joeyww12000 said:
He just isnt a smart guy.
Really, is he the owners son?
There is a reason he is a Foreman and your boss, sure he may have a problem understanding this requirement but he must have some qualities that have put him in the position he is in.
The electrical trade is full of big egos, all I have to do is look in the mirror and I see one more big headed foreman. How you deal with these egos will have a lot to do with how far you go in the trade. Sure you can be a tough guy and ram right into the big egos but that approach can be frustrating and hurt your own advancement.
Re-read Winnie's post and really try to absorb what he is saying
Your job is not to prove to this guy that you are right and he is wrong. Your job is to get him to figure out for himself that he is wrong. No matter how many times you prove things to him, all you will is get him defensive, and make him try harder to probe that he is right and you are wrong.
No one likes to be shown wrong in front of others, and certainly a foreman will not respond well to be dressed down by a relative newcomer.
Look at me, I am a code geek, I go to other foreman's jobs all the time and I see violations, I would never bring this up to the foreman in front of others, I would wait till I got them alone and put it more like 'I have never seen that done that way' Or 'Was there a code change about ....
Or if it is not a real safety issue I might just mind my own business. In the case of an unbonded SDS I would speak up, i is wrong it is a safety issue. If I could not get it straightened out with the foreman I would feel obligated to go over his head, but boy I would want to do that as carefully as I could.