Issues of shoring and reshoring are always diffucult topics, as few viable current resources exist as a guide, and little direction is given in any standard building code. Certainly a response is required whenever a problem, or request is made of an engineer by his or her client, what the response shoudl be is another matter entirely.
I am a formwork engineer by trade and a civil engineer by training. I am responsible for the design and execution of formwork/falsework for multi-story reinforced concrete structures.
Shoring and reshoring should most certainly be addressed in the general conditions of any structure. This is a basic building code requirement. How this is addressed has no clear guide. Perhaps the best way is to specify shoring design by a Professional Engineer familiar with practices of Shoring and Reshoring, with required review/approval of the engineered shoring system by the EOR.
It is certainly in the best interest of the EOR to review, even if the review is not lengthy, the practices and procedures used to construct a design project.
Is the EOR responsible for shoring/reshoring? Probably not in a typical contract. Should the EOR review shoring and reshoring procedure? Definitely. Must the EOR specify at what strength the concrete is safe to strip? Without a doubt.
As to thoughts of the state of the industry where the design is questioned by requests to strip at an earlier date, a general contractor would like a self supporting building ready to dry in as soon as possible. This requires the removal of shoring as soon as possible. To make this a happen, a good relationship is required between the EOR and the contractor and perhaps the specialty contractor providing the shoring system. If the client wants the shoring removed to all for HVAC work, the structure must support itself, and EOR is the only party who may truly say if the structure can handle itself at this time. It serves the EOR to address this issue, and if the structure is not adequate to self support without it's entire structural system, that is a decision for the EOR, not the contractor.
Many questions routed to the EOR may seem absurd or moronic, but are usually recieved out of context.
I apologize for the long winded answer. I may need to write a book on the conflicts, trials and tribulations of the Formwork Engineer, bastard child of structural engineering.
Daniel Toon