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9.

The Architectural Office and the Buildings Ordinance Office employ no departmental men but the former probably deals with a larger volume of Building Work than any two local firms of Architects whilst the latter is charged with the administrat- ion of the Public Health and Buildings Ordinance, 1903. This Ordinance affects the general public in so many ways and to such an extent that its administration not only involves highly important duties and heavy responsibilities but also a combinatio of the greatest firmness and tact.

10.

In 1919, the Buildings Ordinance Office dealt with nearly 4,000 plans submitted most of them containing calculated

whilst evasions of the statutory requirements of the Ordinance

it further has to exercise a general supervision over all works

erected by private enterprise and inspect and test all house drainage work. Its other duties include arranging for all houses to be erected at the levels laid down in the development scheme of the Colony, the carrying out of all necessary work in the numberous Chinese Cemeteries, issuing thousands of permits to the public for erecting matsheds and for obtaining earth,

stone, turf, &c., &c.

11.

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The work of the Assistant Engineer is primarily to act as an Assistant to the Executive Engineer in Charge of his Sub-department; he is necessarily a trained Engineer and therefore also a trained Surveyor and his rowk in a lesser degree, and, with less responsibility, covers much the same ground as the Executive Engineer, who however alone deals with the administra-

tion of the Office.

12.

As a general rule, the Executive Engineer divides the aggregate work of his Office between himself and his Assistants either topographically - one taking one district and one the

other

-

or in other cases by a differentiation of the character of the work dealt with and, whilst the Executive Engineer has more responsibility and worry, the Assistant may have more of the heavy drudgery of the Office.

13.

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