The Construction Project Manager II (CPM 2) leads facility construction projects through their full lifecycle, from programming and design to construction and closeout. This role manages architects, engineers, consultants, contractors, and internal stakeholders across FMOLHS facilities to deliver projects that meet scope, schedule, budget, ICCRA/PCRA, and system standards. The CPM 2 leverages strong commercial construction expertise—both new and renovation—to coordinate drawings, resolve field conflicts, and drive execution in active, occupied healthcare environments. The CPM 2 independently manages construction projects and workstreams across the full project lifecycle and demonstrates consistent forward progress with limited oversight; they own routine project decisions.
30% – Full Lifecycle Project Management
• Lead projects from programming → design → construction → closeout. Lead multi-phase programs ($>25M)
• Manage SD → DD → CD development and resolve design conflicts in alignment with market needs.
25% – Stakeholder & Team Management
• Run O/A/C meetings and maintain weekly project summaries.
• Direct the work of A/E teams, general contractors, and specialty consultants.
20% – Budget & Cost Control
• Manage owner budgets including IS, Biomed, Security, and FF&E allocations.
• Develop medical equipment scopes and budgets with internal stakeholders and external consultants where needed.
• Review payment applications, POs, and invoices; verify construction progress vs. percent billed.
• Complete monthly budget reconciliations and project cash-flow analyses.
15% – Regulatory, ICCRA/PCRA, Life Safety
• Ensure compliance with healthcare regulatory requirements.
• Maintain ICCRA/PCRA documentation and support life-safety coordination.
10% – Reporting & Logistics
• Maintain stakeholder reports, dashboards, and project goal matrices.
Promotion Philosophy
Promotion is not automatic and is not tenure-based. Advancement requires sustained demonstration of next-level performance.
CPM2 to CPM3 – Promotion Criteria
Eligibility Requirements
Area Requirement
30% – Full Lifecycle Project Management
• Lead projects from programming → design → construction → closeout. Lead multi-phase programs ($>25M)
• Manage SD → DD → CD development and resolve design conflicts in alignment with market needs.
25% – Stakeholder & Team Management
• Run O/A/C meetings and maintain weekly project summaries.
• Direct the work of A/E teams, general contractors, and specialty consultants.
20% – Budget & Cost Control
• Manage owner budgets including IS, Biomed, Security, and FF&E allocations.
• Develop medical equipment scopes and budgets with internal stakeholders and external consultants where needed.
• Review payment applications, POs, and invoices; verify construction progress vs. percent billed.
• Complete monthly budget reconciliations and project cash-flow analyses.
15% – Regulatory, ICCRA/PCRA, Life Safety
• Ensure compliance with healthcare regulatory requirements.
• Maintain ICCRA/PCRA documentation and support life-safety coordination.
10% – Reporting & Logistics
• Maintain stakeholder reports, dashboards, and project goal matrices.
Promotion Philosophy
Promotion is not automatic and is not tenure-based. Advancement requires sustained demonstration of next-level performance.
CPM2 to CPM3 – Promotion Criteria
Eligibility Requirements:
Area Requirement
Complexity Management: Manages multiple complex projects concurrently
Autonomy: Operates with minimal oversight across scope, schedule, and budget
Risk Management: Anticipates and mitigates risks proactively
Judgment: Demonstrates advanced healthcare construction and regulatory judgment
Executive Communication: Communicates with executives using solution-based recommendations
Leadership: Coaches and develops PM1 and PM2 staff
Resilience: Maintains performance under ambiguity and pressure
Ineligibility Indicators:
Requires escalation for routine decisions
Manages tasks without owning outcomes
Reacts rather than anticipates in ways that negatively impact schedule or financials
Limited capacity to manage complexity