Did you know?
How do IDCON define break-in jobs?
Break-in jobs is a term used for identifying maintenance
jobs that are added to a schedule without proper lead time
allowed for planning and scheduling. Break-in Jobs are often
incorrectly identified as a synonym to break downs, or true
emergency work. In our experience, break-in jobs are often
NOT true emergencies, instead they are often EMOTIONAL emergencies.
Meaning that someone push a job that could wait till tomorrow,
or next week, onto the schedule and therefore not allowing
time for proper planning and scheduling of the job. Sounds
familiar?
An actual example: Operations manager for an area put priority
one (1=emergency) on all work orders. When asking him why,
the answer is simple, “otherwise the work will not
be done”. The maintenance manager from the same area
says he picks the work orders he feels are important to
him since all have an emergency rating anyway. A common,
and typical example of a malfunctioning usage of the priority
system.
IDCON’s definition of a break-in job is:
“ Work that changes a set schedule after an agreed
upon cut-off time. Break in job are either:
break-downs
emotional add-on work”
The following are Current Best Practice deadlines for each
scheduling category:
Daily schedule: 20 h before start of job
Weekly schedule: 72 h before start of week.
Shutdown/ Turnaround: 1 weeks before start of shutdown if
the shutdown is shorter than 16 hours.
4 weeks before start of shutdown if the shutdown is longer
than 16 hours.

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