Gone are the days when "the guy at the drafting board" could actually lay something out once, revise it once, and have the engineer stamp and issue it. The proliferation of CADD and CADD-based designers since 1983 has actually increased net INEFFICIENCY by an amount measured in orders of magnitude, rather than mere percentage.
This is not true at all for civil-site, in my experience. In a
properly run medium to large civil site shop, the PE of record will instruct his team of "designers" (not draftsmen, designers) in how he wants elements laid out, what he wants things to look like, etc, with some general comments on how certain constraining elements of the job are to be handled, and turns the designers loose in the CAD / CAE environment, then checks on them periodically to make sure they're all on the right course, all the while educating his designers on elements of the design they may not be familiar with. The PE reviews everything, may make more design changes himself, oversees the project to completion, stamps it, and it's done.
The designer talent for an operation like that is typically a bunch of EITs, with a few younger PEs or older draftsmen-turned-designers sprinkled in.
That's the best way to work it in my experience. If you're too small to have a pool of techs that are that sharp, then the PE has to be able to draft, and in my field that drafting has to be done in a CAD environment or you're flat dead in the water.
AELLC, you say it took you a week to do a sheet of structural details by CAD. You also said something about drawing each line individually. I don't mean any offense, as I'm sure you probably realize this, but that really just speaks to how poor your CAD skills are.

A detail sheet from scratch for me would take a day tops. If you ever get stuck doing that again, I suggest you learn the modfiy commands (offset, copy, rotate, mirror), you learn the osnaps, and you learn the keystroke shortcuts. Everything in the AutoCAD environment is built to make drafting go faster, you just have to learn the environment.
Or, if you're an old fart, hire someone who's already learned it I guess.
Hydrology, Drainage Analysis, Flood Studies, and Complex Stormwater Litigation for Atlanta and the South East -