I agree that there is a serious problem in the construction industry as it pertains to QA. Most General Contractors who have testing/inspecting on their budgets use those funds as a cushion, rather than adequately ensuring that materials are fully tested and inspected according to accepted industry standards. Most jobs don't hire testing agencies. Of those that do, most cause conflict of interests because they usually demand that the General Contractor oversee the testing agency (time on site, what, when and where to test, etc.), rather than the testing agency working directly for the owner and designers. I have worked with precious few contractors that take QA seriously (e.g., "it's concrete, it'll get hard" is a saying I've heard much too often). And I can't count how many times I've been told "we've decided not to place that grout until Friday" but when I return I find that the grout cells were already placed and the CMU proceeding at an accelerated pace. Problem with that type of situation is that since you report to and through the General Contractor, who knows darned well what he's done, he'll simply toss your report into file thirteen. If you make a stink about it, he'll simply hire another testing facility; so the owner and designer are none the wiser. So in my 22 years experience, I've become convinced that a testing agency is only effective when they work for the owner and designer directly. The testing industry is just as much at fault, however. They are not organized in any fashion whatsoever. So, they have no minimum trade standards, certification requirements, or union representation. (My company does require training and certification of all technicians; but believe me, we are the exception and not the rule). No testing technicians qualify for Prevailing Wage, while the simplest or least experienced laborer on the site does and usually at nearly twice the wage of the tester! This means that there are some very unprofessional testers out there who just don't know the standards or when and how they apply. Case in point, I found a tester on the site who never looked at the foundation plan, reinforcement details, or soils report; but was there to do a footer inspection. I'm afraid that until contractors, testing agencies, and designers all get a standardized practice for uniform QA implementation that we are doomed to a never ending cycle of structural failures.