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Nine years ago, I met a facility manager taking an all- too-common action in our industry, albeit for a very uncommon reason. Like many in the industry, this seasoned facility manager wasn’t using his Building Management System (BMS), also known as Building Automated Controls, as designed and programmed. Unlike most, that decision resulted from a very strong desire not to be held under contempt of court charges. Again?
This facility manager overrode many of the automated features of his aging courthouse facility’s controlsand operated most systems manually, in HAND mode, so that he could keepcourtrooms comfortable for a heat-sensitive judge. If he was uncomfortable on the bench for prolonged periods, the judge in question said, the facility manager would be “heavily sanctioned. One day, when the faulty, old HVAC and control systems were not operating to the fullest capacity, many of the courtrooms were extremely hot and humid. Our poor facility manager wound up in trouble with the law–well, at least until he promised to fix the BMS issueLeadership is unlikely to notice facility management on their own, unless the BMS is doing something wrong. Keep your department on their minds when things are going right, not just when there is an issue.
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