photo of drain tile installation at northeast corner, minimum 3MP resolution.”
  4. If the field team confirms the photos were never taken, set status to Field Visit Required and request a re-inspection focused on photography.
  5. Set triage status to Awaiting Documents while waiting.
Frequency Missing photos account for roughly 40% of all triage cases. Getting comfortable with this workflow will cover a large portion of your workload.

Situation: You have sent RFIs for missing documents (permits, plans) but the client or their scheduler is not responding.

Steps

  1. Verify the RFI was directed to the right person. Check whether the scheduler is still active at the branch.
  2. Allow the auto-reminder cadence to run (Day 1, 3, 5, 7).
  3. After Day 7 with no response, escalate to the originating branch’s GOA via the Escalations page.
  4. If the GOA also cannot get a response, document this in Triage Notes and discuss with Dustin. The project may need to be closed or archived if the client is truly unreachable.
Do not close prematurely Even if a client is unresponsive, you cannot unilaterally close or archive a project. Only Admin or Owner can make that call. Your job is to exhaust all reasonable avenues and document the attempts.

Situation: The Scope of Work has line items that are incomplete, have wrong quantities, or are missing entirely.

Steps

  1. Compare the SOW to the site visit records. Do the inspected items match what is in the SOW?
  2. If the SOW is simply missing items that were inspected, send an RFI to the original scheduler to update the SOW.
  3. If quantities are wrong (e.g., SOW says 3 windows but 5 were inspected), send an RFI to clarify.
  4. If the SOW and site visit data fundamentally disagree, this may require a re-inspection or an escalation to determine what was actually done on site.
Tip SOW discrepancies often indicate that the project scope changed during construction and the original submission was never updated. The field team’s data is usually more accurate than the original SOW for what was actually present on site.

Situation: The project was inspected so long ago that the data may no longer be valid. Construction may have continued, conditions may have changed, or the site may have been significantly altered.

Steps

  1. Check how old the inspection data is. If it is more than 6 months old, there is a higher risk that site conditions have changed.
  2. Check the Comm Log and project notes for any indication that work continued after the inspection.
  3. If there is reason to believe site conditions have changed, set status to Field Visit Required and request a re-inspection.
  4. Document in Triage Notes why you believe a re-inspection is necessary. This justifies the additional cost and scheduling effort.
Judgment call There is no hard rule for when data is “too stale.” Use your judgment. Foundation and waterproofing inspections are generally more durable (the structure does not change much). Drainage inspections may be affected by subsequent grading or landscaping work. When in doubt, request the re-inspection.

Situation: After investigation, you determine the project was transferred to triage in error, or the originating branch has since resolved the blocking issue.

Steps

  1. Verify with the branch GOA that the issue is truly resolved.
  2. Use the “Return to Branch” function to send the project back.
  3. Set triage status to Returned to Branch.
  4. Document the reason for return in Triage Notes.
When to return Returns should be rare. Common valid reasons: the 45-day scan picked up a project that had a cert in transit, or the branch completed the missing work independently during the triage period.
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Before you log off each day, run through this checklist to make sure nothing is left hanging.

#CheckWhy
1All newly assigned projects have been opened and given an initial investigationNo project should sit in Assigned status for more than one business day
2Triage statuses are up to date for every project you touched todayAccurate statuses keep the Tracker useful and prevent duplicate work
3Triage Notes are updated with your findings and next stepsIf you are out tomorrow, someone else can pick up where you left off
4All RFIs sent today have the correct recipient and clear request languageVague RFIs slow everything down
5Any projects moved to Ready for Cert have been flagged for Admin/OwnerThe handoff must be visible so cert drafting can begin
6Escalations submitted today have supporting documentationAn escalation without context forces the GOA to investigate from scratch
7Holding Pool reviewed (weekly, minimum)On-hold projects are easy to forget. One quick scan prevents projects from going dormant.
8Dashboard numbers noted for tomorrow’s comparisonTracking day-over-day changes helps you spot trends early
Tip If you are leaving a project in a transitional state (e.g., you sent an RFI but have not updated the triage status yet), finish the status update before logging off. Tomorrow-you will thank today-you.
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TermDefinition
45-Day RuleThe automatic transfer of a project to triage when 45+ calendar days have passed since the last inspection without certification delivery.
ABSoWAs-Built Scope of Work. The actual work performed on site, as opposed to the planned scope. May differ from the original SOW.
Cert / CertificationThe compliance certification document delivered to the builder confirming the inspected work meets building code requirements.
Cert PackageThe complete set of documents delivered to the client: certification letter, supporting data, photos, and test results.
Comm LogThe communication and event log for a project. Every status change, RFI, escalation, and note is recorded here automatically.
Desk ReviewA review that can be completed in the office using existing data, photos, and documents. Does not require a site visit.
Drive LogPSI and torque readings from foundation pile driving. Specific to UND (underground duct) projects.
EscalationA formal request for management attention on a stuck or problematic project. Routed to the GOA and visible to Admin/Owner.
Field CompleteThe status indicating all on-site inspection work is done and the project is ready for office review.
Field Visit RequiredA triage status indicating a re-inspection is needed. The project cannot be resolved with existing data alone.
GOAGeneral Office Admin. The branch manager who receives invoices and handles branch-level operations.
Holding PoolA collection of projects that are paused (on hold) for a specific reason.
Originating BranchThe branch that originally submitted the project. Invoices route here even after triage transfer.
PSoWPlanned Scope of Work. The original scope submitted during intake, before inspection.
RFIRequest for Information. A formal request for missing data directed to a specific person.
SLAService Level Agreement. The target timeframe for cert + invoice delivery (3 business days from final inspection). Clock pauses during open RFIs.
SOWScope of Work. The list of inspection items, quantities, and specifications for a project.
Site VisitA physical on-site inspection performed by the field inspector.
SmartSuiteThe project database behind the portal. You interact with it only through the portal interface.
TriageThe process of recovering aged projects that have exceeded the 45-day threshold. Also refers to the team and the portal role.
Triage IntakeThe submission path for re-entering aged projects into the triage pipeline. Separate from regular project intake.
TrackerThe triage-specific dashboard showing counts by branch, days in triage, and status breakdown.
UNDUnderground Duct. A type of foundation inspection that requires drive log data (PSI/torque readings).
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Your Portal

