Due to the enormous house needs, Aceh reconstruction is a big business for contractors. More than 100,000 houses are to be built, and this should be as soon as possible. The tsunami victims became impatient since they had been in tents for almost 2 years. The donors were irritated due to the slow progress of reconstruction. They were chasing the NGOs, who received their funding to fulfill what the NGOs had been promised. These were a perfect chemistry to drive a rush and messy construction job. In the next paragraph, I will explain how bad the situation was.
This reconstruction job is a fiesta and a heavy meal from the contractors' side. No wonder they were flooded by BRR with requests for prequalification. In mid-March 2006, 3,088 companies took the prequalification document. There were 2,885 contractors and 203 consultants. It would be unbelievable to compare the number of the same kind of company in Jakarta with many continuous construction jobs. A notary whom we hire for our legal works mentioned that a week before the company profile submission, she received abundant requests for company legal documents. This was miserable. These newborn companies are intended for the sake of winning a contract. They don’t have a past record, which shows they have the capacity to work. And their capability to supply the working capital is a big question mark. It was a common tale that if they could win the contract, they would subcontract to another company to create the 2-tier or even worse. At that time, many NGOs became sitting ducks in front of nasty contractors.
Someone asked me which one is better, using a contractor for the construction or direct implementation using skilled labourers? Both are fine. This is my recommendation; we have to use a contractor and direct implementation using skilled laborers simultaneously. The contractor and the skilled labourers can be like Dr Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde. Sometimes they are good, and sometimes they are corrupt. They can be nice, but they can be ill-behaved at other times. Let say, your contractor done something nasty, you can switch them off and turn the job to skilled labours, and vice versa. The project management discipline can do that. You have to have a strong system and quite some experience to make this kind of move. If you can’t take immediate corrective action supported by the system and enough resources, you can be fooled by the contractors or your skilled laborers. I have shared my best practices for managing skilled laborers (click here) and managing contractors (click here). But merely depending on using just skilled laborers or only using contractors is not enough. We have to combine it. This methodology can increase our productivity and reduce overhead and has already been proven in my work on completing the 4,600 permanent houses in Aceh reconstruction.
Arwin Soelaksono - Disaster Response & reConstruction