Construction in Hawaii

Hawaii Construction Intel

Wednesday, May 13, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on construction developments in Hawaii. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on hawaii construction headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Hawaii Construction Headlines

1 story

1.1

Essential Washington Construction Licensing Support from Harbor Compliance.

Harbor Compliance offers assistance with obtaining and renewing construction licenses in Washington.

Why It Matters

This service is vital for construction professionals in WA to ensure compliance and maintain business operations.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Pay-when-paid versus pay-if-paid — the one-word difference.

"Pay-when-paid" sets a timing condition only — the GC must still pay even if the owner never does. "Pay-if-paid" creates a true condition precedent — no owner payment, no GC payment to subs. Many states will not enforce pay-if-paid clauses without unmistakably clear language; ambiguity defaults to pay-when-paid.

Why It Matters

The risk allocation between subcontractors and GCs hinges on this one phrase. Subs who sign pay-if-paid contracts effectively underwrite owner credit risk on top of project risk.

2.2

The difference between an OSHA-recordable injury and a reportable one.

Recordable injuries (OSHA 300 log entries) include any that require medical treatment beyond first aid. Reportable injuries — which trigger an immediate notification to OSHA — are limited to fatalities (within 8 hours) and inpatient hospitalizations, amputations, or eye losses (within 24 hours). The categories are not the same.

Why It Matters

Confusing the two leads to either over-reporting (creating audit triggers) or under-reporting (which is itself a citation-worthy violation). Knowing the distinction protects both the safety record and the regulatory posture.

2.3

Why a foundation problem is almost always a soils-report problem.

Foundation failures rarely originate at the slab; they originate in soil bearing capacity, drainage, or expansive-clay behavior that was either uninvestigated or not honored in the design. A geotechnical report that is older than the building's design or that did not sample at the actual building footprint is a red flag.

Why It Matters

Foundation remediation costs typically exceed the original foundation cost by 5-10x. Investing in current, footprint-specific geotechnical work is the cheapest insurance a project carries.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 13, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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Hawaii Construction Intel - 2026-05-13 | Axiom Synapse | Local Intel