ItemValue
Portal URLunlikely.works
Your Roletriage
Branch ScopeAll branches (cross-branch)
Eligible BranchesBaltimore, Manassas, Richmond

Your Sidebar Navigation

SectionPagesPurpose
DashboardDashboardTriage queue, active projects, RFIs, schedule changes
ScheduleCalendar, Schedule ChangesView inspections, submit schedule change requests
ProjectsProjects, Holding PoolBrowse triage projects, monitor held projects
TriageTriage Intake, TrackerSubmit triage projects, monitor pipeline health
Field OpsRFIs, EscalationsSend RFIs for missing data, escalate stuck issues

Triage Status Flow

Assigned
Under Review
Needs Data
Awaiting Documents
Needs Site Visit
Field Visit Required
Complete
Desk Review In Progress
Ready for Cert
Cert + Invoice Sent → Invoiced (by Admin/Owner)

What You CAN Access

FeatureAccess
DashboardYes — triage-filtered
CalendarYes — view
Schedule ChangesYes — submit
Projects & Project DetailYes — triage projects only
Holding PoolYes — view
Triage IntakeYes — submit (separate from regular intake)
TrackerYes — full view
RFIsYes — create and respond
EscalationsYes — create

What You CANNOT Access

FeatureReason
Regular IntakeTriage uses Triage Intake (separate path)
Work PoolAdmin/Owner feature for claiming review work
Drafting QueueAdmin/Owner feature for cert + invoice creation
Cert & InvoiceAdmin/Owner feature. You get projects ready; they draft and deliver.
Review QueueAdmin/Owner feature for post-inspection review
ReportingAdmin/Owner feature
Admin / System ConfigOwner-only feature

Who to Contact

SituationContactMethod
Missing field data or photosDarius (Field Inspector)RFI via portal
Missing permits, plans, or client infoScheduler (originating branch)RFI via portal
Branch-level issue or unresponsive schedulerGOA (originating branch)Escalation via portal
Project ready for certificationJacob (Admin) or Dustin (Owner)Set status to Ready for Cert
System issue, portal bug, or access problemDustin (Owner)Direct message
Policy question or uncertain situationDustin (Owner)Direct message

Daily Priority Order

  1. Newly assigned triage projects (initial investigation)
  2. Follow up on Awaiting Documents / stale RFIs
  3. Work active projects (oldest first)
  4. Review escalations
  5. Check calendar / schedule changes for re-inspections
  6. Holding Pool scan (weekly minimum)
  7. End-of-day checklist

Key Thresholds

ThresholdValueWhat Happens
Triage transfer45 daysProject auto-transfers from branch to triage
Cert + invoice SLA3 biz daysTarget delivery time after final inspection
RFI auto-remindersDay 1→3→5→7+Automatic reminder cadence for unanswered RFIs
Max escalations5 per projectHard limit on escalation count per project
Holding Pool reviewWeeklyCheck for stale holds exceeding 30 days

Emergency Procedures

If the portal is down Contact Dustin immediately. Do not attempt to use SmartSuite directly — the portal and SmartSuite must stay in sync. If urgent triage work is needed while the portal is down, Dustin can handle it through the backend.
If you are unsure about something Ask Dustin or Jacob. There is no penalty for asking questions, especially during onboarding. It is far better to ask than to make an incorrect status change or send an RFI to the wrong person.