Executions
Executions
Execution of construction work is regulated only with respect to safety, statutory compliance, and permitting.
Methods, productivity, sequencing, and performance standards are not regulated.
— Occupational health and safety legislation.
— Labour standards legislation.
— Construction / Builders’ Lien legislation.
— Environmental, building, and permit requirements where applicable.
— Workplace safety rules, procedures, and hazard prevention.
— Worker protection obligations and compliance duties.
— Compliance with permits, inspections, and approvals.
— Employment classification, payroll, and record-keeping requirements.
— Methods, tools, sequencing, or means of work.
— Productivity, pace, or output levels.
— Quality of results beyond safety and code compliance.
— Work organization, supervision, or management models.
There is no statutory definition of “proper execution” outside safety and code compliance.
Practical consequence of the gap
Execution quality, pace, efficiency, and outcomes are resolved contractually and enforced by the parties.
Worker— Must comply with safety and legal requirements.
— No statutory benchmark for output, pace, or efficiency.
Company— Responsible for safety compliance and coordination.
— No statutory protection against inefficient or defective execution absent contractual terms.
Client— Cannot rely on regulation to assess execution quality or efficiency.
— Oversight depends on contractual scope, inspection rights, and acceptance criteria.
— Scope defines what is executed.
— Pricing assumes execution efficiency but does not regulate it.
— Acceptance determines whether execution is sufficient.
— Failures arise where execution expectations are assumed but undefined.
— Contract interpretation.
— Acceptance and deficiency resolution processes.
— Statutory adjudication (where applicable).
— Court proceedings.
In force · Safety-regulated · Performance-unregulated