I learnt a long time ago to always include eccentricities due to poorly noded connections, whether it's a simple shear from a beam or a more complex arrangement in a heavier braced connection. Relatively small moments especially about the minor axis of columns (narrower UB's sections especially) have this habit of using up a disproportionate amount of the available capacity as you're usually sailing quite close to the wind on buckling under axial load about the minor axis.
It's just my preference, I don't care if the design segments have a capacity/demand ratio of 1 at the end of the process, provided I know what loads when into the capacity checks and that I've done my best to account for everything that should be accounted for including eccentricities I'm happy. Could I tell you how many times I had to bump up the column weight or size because of the requirement, not really, because that would involve checking it without the eccentricity and it would take longer....
I've peer reviewed plenty of external projects where people are very blasé about intentionally introducing sometimes quite significant eccentricities into connections and never once checking what the effect is. Many times they based their ignorance of the effects by deeming that there engineering judgement is up to scratch.
Many times the designer is asked to assess further, resulting in increasing member size or modifications to the detailing to achieve sufficient strength for all the permutations of the loading.
Moral of the story as far as I'm concerned is unless you actually check, you really don't get a feel for the effect of the eccentric loads for your particular situation. You don't know what you don't know.
Check several of the more critical locations on a job, and see how it pans out and go from there, eventually getting to a point where your judgement might be applied with some guidance from prior results, rather than ignoring completely! Sometimes it's just a matter of the designers not really understanding what they are doing, others are deliberately ignoring and sticking their head in the sand.